27 research outputs found

    Efecto de la modificación de la tubería de salida en filtros de arena con brazos colectores

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    Los filtros presurizados de arena utilizados para proteger de las obturaciones las instalaciones de riego por goteo se pueden dividir en tres zonas en función de su comportamiento hidráulico: 1) entrada del agua, 2) lecho de arena, y 3) salida del agua. Estudios anteriores realizados para optimizar el funcionamiento hidráulico de este tipo de filtros se centraron en la zona de entrada y en el lecho de arena, proponiendo distintos cambios en el diseño tanto del difusor en la zona de entrada como del drenaje del lecho de arena. En el presente trabajo se analizan las consecuencias de modificar la zona de salida del agua de un filtro comercial de arena con brazos colectores sin variar su sistema de drenaje. El sistema original de salida del agua consistía en una tubería horizontal conectada a 10 brazos horizontales. Cinco diseños alternativos que diferían en su área transversal (original o doble), orientación (horizontal o vertical) y número (simple o doble) fueron numéricamente estudiados mediante dinámica de fluidos computacional en cuatro condiciones distintas de operación (dos alturas de lecho (160 y 260 mm) y dos caudales (6 y 12 m3 h-1)). La comparación de estos diseños con el comercial indicó que: 1) una tubería de salida con el doble del área transversal redujo la caída de presión total del filtro un 12% e incrementó la uniformidad del flujo del agua entre brazos colectores; 2) una doble tubería de salida conllevó un comportamiento simétrico del caudal respecto el brazo central pero no impidió que por el brazo central continuará circulando menor cantidad de agua que por los otros brazos colectores; y 3) una salida de agua vertical de igual diámetro que la comercial causó una caída de presión similar pero, en cambio, aumentó considerablemente la uniformidad del flujo entre los distintos brazos

    Comportamiento hidráulico de un filtro de arena con brazos colectores para instalaciones de riego por goteo. Póster

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    La dinámica de fluidos computacional (CFD) permite estudiar hidrodinámicamente distintos equipos de riego como los filtros. Objetivo: analizar el comportamiento de un filtro de arena con drenaje de brazos colectores mediante CFD para identificar mejoras de diseño

    Dispersal probability distributions and the wave-front speed problem

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    The speed and width of front solutions to reaction-dispersal models are analyzed both analytically and numerically. We perform our analysis for Laplace and Gaussian distribution kernels, both for delayed and nondelayed models. The results are discussed in terms of the characteristic parameters of the models

    The effect of atmospheric absorption of sunlight on the runaway greenhouse point

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    The longwave emission of planetary atmospheres that contain a condensable absorbing gas in the infrared (i.e., longwave), which is in equilibrium with its liquid phase at the surface, may exhibit an upper bound. Here we analyze the effect of the atmospheric absorption of sunlight on this radiation limit. We assume that the atmospheric absorption of infrared radiation is independent of wavelength except within the spectral width of the atmospheric window, where it is zero. The temperature profile in radiative equilibrium is obtained analytically as a function of the longwave optical thickness. For illustrative purposes, numerical values for the infrared atmospheric absorption (i.e., greenhouse effect) and the liquid vapor equilibrium curve of the condensable absorbing gas refer to water. Values for the atmospheric absorption of sunlight (i.e., antigreenhouse effect) take a wide range since our aim is to provide a qualitative view of their effects. We find that atmospheres with a transparent region in the infrared spectrum do not present an absolute upper bound on the infrared emission. This result may be also found in atmospheres opaque at all infrared wavelengths if the fraction of absorbed sunlight in the atmosphere increases with the longwave opacit

    Time-delayed fronts from biased random walks

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    We generalize a previous model of time-delayed reaction–diffusion fronts (Fort and Méndez 1999 Phys. Rev. Lett. 82 867) to allow for a bias in the microscopic random walk of particles or individuals. We also present a second model which takes the time order of events (diffusion and reproduction) into account. As an example, we apply them to the human invasion front across the USA in the 19th century. The corrections relative to the previous model are substantial. Our results are relevant to physical and biological systems with anisotropic fronts, including particle diffusion in disordered lattices, population invasions, the spread of epidemics, et

    States of maximum entropy production in a onedimensional vertical model with convective adjustment

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    We investigate the hypothesis that the atmosphere is constrained to maximize its entropy production by using a one-dimensional (1-D) vertical model. We prescribe the lapse rate in the convective layer as that of the standard troposphere. The assumption that convection sustains a critical lapse rate was absent in previous studies, which focused on the vertical distribution of climatic variables, since such a convective adjustment reduces the degrees of freedom of the system and may prevent the application of the maximum entropy production (MEP) principle. This is not the case in the radiative–convective model (RCM) developed here, since we accept a discontinuity of temperatures at the surface similar to that adopted in many RCMs. For current conditions, the MEP state gives a difference between the ground temperature and the air temperature at the surface ≈10 K. In comparison, conventional RCMs obtain a discontinuity ≈2 K only. However, the surface boundary layer velocity in the MEP state appears reasonable (≈3 m s-¹). Moreover, although the convective flux at the surface in MEP states is almost uniform in optically thick atmospheres, it reaches a maximum value for an optical thickness similar to current conditions. This additional result may support the maximum convection hypothesis suggested by Paltridge (1978

    Progress in front propagation research

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    We review the progress in the field of front propagation in recent years. We survey many physical, biophysical and cross-disciplinary applications, including reduced-variable models of combustion flames, Reid's paradox of rapid forest range expansions, the European colonization of North America during the 19th century, the Neolithic transition in Europe from 13 000 to 5000 years ago, the description of subsistence boundaries, the formation of cultural boundaries, the spread of genetic mutations, theory and experiments on virus infections, models of cancer tumors, etc. Recent theoretical advances are unified in a single framework, encompassing very diverse systems such as those with biased random walks, distributed delays, sequential reaction and dispersion, cohabitation models, age structure and systems with several interacting species. Directions for future progress are outline

    Extremal climatic states simulated by a 2-dimensional model Part II: Different climatic scenarios

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    Different climatic simulations have been obtained by using a 2-Dim horizontal energy balancemodel (EBM), which has been constrained to satisfy several extremal principles on dissipationand convection. Moreover, 2 different versions of the model with fixed and variable cloud-coverhave been used. The assumption of an extremal type of behaviour for the climatic system canacquire additional support depending on the similarities found with measured data for pastconditions as well as with usual projections for possible future scenario

    Extremal principle of entropy production in the climate system

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    Paltridge found reasonable values for the most significant climatic variables through maximizing the material transport part of entropy production by using a simple box model. Here, we analyse Paltridge's box model to obtain the energy and the entropy balance equations separately. Derived expressions for global entropy production, which is a function of the radiation field, and even its material transport component, are shown to be different from those used by Paltridge. Plausible climatic states are found at extrema of these parameters. Feasible results are also obtained by minimizing the radiation part of entropy production, in agreement with one of Planck's results, Finally, globally averaged values of the entropy flux of radiation and material entropy production are obtained for two dynamical extreme cases: an earth with uniform temperature, and an earth in radiative equilibrium at each latitudinal poin

    Periodic Solutions in Low-Dimensional Climatic Models

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    Classic climatic models use constitutive laws without any response time. A more realistic approach to the natural processes governing climate dynamics must introduce response time for heat and radiation fluxes. Extended irreversible thermodynamics (EIT) is a good thermodynamical framework for introducing nonclassical constitutive laws. In the present study EIT has been used to analyze a Budyko–Sellers one-dimensional energybalance model developed by G. R. North. The results present self-sustained periodic oscillations when the response time is greater than a critical value. The high-frequency (few kiloyears) damped and nondamped oscillations obtained can be related to abrupt climatic changes without any variation in the external forcing of the syste
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