26,689 research outputs found
Flight investigation of insect contamination and its alleviation
An investigation of leading edge contamination by insects was conducted with a JetStar airplane instrumented to detect transition on the outboard leading edge flap and equipped with a system to spray the leading edge in flight. The results of airline type flights with the JetStar indicated that insects can contaminate the leading edge during takeoff and climbout. The results also showed that the insects collected on the leading edges at 180 knots did not erode at cruise conditions for a laminar flow control airplane and caused premature transition of the laminar boundary layer. None of the superslick and hydrophobic surfaces tested showed any significant advantages in alleviating the insect contamination problem. While there may be other solutions to the insect contamination problem, the results of these tests with a spray system showed that a continouous water spray while encountering the insects is effective in preventing insect contamination of the leading edges
Applications of thermal energy storage to process heat and waste heat recovery in the iron and steel industry
The system identified operates from the primary arc furnace evacuation system as a heat source. Energy from the fume stream is stored as sensible energy in a solid medium (packed bed). A steam-driven turbine is arranged to generate power for peak shaving. A parametric design approach is presented since the overall system design, at optimum payback is strongly dependent upon the nature of the electric pricing structure. The scope of the project was limited to consideration of available technology so that industry-wide application could be achieved by 1985. A search of the literature, coupled with interviews with representatives of major steel producers, served as the means whereby the techniques and technologies indicated for the specific site are extrapolated to the industry as a whole and to the 1985 time frame. The conclusion of the study is that by 1985, a national yearly savings of 1.9 million barrels of oil could be realized through recovery of waste heat from primary arc furnace fume gases on an industry-wide basis. Economic studies indicate that the proposed system has a plant payback time of approximately 5 years
Solar photochemical process engineering for production of fuels and chemicals
The engineering costs and performance of a nominal 25,000 scmd (883,000 scfd) photochemical plant to produce dihydrogen from water were studied. Two systems were considered, one based on flat-plate collector/reactors and the other on linear parabolic troughs. Engineering subsystems were specified including the collector/reactor, support hardware, field transport piping, gas compression equipment, and balance-of-plant (BOP) items. Overall plant efficiencies of 10.3 and 11.6% are estimated for the flat-plate and trough systems, respectively, based on assumed solar photochemical efficiencies of 12.9 and 14.6%. Because of the opposing effects of concentration ratio and operating temperature on efficiency, it was concluded that reactor cooling would be necessary with the trough system. Both active and passive cooling methods were considered. Capital costs and energy costs, for both concentrating and non-concentrating systems, were determined and their sensitivity to efficiency and economic parameters were analyzed. The overall plant efficiency is the single most important factor in determining the cost of the fuel
Review of solar fuel-producing quantum conversion processes
The status and potential of fuel-producing solar photochemical processes are discussed. Research focused on splitting water to produce dihydrogen and is at a relatively early stage of development. Current emphasis is primarily directed toward understanding the basic chemistry underlying such quantum conversion processes. Theoretical analyses by various investigators predict a limiting thermodynamic efficiency of 31% for devices with a single photosystem operating with unfocused sunlight at 300 K. When non-idealities are included, it appears unlikely that actual devices will have efficiencies greater than 12 to 15%. Observed efficiencies are well below theoretical limits. Cyclic homogeneous photochemical processes for splitting water have efficiencies considerably less than 1%. Efficiency can be significantly increased by addition of a sacrificial reagent; however, such systems are no longer cyclic and it is doubtful that they would be economical on a commercial scale. The observed efficiencies for photoelectrochemical processes are also low but such systems appear more promising than homogeneous photochemical systems. Operating and systems options, including operation at elevated temperature and hybrid and coupled quantum-thermal conversion processes, are also considered
Feasibility study for a scanning celestial attitude determination system SCADS on the IMP spacecraft Final report
System design analysis to establish feasibility of using electro-optical celestial scanning sensor on IMP spacecraft for determination of spacecraft attitude by star measurement
Optical Continuum and Emission-Line Variability of Seyfert 1 Galaxies
We present the light curves obtained during an eight-year program of optical
spectroscopic monitoring of nine Seyfert 1 galaxies: 3C 120, Akn 120, Mrk 79,
Mrk 110, Mrk 335, Mrk 509, Mrk 590, Mrk 704, and Mrk 817. All objects show
significant variability in both the continuum and emission-line fluxes. We use
cross-correlation analysis to derive the sizes of the broad Hbeta-emitting
regions based on emission-line time delays, or lags. We successfully measure
time delays for eight of the nine sources, and find values ranging from about
two weeks to a little over two months. Combining the measured lags and widths
of the variable parts of the emission lines allows us to make virial mass
estimates for the active nucleus in each galaxy. The virial masses are in the
range 10^{7-8} solar masses.Comment: 24 pages, 16 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
IMPACT OF EXPORTS ON THE U.S. BEEF INDUSTRY
Policy and programmatic decisions dealing with beef exports require good information as to the impact of exports on the domestic beef industry. This paper utilizes a partial equilibrium model of the world beef market to assess the impacts on the U.S. beef sector of increases in real income in major beef importing countries, the impacts of changes in the prices of pork and poultry products, and the impacts of changes in the price of feedgrains. A one percent increase in real GDP in Canada, Japan, Mexico, and South Korea yielded a 1.6 percent increase in U.S. exports of high-quality beef. This increase in exports leads to approximately a 29.2 million pound increase U.S. beef production on a retail weight basis. The increase in export demand also yields an increase in beef prices of approximately 120 box of beef and 70 fed steer. One percent increases in the prices of pork and poultry products yield a smaller 0.8 percent increase in U.S. beef exports, but also lead to a 1.5 percent increase in U.S. imports of low-quality beef. This is due to U.S. consumers viewing low-quality beef as a substitute for pork and poultry. Finally, a one percent increase in the price of feedgrains reduces U.S. beef exports by 0.4 percent. This is due to a reduction in U.S. beef production from the increased feeding costs.International Relations/Trade, Livestock Production/Industries,
Keplerian Motion of Broad-Line Region Gas as Evidence for Supermassive Black Holes in Active Galactic Nuclei
Emission-line variability data on NGC 5548 argue strongly for the existence
of a mass of order 7 x 10^7 solar masses within the inner few light days of the
nucleus in the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 5548. The time-delayed response of the
emission lines to continuum variations is used to infer the size of the
line-emitting region, and these determinations are combined with measurements
of the Doppler widths of the variable line components to estimate a virial
mass. The data for several different emission lines spanning an order of
magnitude in distance from the central source show the expected V proportional
to r^{-1/2} correlation and are consistent with a single value for the mass.Comment: 9 pages, 2 Figures. accepted by ApJ Letter
b-quark decay in the collinear approximation
The semileptonic decay of a b-quark, b--> c l nu, is considered in the
relativistic limit where the decay products are approximately collinear.
Analytic results for the double differential lepton energy distributions are
given for finite charm-quark mass. Their use for the fast simulation of
isolated lepton backgrounds from heavy quark decays is discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, submitted to Phys.Rev.
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