4,959 research outputs found
Summary of 2011 Direct and Nearby Lightening Strikes to Launch Complex 39B
During early deployment, 2011, the LC39B lightning instrumentation was used to support the last two Space shuttle missions, STS-134 & STS-135 The day before STS-135 launch, LC39B LIS was used to locate nearby strikes to LC39A, preventing a launch scrub
Numerical analysis of the stability of the Electrohydrodynamic (EHD) electroconvection between two plates
The time evolution of the problem of Electrohydrodynamic (EHD)
convection in a liquid between two plates is analysed numerically. The equations are
nondimensionalized using the ion drift velocity and the viscous time scales. Following
the non-dimensionalisation of the respective model, two different techniques have been
used to describe the charge evolution, namely the Finite-Element Flux-Corrected
Transport Method and the Particle-In-Cell technique. The results obtained with the
two schemes, apart from showing good agreement, have revealed the appearance of a
two-roll structure not described in previous works. This is investigated in detail for
both strong and weak injection.Ministerio de ciencia y tecnología FQM-42
Calculating the Lightning Protection System Downconductors' Grounding Resistance at Launch Complex 39B, Kennedy Space Center
A new Lightning Protection System (LPS) was designed and built at Launch Complex 39B (LC39B), at the Kennedy Space Center (KSC), Florida, which consists of a catenary wire system (at a height of about 181 meters above ground level) supported by three insulators installed atop three towers in a triangular configuration. Nine downconductors (each about 250 meters long) are connected to the catenary wire system. Each downconductor is connected to a 7.62-meter-radius circular counterpoise conductor with six equally spaced, 6-meter-long vertical grounding rods. Grounding requirements at LC39B call for all underground and aboveground metallic piping, enclosures, raceways, and cable trays, within 7.62 meters of the counterpoise, to be bonded to the counterpoise, which results in a complex interconnected grounding system, given the many metallic piping, raceways, and cable trays that run in multiple directions around LC39B. The complexity of this grounding system makes the fall-of-potential method, which uses multiple metallic rods or stakes, unsuitable for measuring the grounding impedances of the downconductors. To calculate the grounding impedance of the downconductors, an Earth Ground Clamp (EGC) (a stakeless device for measuring grounding impedance) and an Alternative Transient Program (ATP) model of the LPS are used. The EGC is used to measure the loop impedance plus the grounding impedance of each downconductor, and the ATP model is used to calculate the loop impedance of each downconductor circuit. The grounding resistance of the downconductors is then calculated by subtracting the ATP calculated loop impedances from the EGC measurements
The Multiculturalism Act and Refbgee Integration in Canada
From the scope of federal government
work, this document sketches some
legal, administrative and policy related
aspects of the 1988 Multiculturalism
Act with regard to their linkages to
the refugee integration process in
Canada
Multifractality of quantum wave functions in the presence of perturbations
We present a comprehensive study of the destruction of quantum
multifractality in the presence of perturbations. We study diverse
representative models displaying multifractality, including a pseudointegrable
system, the Anderson model and a random matrix model. We apply several types of
natural perturbations which can be relevant for experimental implementations.
We construct an analytical theory for certain cases, and perform extensive
large-scale numerical simulations in other cases. The data are analyzed through
refined methods including double scaling analysis. Our results confirm the
recent conjecture that multifractality breaks down following two scenarios. In
the first one, multifractality is preserved unchanged below a certain
characteristic length which decreases with perturbation strength. In the second
one, multifractality is affected at all scales and disappears uniformly for a
strong enough perturbation. Our refined analysis shows that subtle variants of
these scenarios can be present in certain cases. This study could guide
experimental implementations in order to observe quantum multifractality in
real systems.Comment: 20 pages, 27 figure
Two scenarios for quantum multifractality breakdown
We expose two scenarios for the breakdown of quantum multifractality under
the effect of perturbations. In the first scenario, multifractality survives
below a certain scale of the quantum fluctuations. In the other one, the
fluctuations of the wave functions are changed at every scale and each
multifractal dimension smoothly goes to the ergodic value. We use as generic
examples a one-dimensional dynamical system and the three-dimensional Anderson
model at the metal-insulator transition. Based on our results, we conjecture
that the sensitivity of quantum multifractality to perturbation is universal in
the sense that it follows one of these two scenarios depending on the
perturbation. We also discuss the experimental implications.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, minor modifications, published versio
Cultures of Expertise and the Public Interventions of Economists
The essays in this volume examine the economist as public intellectual. Rather than assessing the changing status of the public intellectual in culture or attempting to define the identity of the public intellectual, our approach is to study the public interventions of economists, that is, the encounters between economists and their publics. In the volume we constrain ourselves to the long twentieth century in the United States and the United Kingdom, fenced at one end by the Progressive Era and Fabianism and the ongoing economic crisis at the other. Economists then and now have been occupants of the public sphere, and to understand their encounters with the public we must appreciate the expectations they bring to the meeting and the institutional contexts that enable the encounters. The unifying claim of our collection is that economists’ public interventions have been of profound consequence for both the structure and the content of the public sphere.</jats:p
Triggered-Lightning Interaction with a Lightning Protective System: Current Distribution and Electromagnetic Environment
A new comprehensive lightning instrumentation system has been designed for Launch Complex 39B (LC3913) at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida. This new instrumentation system includes the synchronized recording of six high-speed video cameras; currents through the nine downconductors of the new lightning protection system for LC3913; four dH/dt, 3-axis measurement stations; and five dE/dt stations composed of two antennas each. A 20:1 scaled down model of the new Lightning Protection System (LPS) of LC39B was built at the International Center for Lightning Research and Testing, Camp Blanding, FL. This scaled down lightning protection system was instrumented with the transient recorders, digitizers, and sensors to be used in the final instrumentation installation at LC3913. The instrumentation used at the ICLRT is also a scaled-down instrumentation of the LC39B instrumentation. The scaled-down LPS was subjected to seven direct lightning strikes and six (four triggered and two natural nearby flashes) in 2010. The following measurements were acquired at the ICLRT: currents through the nine downconductors; two dl-/dt, 3-axis stations, one at the center of the LPS (underneath the catenary wires), and another 40 meters south from the center of the LPS; ten dE/dt stations, nine of them on the perimeter of the LPS and one at the center of the LPS (underneath the catenary wire system); and the incident current. Data from representative events are presented and analyzed in this paper
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