20,193 research outputs found

    The structural dynamics analysis of the main injector LOX inlet tee and its redesign

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    A ground test of a specially instrumented Space Shuttle Main Engine (SSME) revealed excessively high strains in the high pressure Liquid Oxygen (LOX) inlet line which carries LOX to the Main Injector. The inlet tee acts as a manifold which utilizes two splitter vanes to direct the flow of LOX into the main injector. When the high strains were discovered, it was thought that these splitter vanes, coupled with high energy flow was the source. This resulted not only in high strains in the LOX inlet tee, but excessive vibration at a frequency of 4000 Hz located at the gimbal bearing, and at the main injector. This was later to be known as The 4kHz Phenomenon. The dynamic analysis which was used to predict the response due to the 4kHz phenomenon and the analysis used to aid in the design modification required to the hardware to reduce or eliminate the phenomenon is examined

    Generalizations of the Familywise Error Rate

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    Consider the problem of simultaneously testing null hypotheses H_1,...,H_s. The usual approach to dealing with the multiplicity problem is to restrict attention to procedures that control the familywise error rate (FWER), the probability of even one false rejection. In many applications, particularly if s is large, one might be willing to tolerate more than one false rejection provided the number of such cases is controlled, thereby increasing the ability of the procedure to detect false null hypotheses. This suggests replacing control of the FWER by controlling the probability of k or more false rejections, which we call the k-FWER. We derive both single-step and stepdown procedures that control the k-FWER, without making any assumptions concerning the dependence structure of the p-values of the individual tests. In particular, we derive a stepdown procedure that is quite simple to apply, and prove that it cannot be improved without violation of control of the k-FWER. We also consider the false discovery proportion (FDP) defined by the number of false rejections divided by the total number of rejections (defined to be 0 if there are no rejections). The false discovery rate proposed by Benjamini and Hochberg [J. Roy. Statist. Soc. Ser. B 57 (1995) 289-300] controls E(FDP). Here, we construct methods such that, for any \gamma and \alpha, P{FDP>\gamma}\le\alpha. Two stepdown methods are proposed. The first holds under mild conditions on the dependence structure of p-values, while the second is more conservative but holds without any dependence assumptions.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/009053605000000084 in the Annals of Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org

    The effect of stellar migration on Galactic chemical evolution: a heuristic approach

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    In the last years, stellar migration in galactic discs has been the subject of several investigations. However, its impact on the chemical evolution of the Milky Way still needs to be fully quantified. In this paper, we aim at imposing some constraints on the significance of this phenomenon by considering its influence on the chemical evolution of the Milky Way thin disc. We do not investigate the physical mechanisms underlying the migration of stars. Rather, we introduce a simple, heuristic treatment of stellar migration in a detailed chemical evolution model for the thin disc of the Milky Way, which already includes radial gas flows and reproduces several observational constraints for the solar vicinity and the whole Galactic disc. When stellar migration is implemented according to the results of chemo-dynamical simulations by Minchev et. al. (2013) and finite stellar velocities of 1 km s1^{-1} are taken into account, the high-metallicity tail of the metallicity distribution function of long-lived thin-disc stars is well reproduced. By exploring the velocity space, we find that the migrating stars must travel with velocities in the range 0.5 -2 km s1^{-1} to properly reproduce the high-metallicity tail of the metallicity distribution. We confirm previous findings by other authors that the observed spread in the age-metallicity relation of solar neighbourhood stars can be explained by the presence of stars which originated at different Galactocentric distances, and we conclude that the chemical properties of stars currently observed in the solar vicinity do suggest that stellar migration is present to some extent.Comment: Accepted for publication by Ap

    The connection between the Galactic halo and ancient Dwarf Satellites

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    We explore the hypothesis that the classical and ultra-faint dwarf spheroidal satellites of the Milky Way have been the building blocks of the Galactic halo by comparing their [O/Fe] and [Ba/Fe] versus [Fe/H] patterns with the ones observed in Galactic halo stars. Oxygen abundances deviate substantially from the observed abundances in the Galactic halo stars for [Fe/H] values larger than -2 dex, while they overlap for lower metallicities. On the other hand, for the [Ba/Fe] ratio the discrepancy is extended at all [Fe/H] values, suggesting that the majority of stars in the halo are likely to have been formed in situ. Therefore, we suggest that [Ba/Fe] ratios are a better diagnostic than [O/Fe] ratios. Moreover, we show the effects of an enriched infall of gas with the same chemical abundances as the matter ejected and/or stripped from dwarf satellites of the Milky Way on the chemical evolution of the Galactic halo. We find that the resulting chemical abundances of the halo stars depend on the assumed infall time scale, and the presence of a threshold in the gas for star formation.Comment: To appear in Proceeding of Science: Frontier Research in Astrophysics - II 23-28 May 2016 Mondello (Palermo), Ital

    A new method of measuring center-of-mass velocities of radially pulsating stars from high-resolution spectroscopy

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    We present a radial velocity analysis of 20 solar neighborhood RR Lyrae and 3 Population II Cepheids variables. We obtained high-resolution, moderate-to-high signal-to-noise ratio spectra for most stars and obtained spectra were covering different pulsation phases for each star. To estimate the gamma (center-of-mass) velocities of the program stars, we use two independent methods. The first, `classic' method is based on RR Lyrae radial velocity curve templates. The second method is based on the analysis of absorption line profile asymmetry to determine both the pulsational and the gamma velocities. This second method is based on the Least Squares Deconvolution (LSD) technique applied to analyze the line asymmetry that occurs in the spectra. We obtain measurements of the pulsation component of the radial velocity with an accuracy of ±\pm 3.5 km s1^{-1}. The gamma velocity was determined with an accuracy ±\pm 10 km s1^{-1}, even for those stars having a small number of spectra. The main advantage of this method is the possibility to get the estimation of gamma velocity even from one spectroscopic observation with uncertain pulsation phase. A detailed investigation of the LSD profile asymmetry shows that the projection factor pp varies as a function of the pulsation phase -- this is a key parameter which converts observed spectral line radial velocity variations into photospheric pulsation velocities. As a byproduct of our study, we present 41 densely-spaced synthetic grids of LSD profile bisectors that are based on atmospheric models of RR Lyr covering all pulsation phases.Comment: 17 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS; doi:10.1093/mnras/stx294

    Ribosome recycling induces optimal translation rate at low ribosomal availability

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    Funding statement The authors thank BBSRC (BB/F00513/X1, BB/I020926/1 and DTG) and SULSA for funding. Acknowledgement The authors thank R. Allen, L. Ciandrini, B. Gorgoni and P. Greulich for very helpful discussions and careful reading of the manuscript.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
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