2,567 research outputs found
Frangible tube energy dissipation Patent
Energy dissipating shock absorbing system for land payload recovery or vehicle brakin
Break-up of metal tube makes one-time shock absorber, bars rebound
A frangible metal tube has the capability to dissipate the energy generated when a vehicle lands with excessive velocity. The tube is so placed that, at impact, it is forced against a die and, as it fragments, energy is absorbed
Laser anemometer measurements in a transonic axial-flow fan rotor
Laser anemometer surveys were made of the 3-D flow field in NASA rotor 67, a low aspect ratio transonic axial-flow fan rotor. The test rotor has a tip relative Mach number of 1.38. The flowfield was surveyed at design speed at near peak efficiency and near stall operating conditions. Data is presented in the form of relative Mach number and relative flow angle distributions on surfaces of revolution at nine spanwise locations evenly spaced from hub to tip. At each spanwise location, data was acquired upstream, within, and downstream of the rotor. Aerodynamic performance measurements and detailed rotor blade and annulus geometry are also presented so that the experimental results can be used as a test case for 3-D turbomachinery flow analysis codes
1,2-Diiodo-4,5-dimethylÂbenzene
The structure of the title compound, C8H8I2, conforms closely to the mm2 symmetry expected for the free molÂecule and is the first reported structure of a diiodoÂdimethylÂbenzene. Repulsion by neighboring I atoms and the neighboring methyl groups opposite to them results in a slight elongation of the molÂecule along the approximate twofold rotation axis that bisÂects the ring between the two I atoms. In the extended structure, the molÂecules form inversion-related pairs which are organized in approximately hexaÂgonal close-packed layers and the layers then stacked so that molÂecules in neighboring layers abut head-to-tail in a manner that optimizes dipole–dipole interÂactions
Requirements Study for System Implementation of an Atmospheric Laser Propagation Experiment Program, Volume II
Program planning, ground support and airborne equipment for laser space communication syste
The Waldmeier Effect in Sunspot Cycles
We discuss two aspects of the Waldmeier Effect, namely (1) the rise times of
sunspot cycles are anti-correlated to their strengths (WE1) and (2) the rates
of rise of the cycles are correlated to their strengths (WE2). From analysis of
four different data sets we conclude that both WE1 and WE2 exist in all the
data sets. We study these effects theoretically by introducing suitable
stochastic fluctuations in our regular solar dynamo model.Comment: Magnetic Coupling between the Interior and Atmosphere of the Sun;
Astrophysics and Space Science Proceeding
Magnetic Flux Transport at the Solar Surface
After emerging to the solar surface, the Sun's magnetic field displays a
complex and intricate evolution. The evolution of the surface field is
important for several reasons. One is that the surface field, and its dynamics,
sets the boundary condition for the coronal and heliospheric magnetic fields.
Another is that the surface evolution gives us insight into the dynamo process.
In particular, it plays an essential role in the Babcock-Leighton model of the
solar dynamo. Describing this evolution is the aim of the surface flux
transport model. The model starts from the emergence of magnetic bipoles.
Thereafter, the model is based on the induction equation and the fact that
after emergence the magnetic field is observed to evolve as if it were purely
radial. The induction equation then describes how the surface flows --
differential rotation, meridional circulation, granular, supergranular flows,
and active region inflows -- determine the evolution of the field (now taken to
be purely radial). In this paper, we review the modeling of the various
processes that determine the evolution of the surface field. We restrict our
attention to their role in the surface flux transport model. We also discuss
the success of the model and some of the results that have been obtained using
this model.Comment: 39 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in Space Sci. Re
Comparisons of Supergranule Characteristics During the Solar Minima of Cycles 22/23 and 23/24
Supergranulation is a component of solar convection that manifests itself on
the photosphere as a cellular network of around 35 Mm across, with a turnover
lifetime of 1-2 days. It is strongly linked to the structure of the magnetic
field. The horizontal, divergent flows within supergranule cells carry local
field lines to the cell boundaries, while the rotational properties of
supergranule upflows may contribute to the restoration of the poloidal field as
part of the dynamo mechanism that controls the solar cycle. The solar minimum
at the transition from cycle 23 to 24 was notable for its low level of activity
and its extended length. It is of interest to study whether the convective
phenomena that influences the solar magnetic field during this time differed in
character to periods of previous minima. This study investigates three
characteristics (velocity components, sizes and lifetimes) of solar
supergranulation. Comparisons of these characteristics are made between the
minima of cycles 22/23 and 23/24 using MDI Doppler data from 1996 and 2008,
respectively. It is found that whereas the lifetimes are equal during both
epochs (around 18 h), the sizes are larger in 1996 (35.9 +/- 0.3 Mm) than in
2008 (35.0 +/- 0.3 Mm), while the dominant horizontal velocity flows are weaker
(139 +/- 1 m/s in 1996; 141 +/- 1 m/s in 2008). Although numerical differences
are seen, they are not conclusive proof of the most recent minimum being
inherently unusual.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures. Solar Physics, in pres
Experimental and computational results from a large low-speed centrifugal impeller
An experimental and computational investigation of the NASA Low-Speed Centrifugal Compressor (LSCC) flow field has been conducted using laser anemometry and Dawes' 3D viscous code. The experimental configuration consists of a backswept impeller followed by a vaneless diffuser. Measurements of the three-dimensional velocity field were acquired at several measurement planes through the compressor. The measurements describe both the throughflow and secondary velocity field along each measurement plane and in several cases provide details of the flow within the blade boundary layers. The experimental and computational results provide a clear understanding of the development of the throughflow momentum wake which is characteristic of centrifugal compressors
A guanosine 5′-triphosphate-dependent protein kinase is localized in the outer envelope membrane of pea chloroplasts
A guanosine 5-triphosphate (GTP)-dependent protein kinase was detected in preparations of outer chloroplast envelope membranes of pea (Pisum sativum L.) chloroplasts. The protein-kinase activity was capable of phosphorylating several envelope-membrane proteins. The major phosphorylated products were 23- and 32.5-kilo-dalton proteins of the outer envelope membrane. Several other envelope proteins were labeled to a lesser extent. Following acid hydrolysis of the labeled proteins, most of the label was detected as phosphoserine with only minor amounts detected as phosphothreonine. Several criteria were used to distinguish the GTP-dependent protein kinase from an ATP-dependent kinase also present in the outer envelope membrane. The ATP-dependent kinase phosphorylated a very different set of envelope-membrane proteins. Heparin inhibited the GTP-dependent kinase but had little effect upon the ATP-dependent enzyme. The GTP-dependent enzyme accepted phosvitin as an external protein substrate whereas the ATP-dependent enzyme did not. The outer membrane of the chloroplast envelope also contained a phosphotransferase capable of transferring labeled phosphate from [-32P]GTP to ADP to yield (-32P]ATP. Consequently, addition of ADP to a GTP-dependent protein-kinase assay resulted in a switch in the pattern of labeled products from that seen with GTP to that typically seen with ATP
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