5,434 research outputs found
Procedure for generating global atmospheric engine emissions data from future supersonic transport aircraft. The 1990 high speed civil transport studies
The input for global atmospheric chemistry models was generated for baseline High Speed Civil Transport (HSCT) configurations at Mach 1.6, 2.2, and 3.2. The input is supplied in the form of number of molecules of specific exhaust constituents injected into the atmosphere per year by latitude and by altitude (for 2-D codes). Seven exhaust constituents are currently supplied: NO, NO2, CO, CO2, H2O, SO2, and THC (Trace Hydrocarbons). An eighth input is also supplied, NO(x), the sum of NO and NO2. The number of molecules of a given constituent emitted per year is a function of the total fuel burned by a supersonic fleet and the emission index (EI) of the aircraft engine for the constituent in question. The EIs for an engine are supplied directly by the engine manufacturers. The annual fuel burn of a supersonic fleet is calculated from aircraft performance and economic criteria, both of which are strongly dependent on basic design parameters such as speed and range. The altitude and latitude distribution of the emission is determined based on 10 Intern. Air Transport Assoc. (IATA) regions chosen to define the worldwide route structure for future HSCT operations and the mission flight profiles
Analysis of information systems for hydropower operations
The operations of hydropower systems were analyzed with emphasis on water resource management, to determine how aerospace derived information system technologies can increase energy output. Better utilization of water resources was sought through improved reservoir inflow forecasting based on use of hydrometeorologic information systems with new or improved sensors, satellite data relay systems, and use of advanced scheduling techniques for water release. Specific mechanisms for increased energy output were determined, principally the use of more timely and accurate short term (0-7 days) inflow information to reduce spillage caused by unanticipated dynamic high inflow events. The hydrometeorologic models used in predicting inflows were examined to determine the sensitivity of inflow prediction accuracy to the many variables employed in the models, and the results used to establish information system requirements. Sensor and data handling system capabilities were reviewed and compared to the requirements, and an improved information system concept outlined
Microearthquake evidence for reaction-driven cracking within the Trans-Atlantic Geotraverse active hydrothermal deposit
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2014. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth 119 (2014): 822–839, doi:10.1002/2013JB010110.We detected 32,078 very small, local microearthquakes (average ML = −1) during a 9 month deployment of five ocean bottom seismometers on the periphery of the Trans-Atlantic Geotraverse active mound. Seismicity rates were constant without any main shock-aftershock behavior at ~243 events per day at the beginning of the experiment, 128 events per day after an instrument failed, and 97 events per day at the end of the experiment when whale calls increased background noise levels. The microearthquake seismograms are characterized by durations of <1 s and most have single-phase P wave arrivals (i.e., no S arrivals). We accurately located 6207 of the earthquakes, with hypocenters clustered within a narrow depth interval from ~50 to 125 m below seafloor on the south and west flanks of the deposit. We model the microearthquakes as reaction-driven fracturing events caused by anhydrite deposition in the secondary circulation system of the hydrothermal mound and show that under reasonable modeling assumptions an average event represents a volume increase of 31–58 cm3, yielding an annual (seismogenic) anhydrite deposition rate of 27–51 m3.This work was supported in part by the U.S. National Science Foundation, National Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship, and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Deep Ocean Exploration Institute.2014-09-1
Arp 65 interaction debris: massive HI displacement and star formation
Context: Pre-merger interactions between galaxies can induce significant
changes in the morphologies and kinematics of the stellar and ISM components.
Large amounts of gas and stars are often found to be disturbed or displaced as
tidal debris. This debris then evolves, sometimes forming stars and
occasionally tidal dwarf galaxies. Here we present results from our HI study of
Arp 65, an interacting pair hosting extended HI tidal debris. Aims: In an
effort to understand the evolution of tidal debris produced by interacting
pairs of galaxies, including in situ star and tidal dwarf galaxy formation, we
are mapping HI in a sample of interacting galaxy pairs. The Arp 65 pair is one
of them. Methods: Our resolved HI 21 cm line survey is being carried out using
the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT). We used our HI survey data as well
as available SDSS optical, Spitzer infra-red and GALEX UV data to study the
evolution of the tidal debris and the correlation of HI with the star-forming
regions within it. Results: In Arp 65 we see a high impact pre-merger
interaction involving a pair of massive galaxies (NGC 90 and NGC 93) that have
a stellar mass ratio of ~ 1:3. The interaction, which probably occurred ~ 1.0
-- 2.5 10 yr ago, appears to have displaced a large fraction of
the HI in NGC 90 (including the highest column density HI) beyond its optical
disk. We also find extended ongoing star formation in the outer disk of NGC 90.
In the major star-forming regions, we find the HI column densities to be ~ 4.7
10 cm or lower. But no signature of star formation was
found in the highest column density HI debris, SE of NGC 90. This indicates
conditions within the highest column density HI debris remain hostile to star
formation and it reaffirms that high HI column densities may be a necessary but
not sufficient criterion for star formation.Comment: Accepted in A&
Anti-phase locking in a two-dimensional Josephson junction array
We consider theoretically phase locking in a simple two-dimensional Josephson
junction array consisting of two loops coupled via a joint line transverse to
the bias current. Ring inductances are supposed to be small, and special
emphasis is taken on the influence of external flux. Is is shown, that in the
stable oscillation regime both cells oscillate with a phase shift equal to
(i.e. anti-phase). This result may explain the low radiation output
obtained so far in two-dimensional Josephson junction arrays experimentally.Comment: 11 pages, REVTeX, 1 Postscript figure, Subm. to Appl. Phys. Let
Hot Populations in M87 Globular Clusters
We have obtained HST/STIS far- and near-UV photometry of globular clusters in
four fields in the gE galaxy M87. To a limit of m(FUV) = 25 we detect a total
of 66 globular clusters (GCs) in common with the deep HST optical-band study of
Kundu et al. (1999). Despite strong overlap in V- and I-band properties, the
M87 GCs have UV/optical properties that are distinct from clusters in the Milky
Way and in M31. M87 clusters, especially metal-poor ones, produce larger hot HB
populations than do Milky Way analogues. Cluster mass is probably not a factor
in these distinctions. The most metal-rich M87 GCs in our sample are near Z_sun
and overlap the local E galaxy sample in estimated Mg_2 line indices.
Nonetheless, the clusters produce much more UV light at a given Mg_2, being up
to 1 mag bluer than any gE galaxy in (FUV-V) color. The M87 GCs do not appear
to represent a transition between Milky Way-type clusters and E galaxies. The
differences are in the correct sense if the clusters are significantly older
than the E galaxies. Comparisons with Galactic open clusters indicate that the
hot stars lie on the extreme horizontal branch, rather than being blue
stragglers, and that the EHB becomes well populated for ages > 5 Gyr. We find
that 43 of our UV detections have no optical-band counterparts. Most appear to
be UV-bright background galaxies, seen through M87. Eleven NUV variable sources
detected at only one epoch in the central field are probably classical novae.
[Abridged]Comment: 70 pages, 25 figures (including 4 jpgs), 7 tables. To appear in AJ.
Full resolution version available at
http://www.astro.virginia.edu/~rwo/m87/m87-hotpops.pd
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