18,794 research outputs found
LTA bibliography
This bibliography includes publications which deal with airship design, engineering, stress calculations, and historical information
Airship economics
Projected operating and manufacturing costs of a large airship design which are considered practical with today's technology and environment are discussed. Data and information developed during an 18-month study on the question of feasibility, engineering, economics and production problems related to a large metalclad type airship are considered. An overview of other classic airship designs are provided, and why metalclad was selected as the most prudent and most economic design to be considered in the 1970-80 era is explained. Crew operation, ATC and enroute requirements are covered along with the question of handling, maintenance and application of systems to the large airship
The Slate all metal airship
The development of the Slate all metal airship City of Glendale built and completed in 1930 is presented. The airship facilities are discussed. Pertinent data which led to other engineering accomplishments for aviation are shown. The SMD-100 concept is presented along with a brief commentary on the costs and problems involved in such an airship design and the application of the hoisting and elevator facilities to airship development
Experimental and analytical study of a conically diffused flow with a nearly separated boundary layer
Turbulence measurements were obtained in the nearly separated flow in a 13 deg total angle of divergence conical diffuser coupled to a constant area tailpipe. Air at 207 newtons per square centimeter and 308 K provided an inlet velocity of about 51 meters per second at an inlet unit Reynolds number of 63.7 million per meter. Very high longitudinal turbulence intensities accompanied the diffusion process with peak values approaching 40 percent when normalized by the local centerline velocity. Predictions of the pressure recovery coefficient using a mixing length concept were good in the early stages of diffusion. In the latter stages of diffusion satisfactory predictions of the pressure recovery were obtained with an empirical method
Quasi-isometric classification of non-geometric 3-manifold groups
We describe the quasi-isometric classification of fundamental groups of
irreducible non-geometric 3-manifolds which do not have "too many" arithmetic
hyperbolic geometric components, thus completing the quasi-isometric
classification of 3--manifold groups in all but a few exceptional cases.Comment: Minor revision (added footnote in the Introduction
Correlated Equilibria of Classical Strategic Games with Quantum Signals
Correlated equilibria are sometimes more efficient than the Nash equilibria
of a game without signals. We investigate whether the availability of quantum
signals in the context of a classical strategic game may allow the players to
achieve even better efficiency than in any correlated equilibrium with
classical signals, and find the answer to be positive.Comment: 8 pages, LaTe
Some economic tables for airships
During the course of the Southern California Aviation Council study on lighter than air it was determined that some form of economic base must be developed for estimation of costs of the airship. The tables are presented
Energy Loss from Reconnection with a Vortex Mesh
Experiments in superfluid 4He show that at low temperatures, energy
dissipation from moving vortices is many orders of magnitude larger than
expected from mutual friction. Here we investigate other mechanisms for energy
loss by a computational study of a vortex that moves through and reconnects
with a mesh of small vortices pinned to the container wall. We find that such
reconnections enhance energy loss from the moving vortex by a factor of up to
100 beyond that with no mesh. The enhancement occurs through two different
mechanisms, both involving the Kelvin oscillations generated along the vortex
by the reconnections. At relatively high temperatures the Kelvin waves increase
the vortex motion, leading to more energy loss through mutual friction. As the
temperature decreases, the vortex oscillations generate additional reconnection
events between the moving vortex and the wall, which decrease the energy of the
moving vortex by transfering portions of its length to the pinned mesh on the
wall.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
Multi-camera Realtime 3D Tracking of Multiple Flying Animals
Automated tracking of animal movement allows analyses that would not
otherwise be possible by providing great quantities of data. The additional
capability of tracking in realtime - with minimal latency - opens up the
experimental possibility of manipulating sensory feedback, thus allowing
detailed explorations of the neural basis for control of behavior. Here we
describe a new system capable of tracking the position and body orientation of
animals such as flies and birds. The system operates with less than 40 msec
latency and can track multiple animals simultaneously. To achieve these
results, a multi target tracking algorithm was developed based on the Extended
Kalman Filter and the Nearest Neighbor Standard Filter data association
algorithm. In one implementation, an eleven camera system is capable of
tracking three flies simultaneously at 60 frames per second using a gigabit
network of nine standard Intel Pentium 4 and Core 2 Duo computers. This
manuscript presents the rationale and details of the algorithms employed and
shows three implementations of the system. An experiment was performed using
the tracking system to measure the effect of visual contrast on the flight
speed of Drosophila melanogaster. At low contrasts, speed is more variable and
faster on average than at high contrasts. Thus, the system is already a useful
tool to study the neurobiology and behavior of freely flying animals. If
combined with other techniques, such as `virtual reality'-type computer
graphics or genetic manipulation, the tracking system would offer a powerful
new way to investigate the biology of flying animals.Comment: pdfTeX using libpoppler 3.141592-1.40.3-2.2 (Web2C 7.5.6), 18 pages
with 9 figure
Complete Phase Diagram of DNA Unzipping: Eye, Y-fork and triple point
We study the unzipping of double stranded DNA (dsDNA) by applying a pulling
force at a fraction from the anchored end. From exact
analytical and numerical results, the complete phase diagram is presented. The
phase diagram shows a strong ensemble dependence for various values of . In
addition, we show the existence of an ``eye'' phase and a triple point.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures; revised version: misprints corrected. References
corrected/added. To appear in Physical Review Letter
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