23,467 research outputs found
Test program to demonstrate the stability of hydrazine in propellant tanks
A 24-month coupon test program to evaluate the decomposition of propellant tanks is reported. The propellant fuel evaluated was monopropellant-grade hydrazine (N2H4), which is normally a colorless, fuming, corrosive, strongly reducing liquid. The degree of hydrazine decomposition was determined by means of chemical analyses of the liquid and evolved gases at the end of the test program. The experimental rates of hydrazine decomposition were determined to be within acceptable limits. The propellant tank materials and material combinations were not degraded by a 2-year exposure to hydrazine propellant. This was verified using change-of-weight determinations and microscopic examination of the specimen surface before and after exposure, and by posttest chemical analyses of hydrazine liquid for residual metal content
Helium Saturation of Liquid Propellants
The research is in three areas which are: (1) techniques were devised for achieving the required levels of helium (He) saturation in liquid propellants (limited to monomethylhydrazine (MMH) and nitrogen tetroxide (NTO)); (2) the values were evaluated for equilibrium solubilities of He in liquid propellants as currently used in the industry; and (3) the He dissolved in liquid propellants were accurately measured. Conclusions drawn from these studies include: (1) Techniques for dissolving He in liquid propellants depending upon the capabilities of the testing facility (Verification of the quantity of gas dissolved is essential); (2) Until greater accuracy is obtained, the equilibrium solubility values of He in MMH and NTO as cited in the Air Force Propellant Handbooks should be accepted as standard (There are still enough uncertainties in the He saturation values to warrant further basic experimental studies); and (3) The manometric measurement of gas volume from a frozen sample of propellant should be the accepted method for gas analysis
Diagnosis and management of pneumonia in the emergency department.
Pneumonia is a condition that is often treated by emergency physicians. This article reviews the diagnosis and management of pneumonia in the emergency department and highlights dilemmas in diagnostic testing, use of blood and sputum cultures, hospital admission decisions, infection control, quality measures for pneumonia care, and empiric antimicrobial therapy
Sun-Sized Water Vapor Masers in Cepheus A
We present the first VLBI observations of a Galactic water maser (in Chepeus
A) made with a very long baseline interferometric array involving the
RadioAstron Earth-orbiting satellite station as one of its elements. We
detected two distinct components at -16.9 and 0.6 km/s with a fringe spacing of
66 microarcseconds. In total power, the 0.6 km/s component appears to be a
single Gaussian component of strength 580 Jy and width of 0.7 km/s.
Single-telescope monitoring showed that its lifetime was only 8~months. The
absence of a Zeeman pattern implies the longitudinal magnetic field component
is weaker than 120 mG. The space-Earth cross power spectrum shows two
unresolved components smaller than 15 microarcseconds, corresponding to a
linear scale of 1.6 x 10^11 cm, about the diameter of the Sun, for a distance
of 700 pc, separated by 0.54 km/s in velocity and by 160 +/-35 microarcseconds
in angle. This is the smallest angular structure ever observed in a Galactic
maser. The brightness temperatures are greater than 2 x 10^14K, and the line
widths are 0.5 km/s. Most of the flux (about 87%) is contained in a halo of
angular size of 400 +/- 150 microarcseconds. This structure is associated with
the compact HII region HW3diii. We have probably picked up the most prominent
peaks in the angular size range of our interferometer. We discuss three
dynamical models: (1) Keplerian motion around a central object, (2) two chance
overlapping clouds, and (3) vortices caused by flow around an obstacle (i.e.,
von Karman vortex street) with Strouhal number of about~0.3.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ, February 16,
201
RadioAstron probes the ultra-fine spatial structure in the HO maser emission in the star forming region W49N
HO maser emission associated with the massive star formation region W49N
were observed with the Space-VLBI mission RadioAstron. The procedure for
processing of the maser spectral line data obtained in the RadioAstron
observations is described. Ultra-fine spatial structures in the maser emission
were detected on space-ground baselines of up to 9.6 Earth diameters. The
correlated flux densities of these features range from 0.1% to 0.6% of the
total flux density. These low values of correlated flux density are probably
due to turbulence either in the maser itself or in the interstellar medium.Comment: Accepted for publication in Advances in Space Researc
Outflow 20--2000 AU from a High-Mass Protostar in W51-IRS2
We present the results of the first high angular resolution observations of
SiO maser emission towards the star forming region W51-IRS2 made with the Very
Large Array (VLA) and Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA). Our images of the water
maser emission in W51-IRS2 reveal two maser complexes bracketing the SiO maser
source. One of these water maser complexes appears to trace a bow shock whose
opening angle is consistent with the opening angle observed in the distribution
of SiO maser emission. A comparison of our water maser image with an image
constructed from data acquired 19 years earlier clearly shows the persistence
and motion of this bow shock. The proper motions correspond to an outflow
velocity of 80 km/s, which is consistent with the data of 19 years ago (that
spanned 2 years). We have discovered a two-armed linear structure in the SiO
maser emission on scales of ~25 AU, and we find a velocity gradient on the
order of 0.1 km/s/AU along the arms. We propose that the SiO maser source
traces the limbs of an accelerating bipolar outflow close to an obscured
protostar. We estimate that the outflow makes an angle of <20 degrees with
respect to the plane of the sky. Our measurement of the acceleration is
consistent with a reported drift in the line-of-sight velocity of the W51 SiO
maser source.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures (including 3 color). Accepted for publication in
ApJ (April 1, 2001 issue
A candidate optical counterpart to the middle-aged gamma-ray pulsar PSR J1741-2054
We carried out deep optical observations of the middle-aged -ray
pulsar PSR J1741-2054 with the Very Large Telescope (VLT). We identified two
objects, of magnitudes and , at positions
consistent with the very accurate Chandra coordinates of the pulsar, the
faintest of which is more likely to be its counterpart. From the VLT images we
also detected the known bow-shock nebula around PSR J1741-2054. The nebula is
displaced by \sim 0\farcs9 (at the confidence level) with respect
to its position measured in archival data, showing that the shock propagates in
the interstellar medium consistently with the pulsar proper motion. Finally, we
could not find evidence of large-scale extended optical emission associated
with the pulsar wind nebula detected by Chandra, down to a surface brightness
limit of magnitudes arcsec. Future observations are needed
to confirm the optical identification of PSR J1741-2054 and characterise the
spectrum of its counterpart.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, Astrophysical Journal, in pres
- …