6,178 research outputs found
Investigation of Flight Test Methods for measuring the performance of general aviation aircraft
A theoretical and experimental investigation of methods for measuring the performance of general aviation airplanes was conducted using relatively simple instrumentation currently available and data extraction techniques established from efforts in other disciplines. The possibilities of improving flight test data by use of improved modern instrumentation and digital data recording and data analysis were considered
Comments on “Electric current and electric field induced in a human body when exposed to an incident electric field near the resonant frequency”
[For original paper see R. W. P. King, IEEE Trans. Microwave Theory Tech., vol. 48, no. 9, pp. 147-53 (2000).] The author makes two observations on the original article. The commentator questions whether a seated person is well modeled as a right circular cylinder. The second observation is that King cites only microwave studies on mice to show that electromagnetic radiation causes malignancies. These studies themselves are widely disputed. He then uses simple dimensional scaling to show that 2.45 GHz for a mouse scales to 100 MHz for a man. Such a scaling law may be useful in calculating the resonant frequency for a human subject versus a mouse when treated as antennas, but such scaling is meaningless when the physics of a hypothetical carcinogenic process are unknown
Resolved Stellar Populations of Super-Metal-Rich Star Clusters in the Bulge of M31
We have applied the MCS image deconvolution algorithm (Magain, Courbin & Sohy
1998) to HST/WFPC2 V, I data of three M31 bulge globular clusters (G170, G177,
and G198) and control fields near each cluster. All three clusters are clearly
detected, with an increase in stellar density with decreasing radius from the
cluster centers; this is the first time that stars have been resolved in bulge
clusters in the inner regions of another galaxy. From the RGB slopes of the
clusters and the difference in I magnitude between the HB and the top of the
RGB, we conclude that these three clusters all have roughly solar metallicity,
in agreement with earlier integrated-light spectroscopic measurements. Our data
support a picture whereby the M31 bulge clusters and field stars were born from
the same metal-rich gas, early in the galaxy formation.Comment: 7 pages, 4 Postscript figures, accepted for publication in A&
STAR-XL: student transponder for satellite Ranging on X & L-band
The ESA ESEO Mission [1] included an amateur radio payload [2]. The results of which included the development of radio technologies that utilised final year student projects over a 5 year period. Many lessons regarding compliance and process enabled a new payload to follow: the Student Ranging Transponder Radio for X-band and L-band (or STAR-XL). The STAR-XL design leverages key aspects of the ESEO payload design for a generic CubeSat platform; including TT&C voltage and current sense circuitry, receiver circuitry, and flight software. But instead of a maximum 4800 bps telemetry and transponder system - the STAR- XL targets a 100 kHz bandwidth system that will allow faster downlink rates that are forward error correction, link margin and modulation order dependent. With 100 kHz bandwidth, the linear receiver is designed to also operate as a transponder - enabling ranging and navigation applications such as orbit determination and further experiments from amateur radio groundstations. This paper details the recent student project efforts in three key areas: a new STM32-based on-board computer, an X-band up-converter board and dual X/L band patch (as shown in Fig. 1). The new OBC includes an IQ modulator for transmitting complex waveforms and an optimised flight software suite that takes advantage of dual DMA hardware on-chip to reduce overheads. The X-band upconverter board required the development of new safety interlock and RF chain circuitry on a Rogers (RO4350B) PCB material. A new dual X/L-band patch antenna and filter circuit is also built and measured. Each of these projects has led to new lessons and increased the real-world case studies used to teach spacecraft avionics
Markov chain Monte Carlo analysis of Bianchi VII_h models
We have extended the analysis of Jaffe et al. to a complete Markov chain
Monte Carlo (MCMC) study of the Bianchi type models including a
dark energy density, using 1-year and 3-year Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy
Probe (WMAP) cosmic microwave background (CMB) data. Since we perform the
analysis in a Bayesian framework our entire inference is contained in the
multidimensional posterior distribution from which we can extract marginalised
parameter constraints and the comparative Bayesian evidence. Treating the
left-handed Bianchi CMB anisotropy as a template centred upon the `cold-spot'
in the southern hemisphere, the parameter estimates derived for the total
energy density, `tightness' and vorticity from 3-year data are found to be:
, , with orientation ). This template is preferred by a factor of roughly
unity in log-evidence over a concordance cosmology alone. A Bianchi type
template is supported by the data only if its position on the sky is heavily
restricted. The low total energy density of the preferred template, implies a
geometry that is incompatible with cosmologies inferred from recent CMB
observations. Jaffe et al. found that extending the Bianchi model to include a
term in creates a degeneracy in the plane. We explore this region fully by MCMC and find that the
degenerate likelihood contours do not intersect areas of parameter space that 1
or 3 year WMAP data would prefer at any significance above . Thus we
can confirm that a physical Bianchi model is not responsible for
this signature.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, significant update to include more accurate
results and conclusions to match version accepted by MNRA
Flight test evaluation of a method to determine the level flight performance of a propeller-driven aircraft
The overall drag of the aircraft is expressed in terms of the measured increment of power required to overcome a corresponding known increment of drag, which is generated by a towed drogue. The simplest form of the governing equations, D = delta D SHP/delta SHP, is such that all of the parameters on the right side of the equation can be measured in flight. An evaluation of the governing equations has been performed using data generated by flight test of a Beechcraft T-34B. The simplicity of this technique and its proven applicability to sailplanes and small aircraft is well known. However, the method fails to account for airframe-propulsion system
Experimental studies on the impact properties of water ice
Experimental studies on the impact of ice particles at very low velocity were continued. These measurements have applications in the dynamics of Saturn's rings. Initially data were obtained on the coefficient of restitution for ice spheres of one radius of curvature. The type of measurements were expanded to include restitution data for balls with a variety of surfaces as well as sticking forces between ice particles. Significant improvements were made to this experiment, the most important being the construction of a new apparatus. The new apparatus consists of a smaller version of the disk pendulum and a stainless steel, double-walled cryostat. The apparatus has proved to be a significant improvement over the old one. Measurements can now be made at temperatures near 90 K, comparable to the temperature of the environment of Saturn's rings, and with much greater temperature stability. It was found that a roughened contact surface or the presence of frost can cause a much larger change in the restitution measure than the geometrical effect of the radius of curvature
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