17 research outputs found
Apparatus for transferring cryogenic liquids Patent
Apparatus for cryogenic liquid storage with heat transfer reduction and for liquid transfer at zero gravity condition
Preliminary design of a 100 kW turbine generator
The National Science Foundation and the Lewis Research Center have engaged jointly in a Wind Energy Program which includes the design and erection of a 100 kW wind turbine generator. The machine consists primarily of a rotor turbine, transmission, shaft, alternator, and tower. The rotor, measuring 125 feet in diameter and consisting of two variable pitch blades operates at 40 rpm and generates 100 kW of electrical power at 18 mph wind velocity. The entire assembly is placed on top of a tower 100 feet above ground level
Measured performance of a tip-controlled, teetered rotor with an NACA 64 sub 3-618 tip airfoil
Tests were conducted on the Mod-O 100 kW Wind Turbine to determine the performance of a tip-controlled rotor having an NACA 64 sub-618 airfoil over the moveable outboard 30% of the blade, while operating at nominal rotor speeds of 21 and 31 rpm. Tests were conducted at two rotor speeds to assess the performance improvement which could be realized with 2-speed operation. Test data are compared with analytical predictions and concluding remarks are presented. The results indicate a clear performance improvement for the 2-speed operation
Design, fabrication, and test of a steel spar wind turbine blade
The design and fabrication of wind turbine blades based on 60 foot steel spars are discussed. Performance and blade load information is given and compared to analytical prediction. In addition, performance is compared to that of the original MOD-O aluminum blades. Costs for building the two blades are given, and a projection is made for the cost in mass production. Design improvements to reduce weight and improve fatigue life are suggested
Reactor moderator, pressure vessel, and heat rejection system of an open-cycle gas core nuclear rocket concept
A preliminary design study of a conceptual 6000-megawatt open-cycle gas-core nuclear rocket engine system was made. The engine has a thrust of 196,600 newtons (44,200 lb) and a specific impulse of 4400 seconds. The nuclear fuel is uranium-235 and the propellant is hydrogen. Critical fuel mass was calculated for several reactor configurations. Major components of the reactor (reflector, pressure vessel, and waste heat rejection system) were considered conceptually and were sized
Government review of the Mod-2 wind turbine (as-built)
The findings and recommendations of the Government committee formed to conduct an as-built review of the three Mod-2 wind turbine units at Goldendale, Washington are given. The purpose of the review was to identify any critical deficiencies in machine components that could result in failure, and to recommend any necessary corrective action before resuming safe machine operation. The review concluded that one of the deficiencies identified would preclude planned attended or unattended operation, provided that certain corrective actions were implemented
Deep Mid-Infrared Silicate Absorption as a Diagnostic of Obscuring Geometry Toward Galactic Nuclei
The silicate cross section peak near 10um produces emission and absorption
features in the spectra of dusty galactic nuclei observed with the Spitzer
Space Telescope. Especially in ultraluminous infrared galaxies, the observed
absorption feature can be extremely deep, as IRAS 08572+3915 illustrates. A
foreground screen of obscuration cannot reproduce this observed feature, even
at large optical depth. Instead, the deep absorption requires a nuclear source
to be deeply embedded in a smooth distribution of material that is both
geometrically and optically thick. In contrast, a clumpy medium can produce
only shallow absorption or emission, which are characteristic of
optically-identified active galactic nuclei. In general, the geometry of the
dusty region and the total optical depth, rather than the grain composition or
heating spectrum, determine the silicate feature's observable properties. The
apparent optical depth calculated from the ratio of line to continuum emission
generally fails to accurately measure the true optical depth. The obscuring
geometry, not the nature of the embedded source, also determines the far-IR
spectral shape.Comment: To appear in ApJ
Infrared Spectral Energy Distributions of Seyfert Galaxies: Spitzer Space Telescope Observations of the 12 micron Sample of Active Galaxies
The mid-far-infrared spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of 83 active
galaxies, mostly Seyfert galaxies, selected from the extended 12 micron sample
are presented. The data were collected using all three instruments, IRAC, IRS,
and MIPS, aboard the Spitzer Space Telescope. The IRS data were obtained in
spectral mapping mode, and the photometric data from IRAC and IRS were
extracted from matched, 20 arcsec diameter circular apertures. The MIPS data
were obtained in SED mode, providing very low resolution spectroscopy (R ~ 20)
between ~ 55 and 90 microns in a larger, 20 by 30 arcsec synthetic aperture. We
further present the data from a spectral decomposition of the SEDs, including
equivalent widths and fluxes of key emission lines; silicate 10 and 18 micron
emission and absorption strengths; IRAC magnitudes; and mid-far infrared
spectral indices. Finally, we examine the SEDs averaged within optical
classifications of activity. We find that the infrared SEDs of Seyfert 1s and
Seyfert 2s with hidden broad line regions (HBLR, as revealed by
spectropolarimetry or other technique) are qualitatively similar, except that
Seyfert 1s show silicate emission and HBLR Seyfert 2s show silicate absorption.
The infrared SEDs of other classes with the 12 micron sample, including Seyfert
1.8-1.9, non-HBLR Seyfert 2 (not yet shown to hide a type 1 nucleus), LINER and
HII galaxies, appear to be dominated by star-formation, as evidenced by blue
IRAC colors, strong PAH emission, and strong far-infrared continuum emission,
measured relative to mid-infrared continuum emission.Comment: 78 pages, 13 figure
Decomposing Star Formation and Active Galactic Nucleus with Spitzer Mid-Infrared Spectra: Luminosity Functions and Co-Evolution
We present Spitzer 7-38um spectra for a 24um flux limited sample of galaxies
at z~0.7 in the COSMOS field. The detailed high-quality spectra allow us to
cleanly separate star formation (SF) and active galactic nucleus (AGN) in
individual galaxies. We first decompose mid-infrared Luminosity Functions
(LFs). We find that the SF 8um and 15um LFs are well described by Schechter
functions. AGNs dominate the space density at high luminosities, which leads to
the shallow bright-end slope of the overall mid-infrared LFs. The total
infrared (8-1000um) LF from 70um selected galaxies shows a shallower bright-end
slope than the bolometrically corrected SF 15um LF, owing to the intrinsic
dispersion in the mid-to-far-infrared spectral energy distributions. We then
study the contemporary growth of galaxies and their supermassive black holes
(BHs). Seven of the 31 Luminous Infrared Galaxies with Spitzer spectra host
luminous AGNs, implying an AGN duty cycle of 23+/-9%. The time-averaged ratio
of BH accretion rate and SF rate matches the local M_BH-M_bulge relation and
the M_BH-M_host relation at z ~ 1. These results favor co-evolution scenarios
in which BH growth and intense SF happen in the same event but the former spans
a shorter lifetime than the latter. Finally, we compare our mid-infrared
spectroscopic selection with other AGN identification methods and discuss
candidate Compton-thick AGNs in the sample. While only half of the mid-infrared
spectroscopically selected AGNs are detected in X-ray, ~90% of them can be
identified with their near-infrared spectral indices.Comment: ApJ Accepted. emulateapj style. 16 pages, 9 figures, 4 table