25,208 research outputs found
High power-high voltage waterload Patent
Variable water load for dissipating large amounts of electrical power during high voltage power supply test
The NASA/industry Design Analysis Methods for Vibrations (DAMVIBS) program: Boeing Helicopters airframe finite element modeling
Mathematical models based on the finite element method of structural analysis, as embodied in the NASTRAN computer code, are routinely used by the helicopter industry to calculate airframe static internal loads used for sizing structural members. Historically, less reliance has been placed on the vibration predictions based on these models. Beginning in the early 1980's NASA's Langley Research Center initiated an industry wide program with the objective of engendering the needed trust in vibration predictions using these models and establishing a body of modeling guides which would enable confident future prediction of airframe vibration as part of the regular design process. Emphasis in this paper is placed on the successful modeling of the Army/Boeing CH-47D which showed reasonable correlation with test data. A principal finding indicates that improved dynamic analysis requires greater attention to detail and perhaps a finer mesh, especially the mass distribution, than the usual stress model. Post program modeling efforts show improved correlation placing key modal frequencies in the b/rev range with 4 percent of the test frequencies
Study of boundary-layer transition using transonic-cone preston tube data
The laminar boundary layer on a 10 degree cone in a transonic wind tunnel was studied. The inviscid flow and boundary layer development were simulated by computer programs. The effects of pitch and yaw angles on the boundary layer were examined. Preston-tube data, taken on the boundary-layer-transition cone in the NASA Ames 11 ft transonic wind tunnel, were used to develope a correlation which relates the measurements to theoretical values of laminar skin friction. The recommended correlation is based on a compressible form of the classical law-of-the-wall. The computer codes successfully simulates the laminar boundary layer for near-zero pitch and yaw angles. However, in cases of significant pitch and/or yaw angles, the flow is three dimensional and the boundary layer computer code used here cannot provide a satisfactory model. The skin-friction correlation is thought to be valid for body geometries other than cones
Distant perturbation asymptotics in window-coupled waveguides. I. The non-threshold case
We consider a pair of adjacent quantum waveguides, in general of different
widths, coupled laterally by a pair of windows in the common boundary, not
necessarily of the same length, at a fixed distance. The Hamiltonian is the
respective Dirichlet Laplacian. We analyze the asymptotic behavior of the
discrete spectrum as the window distance tends to infinity for the generic
case, i.e. for eigenvalues of the corresponding one-window problems separated
from the threshold
Adiabatically switched-on electrical bias in continuous systems, and the Landauer-Buttiker formula
Consider a three dimensional system which looks like a cross-connected pipe
system, i.e. a small sample coupled to a finite number of leads. We investigate
the current running through this system, in the linear response regime, when we
adiabatically turn on an electrical bias between leads. The main technical tool
is the use of a finite volume regularization, which allows us to define the
current coming out of a lead as the time derivative of its charge. We finally
prove that in virtually all physically interesting situations, the conductivity
tensor is given by a Landauer-B{\"u}ttiker type formula.Comment: 20 pages, submitte
A Number-Theoretic Error-Correcting Code
In this paper we describe a new error-correcting code (ECC) inspired by the
Naccache-Stern cryptosystem. While by far less efficient than Turbo codes, the
proposed ECC happens to be more efficient than some established ECCs for
certain sets of parameters. The new ECC adds an appendix to the message. The
appendix is the modular product of small primes representing the message bits.
The receiver recomputes the product and detects transmission errors using
modular division and lattice reduction
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