37,528 research outputs found
Thermal stress analysis of ceramic gas-path seal components for aircraft turbines
Stress and temperature distributions were evaluated numerically for a blade-tip seal system proposed for gas turbine applications. The seal consists of an abradable ceramic layer on metallic backing with intermediate layers between the ceramic layer and metal substrate. The most severe stresses in the seal, as far as failure is concerned, are tensile stresses at the top of the ceramic layer and shear and normal stresses at the layer interfaces. All these stresses reach their maximum values during the deceleration phase of a test engine cycle. A parametric study was carried out to evaluate the influence of various design parameters on these critical stress values. The influences of material properties and geometric parameters of the ceramic, intermediate, and backing layers were investigated. After the parametric study was completed, a seal system was designed which incorporated materials with beneficial elastic and thermal properties in each layer of the seal. An analysis of the proposed seal design shows an appreciable decrease in the magnitude of the maximum critical stresses over those obtained with earlier configurations
How Hot Is Radiation?
A self-consistent approach to nonequilibrium radiation temperature is
introduced using the distribution of the energy over states. We begin
rigorously with ensembles of Hilbert spaces and end with practical examples
based mainly on the far from equilibrium radiation of lasers. We show that very
high, but not infinite, laser radiation temperatures depend on intensity and
frequency. Heuristic "temperatures" derived from a misapplication of
equilibrium arguments are shown to be incorrect. More general conditions for
the validity of nonequilibrium temperatures are also established.Comment: 26 pages, revised, LaTeX, 3 encapsulated PostScript figure
Emulation of multivariate simulators using thin-plate splines with application to atmospheric dispersion
It is often desirable to build a statistical emulator of a complex computer simulator in order to perform analysis which would otherwise be computationally infeasible. We propose methodology to model multivariate output from a computer simulator taking into account output structure in the responses. The utility of this approach is demonstrated by applying it to a chemical and biological hazard prediction model. Predicting the hazard area which results from an accidental or deliberate chemical or biological release is imperative in civil and military planning and also in emergency response. The hazard area resulting from such a release is highly structured in space and we therefore propose the use of a thin-plate spline to capture the spatial structure and fit a Gaussian process emulator to the coefficients of the resultant basis functions. We compare and contrast four different techniques for emulating multivariate output: dimension-reduction using (i) a fully Bayesian approach with a principal component basis, (ii) a fully Bayesian approach with a thin-plate spline basis, assuming that the basis coefficients are independent, and (iii) a “plug-in” Bayesian approach with a thin-plate spline basis and a separable covariance structure; and (iv) a functional data modeling approach using a tensor-product (separable) Gaussian process. We develop methodology for the two thin-plate spline emulators and demonstrate that these emulators significantly outperform the principal component emulator. Further, the separable thin-plate spline emulator, which accounts for the dependence between basis coefficients, provides substantially more realistic quantification of uncertainty, and is also computationally more tractable, allowing fast emulation. For high resolution output data, it also offers substantial predictive and computational ad- vantages over the tensor-product Gaussian process emulator
A Selected Ion Flow Tube Study of the Reactions of Several Cations with the Group 6B Hexafluorides SF6, SeF6, and TeF6
The first investigation of the ion chemistry of SeF and TeF is presented. Using a selected ion flow tube, the thermal rate coefficients and ion product distributions have been determined at 300 K for the reactions of fourteen atomic and molecular cations, namely HO, CF, CF, CF, HO, NO, O, CO, CO, N, N, Ar, F and Ne (in order of increasing recombination energy), with SeF and TeF. The results are compared with those from the reactions of these ions with SF, for which the reactions with CF, CF, NO and F are reported for the first time. Several distinct processes are observed amongst the large number of reactions studied, including dissociative charge transfer, and F, F, F and F abstraction from the neutral reactant molecule to the reagent ion. The dissociative charge transfer channels are discussed in relation to vacuum ultraviolet photoelectron and threshold photoelectron-photoion coincidence spectra of XF (X = S, Se, and Te). For reagent ions whose recombination energies lie between the first dissociative ionisation limit, XF XF + F + e, and the onset of ionisation of the XF molecule, the results suggest that if dissociative charge transfer occurs, it proceeds via an intimate encounter. For those reagent ions whose recombination energies are greater than the onset of ionisation, long-range electron transfer may occur depending on whether certain physical factors apply, for example non-zero Franck-Condon overlap. From the reaction kinetics, limits for the heats of formation of SeF, SeF, TeF and TeF at 298 K have been obtained; H(SeF) < -369 kJ mol, H(SeF) < -621 kJ mol, H(TeF) > -570 kJ mol, and H(TeF) < -822 kJ mol
The effects of visual deprivation on adaptation to a rotating environment
Visual deprivation effects on adaptation to rotating environment - Motion sickness studie
A comparison of effectiveness of some antimotion sickness drugs using recommended and larger than recommended doses as tested in the slow rotation room
Comparison of effectiveness of antimotion sickness drugs tested in human centrifug
Symptomatology under storm conditions in the north atlantic in control subjects and in persons with bilateral labyrinthine defects
Motion sickness under conditions of stress and anxiety - role of vestibular apparatu
Particle Swarm Optimization and gravitational wave data analysis: Performance on a binary inspiral testbed
The detection and estimation of gravitational wave (GW) signals belonging to
a parameterized family of waveforms requires, in general, the numerical
maximization of a data-dependent function of the signal parameters. Due to
noise in the data, the function to be maximized is often highly multi-modal
with numerous local maxima. Searching for the global maximum then becomes
computationally expensive, which in turn can limit the scientific scope of the
search. Stochastic optimization is one possible approach to reducing
computational costs in such applications. We report results from a first
investigation of the Particle Swarm Optimization (PSO) method in this context.
The method is applied to a testbed motivated by the problem of detection and
estimation of a binary inspiral signal. Our results show that PSO works well in
the presence of high multi-modality, making it a viable candidate method for
further applications in GW data analysis.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
Computer Library Literature Review on Effectiveness of Antimotion Sickness Drugs
Physiological responses to antimotion sickness drugs - antihistamines, belladonnas, and phenothiazine
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