19,452 research outputs found
Flight test techniques for wake-vortex minimization studies
Flight test techniques developed for use in a study of wake turbulence and used recently in flight studies of wake minimization methods are discussed. Flow visualization was developed as a technique for qualitatively assessing minimization methods and is required in flight test procedures for making quantitative measurements. The quantitative techniques are the measurement of the upset dynamics of an aircraft encountering the wake and the measurement of the wake velocity profiles. Descriptions of the instrumentation and the data reduction and correlation methods are given
Evaluation of a Wake Vortex Upset Model Based on Simultaneous Measurements of Wake Velocities and Probe-Aircraft Accelerations
Simultaneous measurements were made of the upset responses experienced and the wake velocities encountered by an instrumented Learjet probe aircraft behind a Boeing 747 vortex-generating aircraft. The vortex-induced angular accelerations experienced could be predicted within 30% by a mathematical upset response model when the characteristics of the wake were well represented by the vortex model. The vortex model used in the present study adequately represented the wake flow field when the vortices dissipated symmetrically and only one vortex pair existed in the wake
An equation of state for oxygen and nitrogen
Preliminary equations of state are presented for oxygen and nitrogen which provide accurate representations of the available P-density-T data for both fluids. The equation for nitrogen is applicable for temperatures from 70 K to 1300 K at pressures to 10,000 atmospheres, and the equation for oxygen for temperatures from 70 K to 323 K at pressures to 350 atmospheres. Deviations of calculated densities from representative experimental data are included. A volume-explicit equation of state for oxygen to be used in estimating density values in the range of applicability of the equation of state is also presented
The thermodynamic properties of oxygen and nitrogen. Part 1: Thermodynamic properties of nitrogen from 115 R to 3500 R with pressures to 150000 psia
An equation of state is presented for liquid and gaseous nitrogen for temperatures from 115 R to 3500 R and pressures to 150,000 psia. All of the pressure-density-temperature data available from the published literature have been reviewed, and appropriate corrections have been identified and applied to bring experimental temperatures into accord with the International Practical Temperature Scale of 1968. Comparisons of property values calculated from the equation of state to measured values are included to illustrate the accuracy of the equation in representing the data. The coefficients of the equation of state were determined by a weighted least squares fit to selected published data and, simultaneously, to constant volume data determined by corresponding states analysis from oxygen data, and to data which define the phase equilibrium criteria for the saturated liquid and saturated vapor. The methods of weighting the various data for simultaneous fitting are presented and discussed. The equation of state is estimated to be accurate to within 0.5 percent in the liquid region, to within 0.1 percent for supercritical isotherms up to 15,000 psia, and to within 0.3 percent from 15,000 to 150,000 psia
Rate theory for correlated processes: Double-jumps in adatom diffusion
We study the rate of activated motion over multiple barriers, in particular
the correlated double-jump of an adatom diffusing on a missing-row
reconstructed Platinum (110) surface. We develop a Transition Path Theory,
showing that the activation energy is given by the minimum-energy trajectory
which succeeds in the double-jump. We explicitly calculate this trajectory
within an effective-medium molecular dynamics simulation. A cusp in the
acceptance region leads to a sqrt{T} prefactor for the activated rate of
double-jumps. Theory and numerical results agree
Selfduality for coupled Potts models on the triangular lattice
We present selfdual manifolds for coupled Potts models on the triangular
lattice. We exploit two different techniques: duality followed by decimation,
and mapping to a related loop model. The latter technique is found to be
superior, and it allows to include three-spin couplings. Starting from three
coupled models, such couplings are necessary for generating selfdual solutions.
A numerical study of the case of two coupled models leads to the identification
of novel critical points
Cosmic rays in early star-forming galaxies and their effects on the interstellar medium
Galaxies at high redshifts with strong star formation are sources of
high-energy cosmic rays. These cosmic rays interact with the baryon and
radiation fields of the galactic environment via photo-pair, photo-pion and
proton-proton processes to produce charged and neutral pions, neutrons and
protons. The cosmic rays thereby deposit energy into the interstellar medium
(ISM) as they propagate. We show how energy transport and deposition by ultra
high-energy cosmic rays is regulated by the evolution of the galaxy, in
particular by the development of the galactic magnetic field. We show how the
particle-driven energy deposition can influence the thermal evolution of the
host and its surroundings. Using a parametric protogalaxy model, we calculate
the heating effect on the ISM as the cosmic rays are increasingly confined by
the magnetic evolution of the galaxy.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures; Proceedings of the 35th International Cosmic Ray
Conference (ICRC2017), 10-20 July 2017, Bexco, Busan, Korea -
PoS(ICRC2017)28
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