19,122 research outputs found
Airframe structural dynamic considerations in rotor design optimization
An an overview and discussion of those aspects of airframe structural dynamics that have a strong influence on rotor design optimization is provided. Primary emphasis is on vibration requirements. The vibration problem is described, the key vibratory forces are identified, the role of airframe response in rotor design is summarized, and the types of constraints which need to be imposed on rotor design due to airframe dynamics are discussed. Some considerations of ground and air resonance as they might affect rotor design are included
Experiences at Langley Research Center in the application of optimization techniques to helicopter airframes for vibration reduction
A NASA/industry rotorcraft structural dynamics program known as Design Analysis Methods for VIBrationS (DAMVIBS) was initiated at Langley Research Center in 1984 with the objective of establishing the technology base needed by the industry for developing an advanced finite-element-based vibrations design analysis capability for airframe structures. As a part of the in-house activities contributing to that program, a study was undertaken to investigate the use of formal, nonlinear programming-based, numerical optimization techniques for airframe vibrations design work. Considerable progress has been made in connection with that study since its inception in 1985. This paper presents a unified summary of the experiences and results of that study. The formulation and solution of airframe optimization problems are discussed. Particular attention is given to describing the implementation of a new computational procedure based on MSC/NASTRAN and CONstrained function MINimization (CONMIN) in a computer program system called DYNOPT for the optimization of airframes subject to strength, frequency, dynamic response, and fatigue constraints. The results from the application of the DYNOPT program to the Bell AH-1G helicopter are presented and discussed
Airframe design considerations: Overview
Aspects of airframe structural dynamics that have a strong influence on rotor design optimization are presented . Primary emphasis is on vibration requirements. The constraints imposed on rotor design by airframe dynamics are discussed. Rotor/airframe modeling enhancements are also described
No-till Forage Establishment in Alaska
We assessed the effectiveness of no-till forage establishment at six Alaska locations: Anchor Point, Sterling, Point MacKenzie, Palmer, Delta Junction, and Fairbanks. Directly seeding grass into established grass stands generally did not improve forage yields or quality. Seeding rate had little effect on establishment of newly seeded forages in no-till. Grass yields were depressed when companion crop yields were high, and they typically did not recover in subsequent years. Red clover established well, producing high yields of good quality forage under no-till at Point MacKenzie, but established poorly at Anchor Point and Delta Junction. These results indicated that no-till seeding of most forage crops into declining grass stands is not likely to be successful in Alaska with current available technology
Anomalous aspects of magnetosheath flow and of the shape and oscillations of the magnetopause during an interval of strongly northward interplanetary magnetic field
On 15 Feb. 1978, the orientation of the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) remained steadily northward for more than 12 hours. The ISEE 1 and 2 spacecraft were located near apogee on the dawn side flank of the magnetotail. IMP 8 was almost symmetrically located in the magnetosheath on the dusk flank and IMP 7 was upstream in the solar wind. Using plasma and magnetic field data, we show the following: (1) the magnetosheath flow speed on the flanks of the magnetotail steadily exceeded the solar wind speed by 20 percent; (2) surface waves with approximately a 5-min period and very non-sinusoidal waveform were persistently present on the dawn magnetopause and waves of similar period were present in the dusk magnetosheath; and (3) the magnetotail ceased to flare at an antisunward distance of 15 R(sub E). We propose that the acceleration of the magnetosheath flow is achieved by magnetic tension in the draped field configuration for northward IMF and that the reduction of tail flaring is consistent with a decreased amount of open magnetic flux and a larger standoff distance of the subsolar magnetopause. Results of a three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic simulation support this phenomenological model
The short-term effects of management changes on watertable position and nutrients in shallow groundwater in a harvested peatland forest
This work was funded by the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food and the Environmental Protection Agency under the STRIVE program 2007 – 2013.peer-reviewedManagement changes such as drainage, fertilisation, afforestation and harvesting (clearfelling) of forested peatlands influence watertable (WT) position and groundwater concentrations of nutrients. This study investigated the impact of clearfelling of a peatland forest on WT and nutrient concentrations. Three areas were examined: (1) a regenerated riparian peatland buffer (RB) clearfelled four years prior to the present study (2) a recently clearfelled coniferous forest (CF) and (3) a standing, mature coniferous forest (SF), on which no harvesting took place. The WT remained consistently below 0.3 m during the pre-clearfelling period. Results showed there was an almost immediate rise in the WT after clearfelling and a rise to 0.15 m below ground level (bgl) within 10 months of clearfelling. Clearfelling of the forest increased dissolved reactive phosphorus concentrations (from an average of 28–230 μg L−1) in the shallow groundwater, likely caused by leaching from degrading brash mats.Environmental Protection AgencyDepartment of Agriculture, Food and the Marin
Anharmonicity and asymmetry of Landau levels for a two-dimensional electron gas
We calculate the density of states of a two dimensional electron gas located
at the interface of a GaAlAs/GaAs heterojunction. The disorder potential which
is generally created by a single doping layer behind a spacer, is here enhanced
by the presence of a second delta doped layer of scatterers which can be
repulsive or attractive impurities. We have calculated the density of states by
means of the Klauder's approximation, in the presence of a magnetic field of
arbitrary strength. At low field either band tails or impurity bands are
observed for attractive potentials, depending on the impurity concentration. At
higher field, impurity bands are observed for both repulsive and attractive
potentials. We discuss the effect of such an asymmetrical density of states on
the transport properties in the quantum Hall effect regime.Comment: 22 pages, 12 figures. submitted to Phys. Rev.
Invariant classification of orthogonally separable Hamiltonian systems in Euclidean space
The problem of the invariant classification of the orthogonal coordinate webs
defined in Euclidean space is solved within the framework of Felix Klein's
Erlangen Program. The results are applied to the problem of integrability of
the Calogero-Moser model
SU(5) grand unification on a domain-wall brane from an E_6-invariant action
An SU(5) grand unification scheme for effective 3+1-dimensional fields
dynamically localised on a domain-wall brane is constructed. This is achieved
through the confluence of the clash-of-symmetries mechanism for symmetry
breaking through domain-wall formation, and the Dvali-Shifman gauge-boson
localisation idea. It requires an E_6 gauge-invariant action, yielding a
domain-wall solution that has E_6 broken to differently embedded SO(10) x U(1)
subgroups in the two bulk regions on opposite sides of the wall. On the wall
itself, the unbroken symmetry is the intersection of the two bulk subgroups,
and contains SU(5). A 4+1-dimensional fermion family in the 27 of E_6 gives
rise to localised left-handed zero-modes in the 5^* + 10 + 1 + 1 representation
of SU(5). The remaining ten fermion components of the 27 are delocalised exotic
states, not appearing in the effective 3+1-dimensional theory on the
domain-wall brane. The scheme is compatible with the type-2 Randall-Sundrum
mechanism for graviton localisation; the single extra dimension is infinite.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures. Minor changes to text and references. To appear
in Phys. Rev.
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