6,287 research outputs found

    Rotational Instabilities and Centrifugal Hangup

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    One interesting class of gravitational radiation sources includes rapidly rotating astrophysical objects that encounter dynamical instabilities. We have carried out a set of simulations of rotationally induced instabilities in differentially rotating polytropes. An nn=1.5 polytrope with the Maclaurin rotation law will encounter the mm=2 bar instability at T/∣W∣≳0.27T/|W| \gtrsim 0.27. Our results indicate that the remnant of this instability is a persistent bar-like structure that emits a long-lived gravitational radiation signal. Furthermore, dynamical instability is shown to occur in nn=3.33 polytropes with the jj-constant rotation law at T/∣W∣≳0.14T/|W| \gtrsim 0.14. In this case, the dominant mode of instability is mm=1. Such instability may allow a centrifugally-hung core to begin collapsing to neutron star densities on a dynamical timescale. If it occurs in a supermassive star, it may produce gravitational radiation detectable by LISA.Comment: 13 pages (includes 11 figures) and 1 separate jpeg figure; to appear in Astrophysical Sources of Gravitational Radiation, AIP conference proceedings, edited by Joan M. Centrell

    Ground vibration during the bentonite tunnelling process

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    The research was carried out during the bentonite shield tunnel drive for the Acton Grange trunk outfall sewer at Warrington, Cheshire. This tunnel is driven through cohesionless Drift deposits beneath a built-up urban environment, with a cover of less than 6m. The environmental effects of the ground vibration caused by the excavation process are investigated with particular regard to ground settlement by compaction. The geology of the area and the technical and commercial factors which led to the choice of the bentonite tunnelling system are described. Previous work on compaction by vibration is critically reviewed and methods to assess a soil's potential for compaction are given. The vibration instrumentation is described and relevant wave propagation theory is developed with emphasis on body waves from underground sources. Vibration data were recorded from transducers located in boreholes, on the pavement surface, on the tunnelling machine and on the concrete tunnel lining. These records were processed to characterise the vibrations in terms of peak particle velocities, frequency spectra and spatial attenuation.The maximum measured ground vibration (expressed in terms of resultant peak particle velocity) was 3.90 mm/s. The vibration was characterised by random high velocity particle motions resulting from impacts between the machine's disc cutters and glacial boulders in the tunnel face. Surface and subsurface settlement measurements were made along the tunnel line and structural damage to property above the tunnel was observed. Laboratory tests and other field data showed that the ground in this area was likely to settle at levels of vibration lower than those measured from the tunnelling machine. The vibration caused by the excavation process caused ground compaction which contributed to ground settlement and the ensuing damage to the overlying structures. The vibration was not likely to have damaged these properties directly but did cause considerable nuisance to the residents

    Bearing tester data compilation, analysis and reporting and bearing math modeling, volume 1

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    Thermal and mechanical models of high speed angular contact ball bearings operating in LOX and LN2 were developed and verified with limited test data in an effort to further understand the parameters that determine or effect the SSME turbopump bearing operational characteristics and service life. The SHABERTH bearing analysis program which was adapted to evaluate shaft bearing systems in cryogenics is not capable of accommodating varying thermal properties and two phase flow. A bearing model with this capability was developed using the SINDA thermal analyzer. Iteration between the SHABERTH and the SINDA models enable the establishment of preliminary bounds for stable operation in LN2. These limits were established in terms of fluid flow, fluid inlet temperature, and axial load for a shaft speed of 30,000 RPM

    The hydrological regime of a forested tropical Andean catchment.

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    The hydrology of tropical mountain catchments plays a central role in ecological function, geochemical and biogeochemical cycles, erosion and sediment production, and water supply in globally important environments. There have been few studies quantifying the seasonal and annual water budgets in the montane tropics, particularly in cloud forests. We investigated the water balance and hydrologic regime of the Kosñipata catchment (basin area: 164.4 km2) over the period 2010–2011. The catchment spans over 2500 m in elevation in the eastern Peruvian Andes and is dominated by tropical montane cloud forest with some high-elevation puna grasslands. Catchment-wide rainfall was 3112 ± 414 mm yr−1, calculated by calibrating Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) 3B43 rainfall with rainfall data from nine meteorological stations in the catchment. Cloud water input to streamflow was 316 ± 116 mm yr−1 (9.2% of total inputs), calculated from an isotopic mixing model using deuterium excess (Dxs) and δD of waters. Field streamflow was measured in 2010 by recording height and calibrating to discharge. River run-off was estimated to be 2796 ± 126 mm yr−1. Actual evapotranspiration (AET) was 688 ± 138 mm yr−1, determined using the Priestley and Taylor–Jet Propulsion Laboratory (PT-JPL) model. The overall water budget was balanced within 1.6 ± 13.7%. Relationships between monthly rainfall and river run-off follow an anticlockwise hysteresis through the year, with a persistence of high run-off after the end of the wet season. The size of the soil and shallow groundwater reservoir is most likely insufficient to explain sustained dry-season flow. Thus, the observed hysteresis in rainfall–run-off relationships is best explained by sustained groundwater flow in the dry season, which is consistent with the water isotope results that suggest persistent wet-season sources to streamflow throughout the year. These results demonstrate the importance of transient groundwater storage in stabilising the annual hydrograph in this region of the Andes

    Decadal variability of summer Southern African rainfall

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    Status of the Fermilab Muon (g-2) Experiment

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    The New Muon (g−2)(g-2) Collaboration at Fermilab has proposed to measure the anomalous magnetic moment of the muon, aμa_\mu, a factor of four better than was done in E821 at the Brookhaven AGS, which obtained aμ=[116592089(63)]×10−11a_\mu = [116 592 089 (63)] \times 10^{-11} ±0.54\pm 0.54 ppm. The last digit of aμa_{\mu} is changed from the published value owing to a new value of the ratio of the muon-to-proton magnetic moment that has become available. At present there appears to be a difference between the Standard-Model value and the measured value, at the ≃3\simeq 3 standard deviation level when electron-positron annihilation data are used to determine the lowest-order hadronic piece of the Standard Model contribution. The improved experiment, along with further advances in the determination of the hadronic contribution, should clarify this difference. Because of its ability to constrain the interpretation of discoveries made at the LHC, the improved measurement will be of significant value, whatever discoveries may come from the LHC.Comment: Proceedings of the PhiPsi09, Oct. 13-16, 2009, Beijing, China, 4 pages 2 figures. Version 2 includes Fermilab report number, minor corrections and one additional referenc

    Variability of signal to noise ratio and the network analysis of gravitational wave burst signals

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    The detection and estimation of gravitational wave burst signals, with {\em a priori} unknown polarization waveforms, requires the use of data from a network of detectors. For determining how the data from such a network should be combined, approaches based on the maximum likelihood principle have proven to be useful. The most straightforward among these uses the global maximum of the likelihood over the space of all waveforms as both the detection statistic and signal estimator. However, in the case of burst signals, a physically counterintuitive situation results: for two aligned detectors the statistic includes the cross-correlation of the detector outputs, as expected, but this term disappears even for an infinitesimal misalignment. This {\em two detector paradox} arises from the inclusion of improbable waveforms in the solution space of maximization. Such waveforms produce widely different responses in detectors that are closely aligned. We show that by penalizing waveforms that exhibit large signal-to-noise ratio (snr) variability, as the corresponding source is moved on the sky, a physically motivated restriction is obtained that (i) resolves the two detector paradox and (ii) leads to a better performing statistic than the global maximum of the likelihood. Waveforms with high snr variability turn out to be precisely the ones that are improbable in the sense mentioned above. The coherent network analysis method thus obtained can be applied to any network, irrespective of the number or the mutual alignment of detectors.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure

    Constraint Likelihood analysis for a network of gravitational wave detectors

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    We propose a coherent method for the detection and reconstruction of gravitational wave signals for a network of interferometric detectors. The method is derived using the likelihood functional for unknown signal waveforms. In the standard approach, the global maximum of the likelihood over the space of waveforms is used as the detection statistic. We identify a problem with this approach. In the case of an aligned pair of detectors, the detection statistic depends on the cross-correlation between the detectors as expected, but this dependence dissappears even for infinitesimally small misalignments. We solve the problem by applying constraints on thelikelihood functional and obtain a new class of statistics. The resulting method can be applied to the data from a network consisting of any number of detectors with arbitrary detector orientations. The method allows us reconstruction of the source coordinates and the waveforms of two polarization components of a gravitational wave. We study the performance of the method with numerical simulation and find the reconstruction of the source coordinates to be more accurate than in the standard approach.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
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