19,548 research outputs found

    Searches for radio transients

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    Exploration of the transient Universe is an exciting and fast-emerging area within radio astronomy. Known transient phenomena range in time scales from sub-nanoseconds to years or longer, thus spanning a huge range in time domain and hinting a rich diversity in their underlying physical processes. Transient phenomena are likely locations of explosive or dynamic events and they offer tremendous potential to uncover new physics and astrophysics. A number of upcoming next-generation radio facilities and recent advances in computing and instrumentation have provided a much needed impetus for this field which has remained a relatively uncharted territory for the past several decades. In this paper we focus mainly on the class of phenomena that occur on very short time scales (i.e. from ∼\sim milliseconds to ∼\sim nanoseconds), known as {\it fast transients}, the detections of which involve considerable signal processing and data management challenges, given the high time and frequency resolutions required in their explorations, the role of propagation effects to be considered and a multitude of deleterious effects due to radio frequency interference. We will describe the techniques, strategies and challenges involved in their detections and review the world-wide efforts currently under way, both through scientific discoveries enabled by the ongoing large-scale surveys at Parkes and Arecibo, as well as technical developments involving the exploratory use of multi-element array instruments such as VLBA and GMRT. Such developments will undoubtedly provide valuable inputs as next-generation arrays such as LOFAR and ASKAP are designed and commissioned. With their wider fields of view and higher sensitivities, these instruments, and eventually the SKA, hold great potential to revolutionise this relatively nascent field, thereby opening up exciting new science avenues in astrophysics.Comment: To appear in the special issue of the Bulletin of the Astronomical Society of India on Transients at different wavelengths, eds D.J. Saikia and D.A. Green. 21 pages, 5 figures. http://www.ncra.tifr.res.in/~bas

    Experimental investigations on the impedance behavior of a short, cylindrical antenna in a lossy magnetoplasma

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    Impedance of cylindrical antennas in lossy magnetoplasmas and interpretations of maxima in cosmic noise intensities and ionogram

    Experimental on-stream elimination of resonant whirl in a large centrifugal compressor

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    Resonant whirl condition during operation of a multi-stage centrifugal compressor at higher than anticipated speeds and loads was reported. The condition was diagnosed by a large scale computerized Machinery Condition Monitoring System (MACMOS). This computerized system verified that the predominant subsynchronous whirl frequency locked in on the first resonant frequency of the compressor rotor and did not vary with compressor speed. Compressor stability calculations showed the rotor system had excessive hearing stiffness and inadequate effective damping. An optimum bearing design which was developed to minimize the unbalance response and to maximize the stability threshold is presented

    A theoretical investigation of noise reduction through the cylindrical fuselage of a twin-engine, propeller-driven aircraft

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    Interior noise in the fuselage of a twin-engine, propeller-driven aircraft with two propellers rotating in opposite directions is studied analytically. The fuselage was modeled as a stiffened cylindrical shell with simply supported ends, and the effects of stringers and frames were averaged over the shell surface. An approximate mathematical model of the propeller noise excitation was formulated which includes some of the propeller noise characteristics such as sweeping pressure waves around the sidewalls due to propeller rotation and the localized nature of the excitation with the highest levels near the propeller plane. Results are presented in the form of noise reduction, which is the difference between the levels of external and interior noise. The influence of propeller noise characteristics on the noise reduction was studied. The results indicate that the sweep velocity of the excitation around the fuselage sidewalls is critical to noise reduction

    Densification and Structural Transitions in Networks that Grow by Node Copying

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    We introduce a growing network model---the copying model---in which a new node attaches to a randomly selected target node and, in addition, independently to each of the neighbors of the target with copying probability pp. When p<12p<\frac{1}{2}, this algorithm generates sparse networks, in which the average node degree is finite. A power-law degree distribution also arises, with a non-universal exponent whose value is determined by a transcendental equation in pp. In the sparse regime, the network is "normal", e.g., the relative fluctuations in the number of links are asymptotically negligible. For p≥12p\geq \frac{1}{2}, the emergent networks are dense (the average degree increases with the number of nodes NN) and they exhibit intriguing structural behaviors. In particular, the NN-dependence of the number of mm-cliques (complete subgraphs of mm nodes) undergoes m−1m-1 transitions from normal to progressively more anomalous behavior at a mm-dependent critical values of pp. Different realizations of the network, which start from the same initial state, exhibit macroscopic fluctuations in the thermodynamic limit---absence of self averaging. When linking to second neighbors of the target node can occur, the number of links asymptotically grows as N2N^2 as N→∞N\to\infty, so that the network is effectively complete as N→∞N\to \infty.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figure
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