4,893 research outputs found

    Compensation for nonlinear effects due to high heat flux in thin-film thermometry

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    Compensation for nonlinear effects due to high heat flux in thin-film thermometr

    The NASA-Lewis program on fusion energy for space power and propulsion, 1958-1978

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    An historical synopsis is provided of the NASA-Lewis research program on fusion energy for space power and propulsion systems. It was initiated to explore the potential applications of fusion energy to space power and propulsion systems. Some fusion related accomplishments and program areas covered include: basic research on the Electric Field Bumpy Torus (EFBT) magnetoelectric fusion containment concept, including identification of its radial transport mechanism and confinement time scaling; operation of the Pilot Rig mirror machine, the first superconducting magnet facility to be used in plasma physics or fusion research; operation of the Superconducting Bumpy Torus magnet facility, first used to generate a toroidal magnetic field; steady state production of neutrons from DD reactions; studies of the direct conversion of plasma enthalpy to thrust by a direct fusion rocket via propellant addition and magnetic nozzles; power and propulsion system studies, including D(3)He power balance, neutron shielding, and refrigeration requirements; and development of large volume, high field superconducting and cryogenic magnet technology

    A Method for Determining Optimum Re-entry Trajectories

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    Determining optimum atmospheric reentry trajectories using Pontryagin maximum principl

    Plasticity in transmission strategies of the malaria parasite, Plasmodium chabaudi : environmental and genetic effects

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    Parasites may alter their behaviour to cope with changes in the within-host environment. In particular, investment in transmission may alter in response to the availability of parasite resources or host immune responses. However, experimental and theoretical studies have drawn conflicting conclusions regarding parasites' optimal (adaptive) responses to deterioration in habitat quality. We analyse data from acute infections with six genotypes of the rodent malaria species to quantify how investment in transmission (gametocytes) is influenced by the within-host environment. Using a minimum of modelling assumptions, we find that proportional investment in gametocytogenesis increases sharply with host anaemia and also increases at low parasite densities. Further, stronger dependence of investment on parasite density is associated with greater virulence of the parasite genotype. Our study provides a robust quantitative framework for studying parasites' responses to the host environment and whether these responses are adaptive, which is crucial for predicting the short-term and evolutionary impact of transmission-blocking treatments for parasitic diseases

    Top and Bottom: a Brane of Their Own

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    We consider extra dimensional descriptions of models where there are two separate strongly interacting sectors contributing to electroweak symmetry breaking (``topcolor'' type models). In the extra dimensional picture there would be two separate (anti-de Sitter) bulks meeting on the Planck brane, with each bulk having its own corresponding IR (TeV) brane. Sources for electroweak symmetry breaking can then be localized on both of these IR branes, while the different generations of fermions may be separated from each other. We describe the modes propagating in such a setup, and consider the cases where the electroweak symmetry breaking on either of the two IR branes come either from a higgsless scenario (via boundary conditions) or a (top-)Higgs. We show that the tension that exists between obtaining a large top quark mass and the correct value of the Zb\bar{b} couplings in ordinary higgsless models can be largely relieved in the higgsless--top-Higgs versions of the two IR brane models. This may also be true in the purely higgsless--higgsless case, however since that model is necessarily in the strongly coupled regime the tree-level results for the properties of the third generation may get large corrections. A necessary consequence of such models is the appearance of additional pseudo-Goldstone bosons (``top-pions''), which would be strongly coupled to the third generation.Comment: 34 pages, LaTeX, 6 figures. v2: figure 2 fixed, footnote, comments and references adde

    Relativistic Corrections in White Dwarf Asteroseismology

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    With the precision now afforded by modern space-based photometric observations from the retired K2 and current TESS missions, the effects of general relativity (GR) may be detectable in the light curves of pulsating white dwarfs (WDs). Almost all WD models are calculated using a Newtonian description of gravity and hydrodynamics. To determine if inclusion of GR leads to observable effects, we used idealized models of compact stars and made side-by-side comparison of mode periods computed using a (i) Newtonian and (ii) GR description of the equilibrium structure and nonradial pulsations. For application to white dwarfs, it is only necessary to include the first post-Newtonian (1PN) approximation to GR. The mathematical nature of the linear nonradial pulsation problem is then qualitatively unchanged and the GR corrections can be written as extensions of the classic Dziembowski equations. As such, GR effects might easily be included in existing asteroseismology codes. The idealized stellar models are (i) \pn1 relativistic polytropes and (ii) stars with cold degenerate-electron equation of state featuring a near-surface chemical transition from μe=2\mu_e = 2 to μe=1\mu_e = 1, simulating a surface hydrogen layer. Comparison of Newtonian and 1PN normal mode periods reveals fractional differences on the order of the surface gravitational redshift zz. For a typical WD, this fractional difference is ∼10−4\sim 10^{-4} and is greater than the period uncertainty σΠ/Π\sigma_{\Pi}/\Pi of many white dwarf pulsation modes observed by TESS. A consistent theoretical modeling of periods observed in these stars should in principle include GR effects to 1PN order

    Anomalous Diffusion at Edge and Core of a Magnetized Cold Plasma

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    Progress in the theory of anomalous diffusion in weakly turbulent cold magnetized plasmas is explained. Several proposed models advanced in the literature are discussed. Emphasis is put on a new proposed mechanism for anomalous diffusion transport mechanism based on the coupled action of conductive walls (excluding electrodes) bounding the plasma drain current (edge diffusion) together with the magnetic field flux "cutting" the area traced by the charged particles in their orbital motion. The same reasoning is shown to apply to the plasma core anomalous diffusion. The proposed mechanism is expected to be valid in regimes when plasma diffusion scales as Bohm diffusion and at high B/NB/N, when collisions are of secondary importance.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
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