8,001 research outputs found
On the selection of materials for cryogenic seals and the testing of their performance
Three questions are addressed: what mission must a cryogenic seal perform; what are the contrasts between desirable and available seal materials; and how realistic must test conditions be. The question of how to quantify the response of a material subject to large strains and which is susceptible to memory effects leads to a discussion of theoretical issues. Accordingly, the report summarizes some ideas from the rational mechanics of materials. The report ends with a list of recommendations and a conclusion
Development and verification of methods for predicting flow rates through leaks in valves and couplings
This is the final report of a research effort which addresses the title problem. The report discusses two broad models of flows, which represent the following extreme cases: (1) inertia-dominated flow, where friction is relatively insignificant; and (2) friction-dominated flow where inertia is insignificant. In class (2), the leak channel might consist of the gap between a scratch in a plastic seal and a polished metal plate against which the seal is pressed. Here, the cross section of the leak channel is modeled as a flat bottomed crescent. A publication generated under the present grant period presents an exact solution of the equations of fully-developed laminar pipe flow of a liquid in the case of a crescent beneath a hyperbolic arc. A Master's thesis project supported by the present grant presents the corresponding solution beneath a circular arc. A second publication reviews the flow of a gas through the same channel, which may be analyzed by a standard one-dimensional model (Fanno flow) for an engineering approximation. Finally, the report discusses the design and progress in the fabrication of a leak-test cell, in which one may measure the flow of fluid through a controlled flaw in a seal. The aim of such measurements is to furnish data for comparison with the predictions of the theory
A moving mesh method for one-dimensional hyperbolic conservation laws
We develop an adaptive method for solving one-dimensional systems of hyperbolic conservation laws that employs a high resolution Godunov-type scheme for the physical equations, in conjunction with a moving mesh PDE governing the motion of the spatial grid points. Many other moving mesh methods developed to solve hyperbolic problems use a fully implicit discretization for the coupled solution-mesh equations, and so suffer from a significant degree of numerical stiffness. We employ a semi-implicit approach that couples the moving mesh equation to an efficient, explicit solver for the physical PDE, with the resulting scheme behaving in practice as a two-step predictor-corrector method. In comparison with computations on a fixed, uniform mesh, our method exhibits more accurate resolution of discontinuities for a similar level of computational work
A Unified Theory of Matter Genesis: Asymmetric Freeze-In
We propose a unified theory of dark matter (DM) genesis and baryogenesis. It
explains the observed link between the DM density and the baryon density, and
is fully testable by a combination of collider experiments and precision tests.
Our theory utilises the "thermal freeze-in" mechanism of DM production,
generating particle anti-particle asymmetries in decays from visible to hidden
sectors. Calculable, linked, asymmetries in baryon number and DM number are
produced by the feeble interaction mediating between the two sectors, while the
out-of-equilibrium condition necessary for baryogenesis is provided by the
different temperatures of the visible and hidden sectors. An illustrative model
is presented where the visible sector is the MSSM, with the relevant CP
violation arising from phases in the gaugino and Higgsino masses, and both
asymmetries are generated at temperatures of order 100 GeV. Experimental
signals of this mechanism can be spectacular, including: long-lived metastable
states late decaying at the LHC; apparent baryon-number or lepton-number
violating signatures associated with these highly displaced vertices; EDM
signals correlated with the observed decay lifetimes and within reach of
planned experiments; and a prediction for the mass of the dark matter particle
that is sensitive to the spectrum of the visible sector and the nature of the
electroweak phase transition.Comment: LaTeX, 22 pages, 6 figure
Big Bang Synthesis of Nuclear Dark Matter
We investigate the physics of dark matter models featuring composite bound
states carrying a large conserved dark "nucleon" number. The properties of
sufficiently large dark nuclei may obey simple scaling laws, and we find that
this scaling can determine the number distribution of nuclei resulting from Big
Bang Dark Nucleosynthesis. For plausible models of asymmetric dark matter, dark
nuclei of large nucleon number, e.g. > 10^8, may be synthesised, with the
number distribution taking one of two characteristic forms. If
small-nucleon-number fusions are sufficiently fast, the distribution of dark
nuclei takes on a logarithmically-peaked, universal form, independent of many
details of the initial conditions and small-number interactions. In the case of
a substantial bottleneck to nucleosynthesis for small dark nuclei, we find the
surprising result that even larger nuclei, with size >> 10^8, are often finally
synthesised, again with a simple number distribution. We briefly discuss the
constraints arising from the novel dark sector energetics, and the extended set
of (often parametrically light) dark sector states that can occur in complete
models of nuclear dark matter. The physics of the coherent enhancement of
direct detection signals, the nature of the accompanying dark-sector form
factors, and the possible modifications to astrophysical processes are
discussed in detail in a companion paper.Comment: 27 pages, 5 figures, v3; minor additional comments - matches
published versio
Modeling and measurement of the performance of a branched conduit sampling system in a mass spectrometer leak detector
In the leak testing of a large engineering system, one may distinguish three stages, namely leakage measurement by an overall enclosure, leak location, and leakage measurement by a local enclosure. Sniffer probes attached to helium mass spectrometer leak detectors are normally designed for leak location, a qualitative inspection technique intended to pinpoint where a leak is but not to quantify its rate of discharge. The main conclusion of the present effort is that local leakage measurement by a leak detector with a sniffer probe is feasible provided one has: (1) quantitative data on the performance of the mass separator cell (a device interior to the unit where the stream of fluid in the sample line branches); and (2) a means of stabilizing the mass transfer boundary layer that is created near a local leak site when a sniffer probe is placed in its immediate vicinity. Theoretical models of the mass separator cell are provided and measurements of the machine-specific parameters in the formulas are presented. A theoretical model of a porous probe end for stabilizing the mass transfer boundary is also presented
Interpretation of discrepancies in mass spectroscopy data obtained from different experimental configurations
Many helium mass spectrometer leak detectors at KSC employ sampling systems that feature hand held sniffer probes. Authors of general leakage-testing literature recommend sniffer probes for leak location but not for quantitative leakage measurement. Their use in the latter application at KSC involves assumptions that may be subtle. The purpose of the research effort reported herein was to establish the significance of indicated leak rates displayed by sniffer-probe equipped leak detectors and to determine whether the use of alternative hardware or testing procedures may reduce the uncertainty of leakage measurements made with them. The report classifies probe-type sampling systems for helium leak detectors according to their internal plumbing (direct or branched), presents a basic analysis of the fluid dynamics in the sampling system in the branched-conduit case, describes the usual test method for measuring the internal supply-to-sample flowrate ratio (a.k.a permeation ratio), and describes a concept for a sponge-tipped probe whose external supply-to-sample flowrate ratio promises to be lower than that of a simple-ended probe. One conclusion is that the main source of uncertainty in the use of probe-type sampling systems for leakage measurement is uncertainty in the external supply-to-sample flowrate ratio. In contrast, the present method for measuring the internal supply-to-sample flowrate ratio is quantitative and satisfactory. The implication is that probes of lower external supply-to-sample flowrate ratio must be developed before this uncertainty may be reduced significantly
Groundwater investigation Buntine-Marchagee Natural Diversity Recovery Catchment
A groundwater investigation was initiated in the Buntine-Marchagee Natural Diversity Recovery Catchment 200 kms north-east of Perth, Western Australia in 2002. The investigation aimed to install a regional groundwater monitoring network and characterise the regolith throughout the catchment. Drill site selection was based on establishing a series of transects to enable construction of hydrogeological cross-sections to enhance conceptual understanding of the catchment
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