6,305 research outputs found
An investigation of the lower atmosphere of Venus
Clouds of lower Venusian atmospher
Analysis of the depletion of a stored aerosol in low gravity
The depletion of an aerosol stored in a container has been studied in l-g and in low gravity. Models were developed for sedimentation, coagulation and diffusional losses to the walls. The overall depletion caused by these three mechanisms is predicted to be of order 5 to 8 percent per hour in terrestrial conditions, which agrees with laboratory experience. Applying the models to a low gravity situation indicates that there only coagulation will be significant. (Gravity influences diffusional losses because of convection currents caused by random temperature gradients). For the types of aerosol studied, the rate of depletion of particles should be somewhat less than 0.001 N percent per hour, where N is the concentration per cu cm
Design, fabrication and delivery of a prototype saturator for ACPL
The design configuration and performance characteristics of a saturator developed to provide ground-based simulation for some of the experiments for ACPL-1 first flights of Spacelab are described, some difficulties encountered with the apparatus are discussed, and recommendations concerning testing of this type of instrument are presented. The saturators provide a means of accurately fixing the water vapor mixing ratio of an aerosol sample. Dew point temperatures from almost freezing to ambient room temperatures can be attained with high precision. The instruments can accommodate aerosol flow rates approaching 1000 cc/s. Provisions were made to inject aerosols upstream of these saturators, although downstream injection can be accomplished as well. A device of this type will be used in the ACPL-1 to condition various aerosols delivered concurrently to a CFD, expansion chamber, and static diffusion chamber used in zero gravity cloud-forming experiments. The saturator was designed to meet the requirements projected for the flight instrument
Inelastic neutron scattering signal from deconfined spinons in a fractionalized antiferromagnet
We calculate the contribution of deconfined spinons to inelastic neutron
scattering (INS) in the fractionalized antiferromagnet (AF*), introduced
elsewhere. We find that the presence of free spin-1/2 charge-less excitations
leads to a continuum INS signal above the Neel gap. This signal is found above
and in addition to the usual spin-1 magnon signal, which to lowest order is the
same as in the more conventional confined antiferromagnet. We calculate the
relative weights of these two signals and find that the spinons contribute to
the longitudinal response, where the magnon signal is absent to lowest order.
Possible higher-order effects of interactions between magnons and spinons in
the AF* phase are also discussed.Comment: 9 page
EDQNM closure: A homogeneous simulation to support it. A quasi-homogeneous simulation to disprove it
It is known that two-point closures are useful tools for understanding and predicting turbulence. Among the various closures, the Eddy Damped Quasi-Normal Markovian (EDQNM) approach is one of the simplest and, at the same time, most useful. Direct numerical simulations (DNS) can provide information that can be used to test the validity of two-point theories. It is the purpose of the present work to use DNS to validate, or improve upon, EDQNM. A case was selected for which EDQNM is known to give satisfactory results: homogeneous isotropic turbulence. Quantities were then evaluated which may be used to test the assumptions of two-point closure approximations: spectral Lagrangian time scales. The goal was to make a careful and refined study to validate the EDQNM theory. A reference case was built for which EDQNM is likely to give poor results. An attempt to generate a quasi-homogeneous turbulent field containing organized structures, was built by artifically injecting them in the initial conditions. The results of direct simulations using such initial conditions are expected to provide a challenge for EDQNM since this kind of field is simple enough to allow comparisons with two-point theories, but at the same time contains coherent structures which cannot be expected to be accurately accounted for by closures based on expansions about Gaussianity
Magnetic spectrum of the two-dimensional antiferromagnet La2CoO4 studied by inelastic neutron scattering
We report measurements of the magnetic excitation spectrum of the layered
antiferromagnet La2CoO4 by time-of-flight neutron inelastic scattering. In the
energy range probed in our experiments (0-250 meV) the magnetic spectrum
consists of spin-wave modes with strong in-plane dispersion extending up to 60
meV, and a nearly dispersionless peak at 190 meV. The spin-wave modes exhibit a
small (~1 meV) dispersion along the magnetic zone boundary. We show that the
magnetic spectrum can be described very well by a model of a Heisenberg
antiferromagnet that includes the full spin and orbital degrees of freedom of
Co2+ in an axially-distorted crystal field. The collective magnetic dynamics
are found to be controlled by dominant nearest-neighbour exchange interactions,
strong XY-like single-ion anisotropy and a substantial unquenched orbital
angular momentum.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Investigation of correlation between full-scale and fifth-scale wind tunnel tests of a Bell helicopter Textron Model 222
Reasons for lack of correlation between data from a fifth-scale wind tunnel test of the Bell Helicopter Textron Model 222 and a full-scale test of the model 222 prototype in the NASA Ames 40-by 80-foot tunnel were investigated. This investigation centered around a carefully designed fifth-scale wind tunnel test of an accurately contoured model of the Model 222 prototype mounted on a replica of the full-scale mounting system. The improvement in correlation for drag characteristics in pitch and yaw with the fifth-scale model mounted on the replica system is shown. Interference between the model and mounting system was identified as a significant effect and was concluded to be a primary cause of the lack of correlation in the earlier tests
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