4,978 research outputs found
Cloud cavitation on an oscillating hydrofoil
Cloud cavitation, often formed by the breakdown of a sheet or vortex cavity, is believed to be responsible for much of the noise and erosion damage that occurs under cavitating conditions. For this paper, cloud cavitation was produced through the periodic forcing of the flow by an oscillating hydrofoil. The present work examines the acoustic signal generated by the collapse of cloud cavitation, and compares the results to those obtained by studies of single travelling bubble cavitation. In addition, preliminary studies involving the use of air injection on the suction surface of the hydrofoil explore its mitigating effects on the cavitation noise
Maneuver and buffet characteristics of fighter aircraft
Recent research efforts in the improvement of the maneuverability of fighter aircraft in the high-subsonic and transonic speed range are reviewed with emphasis on the factors affecting aerodynamic boundaries, such as maximum obtainable lift, buffet onset, pitchup, wing rock, and nose slice. The investigations were made using a general research configuration which encompassed a systematic matrix of wing-design parameters. These results illustrated the sensitivity of section and planform geometry to a selected design point. The incorporation of variable-geometry wing devices in the form of flaps or leading-edge slats was shown to provide controlled flow over a wide range of flight conditions and substantial improvements in maneuver capabilities. Additional studies indicated that the blending of a highly swept maneuver strake with an efficient, moderately swept wing offers a promising approach for improving maneuver characteristics at high angles of attack without excessive penalties in structural weight
HARM: A Numerical Scheme for General Relativistic Magnetohydrodynamics
We describe a conservative, shock-capturing scheme for evolving the equations
of general relativistic magnetohydrodynamics. The fluxes are calculated using
the Harten, Lax, and van Leer scheme. A variant of constrained transport,
proposed earlier by T\'oth, is used to maintain a divergence free magnetic
field. Only the covariant form of the metric in a coordinate basis is required
to specify the geometry. We describe code performance on a full suite of test
problems in both special and general relativity. On smooth flows we show that
it converges at second order. We conclude by showing some results from the
evolution of a magnetized torus near a rotating black hole.Comment: 38 pages, 18 figures, submitted to Ap
Jet Formation in the magnetospheres of supermassive black holes: analytic solutions describing energy loss through Blandford-Znajek processes
In this paper, we provide exact solutions for the extraction of energy from a
rotating black hole via both the electromagnetic Poynting flux and matter
currents. By appropriate choice of a radially independent poloidal function
, we find solutions where the dominant outward energy flux is
along the polar axis, consistent with a jet-like collimated outflow, but also
with a weaker flux of energy along the equatorial plane. Unlike all the
previously obtained solutions (Blandford & Znajek (1977), Menon & Dermer
(2005)), the magnetosphere is free of magnetic monopoles everywhere
A feasibility study of signed consent for the collection of patient identifiable information for a national paediatric clinical audit database
Objectives: To investigate the feasibility of obtaining signed consent
for submission of patient identifiable data to a national clinical
audit database and to identify factors influencing the consent process
and its success.
Design: Feasibility study.
Setting: Seven paediatric intensive care units in England.
Participants: Parents/guardians of patients, or patients aged 12-16
years old, approached consecutively over three months for signed
consent for submission of patient identifiable data to the national
clinical audit database the Paediatric Intensive Care Audit Network
(PICANet).
Main outcome measures: The numbers and proportions of admissions for
which signed consent was given, refused, or not obtained (form not
returned or form partially completed but not signed), by age, sex,
level of deprivation, ethnicity (South Asian or not), paediatric index
of mortality score, length of hospital stay (days in paediatric
intensive care).
Results: One unit did not start and one did not fully implement the
protocol, so analysis excluded these two units. Consent was obtained
for 182 of 422 admissions (43%) (range by unit 9% to 84%). Most
(101/182; 55%) consents were taken by staff nurses. One refusal (0.2%)
was received. Consent rates were significantly better for children who
were more severely ill on admission and for hospital stays of six days
or more, and significantly poorer for children aged 10-14 years. Long
hospital stays and children aged 10-14 years remained significant in a
stepwise regression model of the factors that were significant in the
univariate model.
Conclusion: Systematically obtaining individual signed consent for
sharing patient identifiable information with an externally located
clinical audit database is difficult. Obtaining such consent is
unlikely to be successful unless additional resources are specifically
allocated to training, staff time, and administrative support
Integrated economic-hydrologic water modeling at the basin scale: the Maipo river basin
Increasing competition for water across sectors increases the importance of the river basin as the appropriate unit of analysis to address the challenges facing water resources management; and modeling at this scale can provide essential information for policymakers in their resource allocation decisions. This paper introduces an integrated economic-hydrologic modeling framework that accounts for the interactions between water allocation, farmer input choice, agricultural productivity, nonagricultural water demand, and resource degradation in order to estimate the social and economic gains from improvement in the allocation and efficiency of water use. The model is applied to the Maipo River Basin in Chile. Economic benefits to water use are evaluated for different demand management instruments, including markets in tradable water rights, based on production and benefit functions with respect to water for the agricultural and urban-industrial sectors.Resource allocation., Water resources development Chile., Chile.,
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