841 research outputs found
High temperature glass coatings for superalloys and refractory metals
New glasses are used as protective coatings on metals and alloys susceptible to oxidation at high temperatures in oxidizing atmospheres. Glasses are stable and solid at temperatures up to 1000 deg C, adhere well to metal surfaces, and are usable for metals with broad range of expansion coefficients
Development and evaluation of controlled viscosity coatings for superalloys
Controlled viscosity glass based protective coatings for superalloys for turbine blade application
A preliminary analysis of the data from experiment 77-13 and final report on glass fining experiments in zero gravity
Thermal fining, thermal migration of bubbles under reduced gravity conditions, and data to verify current theoretical models of bubble location and temperatures as a function of time are discussed. A sample, sodium borate glass, was tested during 5 to 6 minutes of zero gravity during rocket flight. The test cell contained a heater strip; thermocouples were in the sample. At present quantitative data are insufficient to confirm results of theoretical calculations
On the Properties of Plastic Ablators in Laser-Driven Material Dynamics Experiments
Radiation hydrodynamics simulations were used to study the effect of plastic
ablators in laser-driven shock experiments. The sensitivity to composition and
equation of state was found to be 5-10% in ablation pressure. As was found for
metals, a laser pulse of constant irradiance gave a pressure history which
decreased by several percent per nanosecond. The pressure history could be made
more constant by adjusting the irradiance history. The impedance mismatch with
the sample gave an increase o(100%) in the pressure transmitted into the
sample, for a reduction of several tens of percent in the duration of the peak
load applied to the sample, and structured the release history by adding a
release step to a pressure close to the ablation pressure. Algebraic relations
were found between the laser pulse duration, the ablator thickness, and the
duration of the peak pressure applied to the sample, involving quantities
calculated from the equations of state of the ablator and sample using shock
dynamics.Comment: Typos fixe
The Radio to Gamma Ray Connection of EGRET Blazars: Correlation, Regression and Monte Carlo Analysis
A comprehensive statistical analysis of the broadband properties of EGRET
blazars is presented. This analysis includes sources identified as blazars in
the Sowards-Emmerd publications. Using this sample of 122 sources, we find that
there is a relationship as well as a
correlation between and , and a correlation between
radio luminosity and . Through the use of Monte Carlo simulations,
we can replicate the observed luminosity relationship if a synchrotron
self-Compton model is assumed. However, this relationship can not be replicated
if an external Compton scattering model is assumed. These differences are
primarily due to beaming effects.
In addition it has been determined that the intrinsic radio luminosity of the
parent sample falls in the range
and that the bulk Lorentz factors of the source are in the range , in a agreement with VLBI observations.
Finally, we discuss implications for GLAST, successfully launched in June
2008
Indirect search for Dark Matter with H.E.S.S
Observations of the Galactic center region with the H.E.S.S. telescopes have
established the existence of a steady, extended source of gamma-ray emission
coinciding with the position of the super massive black hole Sgr A*. This is a
remarkable finding given the expected presence of dense self-annihilating Dark
Matter in the Galactic center region. The self-annihilation process is giving
rise to gamma-ray production through hadronization including the production of
neutral pions which decay into gamma-rays but also through (loop-suppressed)
annihilation into final states of almost mono-energetic photons. We study the
observed gamma-ray signal (spectrum and shape) from the Galactic center in the
context of Dark Matter annihilation and indicate the prospects for further
indirect Dark matter searches with H.E.S.S.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for Publication in Advances is Space
Research, COSPAR meeting Beijing (2006
Cold ultrarelativistic pulsar winds as potential sources of galactic gamma-ray lines above 100 GeV
The evidence of a line-like spectral feature at 130 GeV recently reported
from some parts of the galactic plane poses serious challenges for any
interpretation of this surprise discovery. It is generally believed that the
unusually narrow profile of the spectral line cannot be explained by
conventional processes in astrophysical objects, and, if real, is likely to be
associated with Dark Matter. In this paper we argue that cold ultrarelativistic
pulsar winds can be alternative sources of very narrow gamma-ray lines. We
demonstrate that Comptonization of a cold ultrarelativistic electron-positron
pulsar wind in the deep Klein-Nishina regime can readily provide very narrow
distinct gamma-ray line features. To verify this prediction, we produced photon
count maps based on the Fermi LAT data in the energy interval 100 to 140 GeV.
We confirm earlier reports of the presence of marginal gamma-ray line-like
signals from three regions of the galactic plane. Although the maps show some
structure inside these regions, unfortunately the limited photon statistics do
not allow any firm conclusion in this regard. The confirmation of 130 GeV line
emission by low-energy threshold atmospheric Cherenkov telescope systems, in
particular by the new 27 m diameter dish of the H.E.S.S. array, would be
crucial for resolving the spatial structure of the reported hotspots, and thus
for distinguishing between the Dark Matter and Pulsar origins of the `Fermi
Lines'.Comment: 5 pages. 4 figure
Evaluation of the MARC 7G1 auxiliary rocket motor for use on the Atlas-Centaur vehicle Final report, Mar. - Oct. 1965
Solid propellant rocket engine environmental and static testing for use as retrograde thrustor in Atlas-Centaur space vehicl
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