1,597 research outputs found
Thermal analysis of conceptual designs for GPHS/FPSE power systems of 250 We and 500 We
Thermal analyses were performed for two distinct configurations of a proposed space nuclear power system which combines General Purpose Heat Source (GPHS) modules with the state of the art Free-Piston Stirling Engines (FPSEs). The two configurations correspond to systems with power levels of 250 and 500 W(sub e). The 250 W(sub e) GPHS/FPSE power system utilizes four GPHS modules and one FPSE, and the 500 W(sub e) contains eight GPHS modules and two FPSEs. The configurations of the systems and the bases for selecting the configurations are described. Brief introductory sections are included to describe the GPHS modules and free piston Stirling engines. The primary focus of the thermal analyses is on the temperature of the iridium fuel clad within the GPHS modules. A design goal temperature of 1573 K was selected as the upper limit for the fuel clad during normal operating conditions. The basis for selecting this temperature limit is discussed in detail. Results obtained from thermal analysis of the 250 W(sub e) GPHS/FPSE power system indicate fuel clad temperatures which slightly exceed the design goal temperature of 1573 K. The results are considered favorable due to the numerous conservative assumptions used in developing the thermal model and performing the thermal analysis. To demonstrate the effects of the conservatism, a brief sensitivity analysis is performed in which a few of the key system parameters are varied to determine their effect on the fuel clad temperatures. It is concluded that thermal analysis of a more detailed thermal model would be expected to yield fuel clad temperatures below the design foal temperature limiy 1573 K
The Efficacy of Semantic Feature Analysis for the Treatment of Aphasia: A Systematic Review
Semantic feature analysis (SFA) is a common treatment for improving naming ability in persons with aphasia (PWA). To examine the effectiveness of SFA in improving naming abilities, we conducted an evidence-based systematic review. Seven studies met the inclusion criteria, were assigned appropriate levels of evidence, and were examined for methodological quality using the Single-Case Experimental Design (SCED) scale. Inter-rater reliability was established using Cohen’s weighted kappa statistic. To determine the clinical significance of SFA, effect sizes, or percent of non-overlapping data (PND), were calculated. Results of this study indicate that SFA may be most effective for persons with fluent aphasias
Disconnecting Solar Magnetic Flux
Disconnection of open magnetic flux by reconnection is required to balance
the injection of open flux by CMEs and other eruptive events. Making use of
recent advances in heliospheric background subtraction, we have imaged many
abrupt disconnection events. These events produce dense plasma clouds whose
distinctie shape can now be traced from the corona across the inner solar
system via heliospheric imaging. The morphology of each initial event is
characteristic of magnetic reconnection across a current sheet, and the
newly-disconnected flux takes the form of a "U"-shaped loop that moves outward,
accreting coronal and solar wind material.
We analyzed one such event on 2008 December 18 as it formed and accelerated
at 20 m/s^2 to 320 km/s, expanding self-similarly until it exited our field of
view 1.2 AU from the Sun. From acceleration and photometric mass estimates we
derive the coronal magnetic field strength to be 8uT, 6 Rs above the
photosphere, and the entrained flux to be 1.6x10^11 Wb (1.6x10^19 Mx). We model
the feature's propagation by balancing inferred magnetic tension force against
accretion drag. This model is consistent with the feature's behavior and
accepted solar wind parameters.
By counting events over a 36 day window, we estimate a global event rate of
1/day and a global solar minimum unsigned flux disconnection rate of 6x10^13
Wb/y (6x10^21 Mx/y) by this mechanism. That rate corresponds to ~0.2 nT/y
change in the radial heliospheric field at 1 AU, indicating that the mechanism
is important to the heliospheric flux balance.Comment: preprint is 20 pages with 8 figures; accepted by APJ for publication
in 201
Magnetospheric plasma pressures in the midnight meridian: Observations from 2.5 to 35 RE
Plasma pressure data from the ISEE 2 fast plasma experiment (FPE) were statistically analyzed to determine the plasma sheet pressure versus distance in the midnight local time sector of the near-earth (12–35 RE) magnetotail plasma sheet. The observed plasma pressure, assumed isotropic, was mapped along model magnetic field flux tubes (obtained from the Tsyganenko and Usmanov [1982] model) to the magnetic equator, sorted according to magnetic activity, and binned according to the mapped equatorial location. In regions (L ≳ 12 RE) where the bulk of the plasma pressure was contributed by particles in the energy range of the FPE (70 eV to 40 keV for ions), the statistically determined peak plasma pressures vary with distance similarly to previously determined lobe magnetic pressures (i.e., in a time-averaged sense, pressure balance normal to the magnetotail magnetic equator in the midnight meridian is maintained between lobe magnetic and plasma sheet plasma pressures). Additional plasma pressure data obtained in the inner magnetosphere (2.5 \u3c L \u3c 7) by the Explorer 45, ATS 5, and AMPTE CCE spacecraft supplement the ISEE 2 data. Estimates of plasma pressures in the “transition” region (7–12 RE), where the magnetic field topology changes rapidly from a dipolar to a tail-like configuration, are compared with the observed pressure profiles. The quiet time “transition” region pressure estimates, obtained previously from inversions of empirical magnetic field models, bridge observations both interior to and exterior to the “transition” region in a reasonable manner. Quiet time observations and estimates are combined to provide profiles of the equatorial plasma pressure along the midnight meridian between 2.5 and 35 RE
Can Streamer Blobs prevent the Buildup of the Interplanetetary Magnetic Field?
Coronal Mass Ejections continuously drag closed magnetic field lines away
from the Sun, adding new flux to the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF). We
propose that the outward-moving blobs that have been observed in helmet
streamers are evidence of ongoing, small-scale reconnection in streamer current
sheets, which may play an important role in the prevention of an indefinite
buildup of the IMF. Reconnection between two open field lines from both sides
of a streamer current sheet creates a new closed field line, which becomes part
of the helmet, and a disconnected field line, which moves outward. The blobs
are formed by plasma from the streamer that is swept up in the trough of the
outward moving field line. We show that this mechanism is supported by
observations from SOHO/LASCO. Additionally, we propose a thorough statistical
study to quantify the contribution of blob formation to the reduction of the
IMF, and indicate how this mechanism may be verified by observations with
SOHO/UVCS and the proposed NASA STEREO and ESA Polar Orbiter missions.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures; accepted by The Astrophysical Journal Letters;
uses AASTe
The average magnetic field draping and consistent plasma properties of the Venus magnetotail
A new technique has been developed to determine the average structure of the Venus magnetotail (in the range from −8 Rv to −12 Rv) from the Pioneer Venus magnetometer observations. The spacecraft position with respect to the cross-tail current sheet is determined from an observed relationship between the field-draping angle and the magnitude of the field referenced to its value in the nearby magnetosheath. This allows us statistically to remove the effects of tail flapping and variability of draping for the first time and thus to map the average field configuration in the Venus tail. From this average configuration we calculate the cross-tail current density distribution and J × B forces. Continuity of the tangential electric field is utilized to determine the average variations of the X-directed velocity which is shown to vary from −250 km/s at −8 Rv to −470 km/s at −12 Rv. From the calculated J × B forces, plasma velocity, and MHD momentum equation the approximate plasma acceleration, density, and temperature in the Venus tail are determined. The derived ion density is approximately ∼0.07 p+/cm³ (0.005 O+/cm³) in the lobes and ∼0.9 p+/cm³ (0.06 O+/cm³) in the current sheet, while the derived approximate average plasma temperature for the tail is ∼6×106 K for a hydrogen plasma or ∼9×107 K for an oxygen plasma
Physical correlations lead to kappa distributions
The recently developed concept of "entropic defect" is important for
understanding the foundations of thermodynamics in space plasma physics, and
more generally, for systems with physical correlations among their particles.
Using this concept, this paper derives the basic formulation of the
distribution function of velocities (or kinetic energies) in space plasma
particle populations. Earlier analyses have shown how the formulation of kappa
distributions is interwoven with the presence of correlations among the
particles' velocities. This paper shows, for the first time, that the reverse
is true: the thermodynamics of particles' physical correlations are consistent
only with the existence of kappa distributions.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figure
Dental, Dental Hygiene, and Graduate Students’ and Faculty Perspectives on Dental Hygienists’ Professional Role and the Potential Contribution of a Peer Teaching Program
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/153742/1/jddj002203372016809tb06187x.pd
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