983 research outputs found
Optimal parameters selection of particle swarm optimization based global maximum power point tracking of partially shaded PV
This paper presents optimal parameters selection of particle swarm optimization (PSO) algorithm for determining the global maximum power point tracking of photovoltaic array under partially shaded conditions. Under partial shading, the power-voltage characteristics have a more complex shape with several local peaks and one global peak. The two proposed controllers include dynamic Particle Swarm Optimization, and constant particle swarm optimization. The developed algorithms are implemented in MATLAB/Simulink platform, and their performances are evaluated. The results indicate that the dynamic particle swarm optimization algorithm can very fast track the GMPP within 128 ms for different shading conditions. In addition, the average tracking efficiency of the proposed algorithm is higher than 99.89%, which provides good prospects to apply this algorithm in the control search unit for the global maximum power point in stations
Dynamics of automatic stations' descent in planetary atmospheres as means of measurement data control
Automatic stations descent in planetary atmospheres as means of measurement data contro
Comparative experimental study of local mixing of active and passive scalars in turbulent thermal convection
We investigate experimentally the statistical properties of active and
passive scalar fields in turbulent Rayleigh-B\'{e}nard convection in water, at
. Both the local concentration of fluorescence dye and the local
temperature are measured near the sidewall of a rectangular cell. It is found
that, although they are advected by the same turbulent flow, the two scalars
distribute differently. This difference is twofold, i.e. both the quantities
themselves and their small-scale increments have different distributions. Our
results show that there is a certain buoyant scale based on time domain, i.e.
the Bolgiano time scale , above which buoyancy effects are significant.
Above , temperature is active and is found to be more intermittent than
concentration, which is passive. This suggests that the active scalar possesses
a higher level of intermittency in turbulent thermal convection. It is further
found that the mixing of both scalar fields are isotropic for scales larger
than even though buoyancy acts on the fluid in the vertical direction.
Below , temperature is passive and is found to be more anisotropic than
concentration. But this higher degree of anisotropy is attributed to the higher
diffusivity of temperature over that of concentration. From the simultaneous
measurements of temperature and concentration, it is shown that two scalars
have similar autocorrelation functions and there is a strong and positive
correlation between them.Comment: 13 pages and 12 figure
Diffusion of passive scalar in a finite-scale random flow
We consider a solvable model of the decay of scalar variance in a
single-scale random velocity field. We show that if there is a separation
between the flow scale k_flow^{-1} and the box size k_box^{-1}, the decay rate
lambda ~ (k_box/k_flow)^2 is determined by the turbulent diffusion of the
box-scale mode. Exponential decay at the rate lambda is preceded by a transient
powerlike decay (the total scalar variance ~ t^{-5/2} if the Corrsin invariant
is zero, t^{-3/2} otherwise) that lasts a time t~1/\lambda. Spectra are sharply
peaked at k=k_box. The box-scale peak acts as a slowly decaying source to a
secondary peak at the flow scale. The variance spectrum at scales intermediate
between the two peaks (k_box0). The mixing
of the flow-scale modes by the random flow produces, for the case of large
Peclet number, a k^{-1+delta} spectrum at k>>k_flow, where delta ~ lambda is a
small correction. Our solution thus elucidates the spectral make up of the
``strange mode,'' combining small-scale structure and a decay law set by the
largest scales.Comment: revtex4, 8 pages, 4 figures; final published versio
Mathematical simulation of the near-bottom section of an ascending twisting flow
The available results of laboratory experiments on the formation of free vortices and controlling of their behavior are compared with the results of mathematical simulation of corresponding flows. This is accomplished by constructing solutions for a set of gas dynamics equations. The comparison is performed for a specific scheme of origination and functioning of free ascending twisting flows. In particular, it is shown that the experimental results confirm the proposed scheme of the origination and initial twisting of ascending vortex flows and validate the reason of their stable functioning with the help of the method intended for controlling generated vortices using vertical grids which was implemented in the experiments. The fact of origination of an ascending flow twisting and its directing is mathematically substantiated using the solution to a specific initially edge problem for a set of gas dynamics equations. A stationary flow whose parameters are close to gas-dynamic parameters of free vortices reproduced in the experiments is calculated. © 2013 Pleiades Publishing, Ltd
Fractal dimension crossovers in turbulent passive scalar signals
The fractal dimension of turbulent passive scalar signals is
calculated from the fluid dynamical equation. depends on the
scale. For small Prandtl (or Schmidt) number one gets two ranges,
for small scale r and =5/3 for large r, both
as expected. But for large one gets a third, intermediate range in
which the signal is extremely wrinkled and has . In that
range the passive scalar structure function has a plateau. We
calculate the -dependence of the crossovers. Comparison with a numerical
reduced wave vector set calculation gives good agreement with our predictions.Comment: 7 pages, Revtex, 3 figures (postscript file on request
From non-Brownian Functionals to a Fractional Schr\"odinger Equation
We derive backward and forward fractional Schr\"odinger type of equations for
the distribution of functionals of the path of a particle undergoing anomalous
diffusion. Fractional substantial derivatives introduced by Friedrich and
co-workers [PRL {\bf 96}, 230601 (2006)] provide the correct fractional
framework for the problem at hand. In the limit of normal diffusion we recover
the Feynman-Kac treatment of Brownian functionals. For applications, we
calculate the distribution of occupation times in half space and show how
statistics of anomalous functionals is related to weak ergodicity breaking.Comment: 5 page
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