2,559 research outputs found
Development of a VOR/DME model for an advanced concepts simulator
The report presents a definition of a VOR/DME, airborne and ground systems simulation model. This description was drafted in response to a need in the creation of an advanced concepts simulation in which flight station design for the 1980 era can be postulated and examined. The simulation model described herein provides a reasonable representation of VOR/DME station in the continental United States including area coverage by type and noise errors. The detail in which the model has been cast provides the interested researcher with a moderate fidelity level simulator tool for conducting research and evaluation of navigator algorithms. Assumptions made within the development are listed and place certain responsibilities (data bases, communication with other simulation modules, uniform round earth, etc.) upon the researcher
Solar comparison spectra, 1.0-2.5 mu, from altitudes 1.5-12.5 km
Solar and telluric infrared spectra from altitudes between 1.5 and 12.5 k
A real-time digital computer program for the simulation of a single rotor helicopter
A computer program was developed for the study of a single-rotor helicopter on the Langley Research Center real-time digital simulation system. Descriptions of helicopter equations and data, program subroutines (including flow charts and listings), real-time simulation system routines, and program operation are included. Program usage is illustrated by standard check cases and a representative flight case
The relationship between corpus callosum size and forebrain volume
Using high-resolution in vivo magnetic resonance morphometry we measured forebrain volume (FBV), midsagittal size of the corpus callosum (CC) and four CC subareas in 120 young and healthy adults (49 women, 71 men). We found moderate linear and quadratic correlations, indicating that the CC and all CC subareas increase with FBV both in men and women (multiple r2 ranging from 0.10 to 0.28). Allometric equations revealed that these increases were less than proportional to FBV (r2 ranging from 0.02 to 0.30). Absolute CC measurements, as well as CC subareas relative to total CC or FBV (the latter measures termed the CC ratios), were further analyzed with regard to possible effects of handedness, gender, or handedness by gender interaction. Contrary to previous reports, left-handers did not show larger CC measurements compared to right-handers. The only apparent influence of gender was on the CC ratios, which were larger in women. However, smaller brains had larger CC ratios which were mainly independent of gender, a result of the less than proportional increase of callosal size with FBV. We suggest that the previously described gender differences in CC anatomy may be better explained by an underlying effect of brain size, with larger brains having relatively smaller callosa. This lends empirical support to the hypothesis that brain size may be an important factor influencing interhemispheric connectivity and lateralizatio
Satellites of Simulated Galaxies: survival, merging, and their relation to the dark and stellar halos
We study the population of satellite galaxies formed in a suite of
N-body/gasdynamical simulations of galaxy formation in a LCDM universe. We find
little spatial or kinematic bias between the dark matter and the satellite
population. The velocity dispersion of the satellites is a good indicator of
the virial velocity of the halo: \sigma_{sat}/V_{vir}=0.9 +/- 0.2. Applied to
the Milky Way and M31 this gives V_{vir}^{MW}=109 +/- 22$ km/s and
V_{vir}^{M31} = 138 +/- 35 km/s, respectively, substantially lower than the
rotation speed of their disk components. The detailed kinematics of simulated
satellites and dark matter are also in good agreement. By contrast, the stellar
halo of the simulated galaxies is kinematically and spatially distinct from the
population of surviving satellites. This is because the survival of a satellite
depends on mass and on time of accretion; surviving satellites are biased
toward low-mass systems that have been recently accreted by the galaxy. Our
results support recent proposals for the origin of the systematic differences
between stars in the Galactic halo and in Galactic satellites: the elusive
``building blocks'' of the Milky Way stellar halo were on average more massive,
and were accreted (and disrupted) earlier than the population of dwarfs that
has survived self-bound until the present.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, MNRAS in press. Accepted version with minor
changes. Version with high resolution figures available at:
http://www.astro.uvic.ca/~lsales/SatPapers/SatPapers.htm
Cosmic M\'enage \`a Trois: The Origin of Satellite Galaxies On Extreme Orbits
We examine the orbits of satellite galaxies identified in a suite of
N-body/gasdynamical simulations of the formation of galaxies in a LCDM
universe. Most satellites follow conventional orbits; after turning around,
they accrete into their host halo and settle on orbits whose apocentric radii
are steadily eroded by dynamical friction. However, a number of outliers are
also present, we find that ~1/3 of satellites identified at are on
unorthodox orbits, with apocenters that exceed their turnaround radii. This
population of satellites on extreme orbits consists typically of the faint
member of a satellite pair that has been ejected onto a highly-energetic orbit
during its first approach to the primary. Since the concurrent accretion of
multiple satellite systems is a defining feature of hierarchical models of
galaxy formation, we speculate that this three-body ejection mechanism may be
the origin of (i) some of the newly discovered high-speed satellites around M31
(such as Andromeda XIV); (ii) some of the distant fast-receding Local Group
members, such as Leo I; and (iii) the oddly isolated dwarf spheroidals Cetus
and Tucana in the outskirts of the Local Group. Our results suggest that care
must be exercised when using the orbits of the most weakly bound satellites to
place constraints on the total mass of the Local Group.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, MNRAS in press. Accepted version with minor
changes. Version with high resolution figures available at:
http://www.astro.uvic.ca/~lsales/SatPapers/SatPapers.htm
Simulations of galaxy formation in a Λ cold dark matter universe : I : dynamical and photometric properties of a simulated disk galaxy.
We present a detailed analysis of the dynamical and photometric properties of a disk galaxy simulated in the cold dark matter (CDM) cosmogony. The galaxy is assembled through a number of high-redshift mergers followed by a period of quiescent accretion after z1 that lead to the formation of two distinct dynamical components: a spheroid of mostly old stars and a rotationally supported disk of younger stars. The surface brightness profile is very well approximated by the superposition of an R1/4 spheroid and an exponential disk. Each photometric component contributes a similar fraction of the total luminosity of the system, although less than a quarter of the stars form after the last merger episode at z1. In the optical bands the surface brightness profile is remarkably similar to that of Sab galaxy UGC 615, but the simulated galaxy rotates significantly faster and has a declining rotation curve dominated by the spheroid near the center. The decline in circular velocity is at odds with observation and results from the high concentration of the dark matter and baryonic components, as well as from the relatively high mass-to-light ratio of the stars in the simulation. The simulated galaxy lies 1 mag off the I-band Tully-Fisher relation of late-type spirals but seems to be in reasonable agreement with Tully-Fisher data on S0 galaxies. In agreement with previous simulation work, the angular momentum of the luminous component is an order of magnitude lower than that of late-type spirals of similar rotation speed. This again reflects the dominance of the slowly rotating, dense spheroidal component, to which most discrepancies with observation may be traced. On its own, the disk component has properties rather similar to those of late-type spirals: its luminosity, its exponential scale length, and its colors are all comparable to those of galaxy disks of similar rotation speed. This suggests that a different form of feedback than adopted here is required to inhibit the efficient collapse and cooling of gas at high redshift that leads to the formation of the spheroid. Reconciling, without fine-tuning, the properties of disk galaxies with the early collapse and high merging rates characteristic of hierarchical scenarios such as CDM remains a challenging, yet so far elusive, proposition
A piloted-simulation evaluation of two electronic display formats for approach and landing
The results of a piloted-simulation evaluation of the benefits of adding runway symbology and track information to a baseline electronic-attitude-director-indicator (EADI) format for the approach-to-landing task were presented. The evaluation was conducted for the baseline format and for the baseline format with the added symbology during 3 deg straight-in approaches with calm, cross-wind, and turbulence conditions. Flight-path performance data and pilot subjective comments were examined with regard to the pilot's tracking performance and mental workload for both display formats. The results show that the addition of a perspective runway image and relative track information to a basic situation-information EADI format improve the tracking performance both laterally and vertically during an approach-to-landing task and that the mental workload required to assess the approach situation was thus reduced as a result of integration of information
Physical Bias of Galaxies From Large-Scale Hydrodynamic Simulations
We analyze a new large-scale (Mpc) numerical hydrodynamic
simulation of the popular CDM cosmological model, including in our
treatment dark matter, gas and star-formation, on the basis of standard
physical processes. The method, applied with a numerical resolution of
kpc (which is still quite coarse for following individual galaxies,
especially in dense regions), attempts to estimate where and when galaxies
form. We then compare the smoothed galaxy distribution with the smoothed mass
distribution to determine the "bias" defined as on scales large compared with the code
numerical resolution (on the basis of resolution tests given in the appendix of
this paper). We find that (holding all variables constant except the quoted
one) bias increases with decreasing scale, with increasing galactic age or
metallicity and with increasing redshift of observations. At the Mpc
fiducial comoving scale bias (for bright regions) is 1.35 at reaching to
3.6 at , both numbers being consistent with extant observations. We also
find that Mpc voids in the distribution of luminous objects are
as observed (i.e., observed voids are not an argument against CDM-like models)
and finally that the younger systems should show a colder Hubble flow than do
the early type galaxies (a testable proposition). Surprisingly, little
evolution is found in the amplitude of the smoothed galaxy-galaxy correlation
function (as a function of {\it comoving} separation). Testing this prediction
vs observations will allow a comparison between this work and that of Kauffmann
et al which is based on a different physical modelingmethod.Comment: in press, ApJ, 26 latex pages plus 7 fig
Tidal disruption of dark matter halos around proto-globular clusters
Tidal disruption of dark matter halos around proto-globular clusters in a
halo of a small galaxy is studied in the context of the hierarchical clustering
scenario by using semi-cosmological N-body/SPH simulations assuming the
standard cold dark matter model (). Our analysis on formation and
evolution of the galaxy and its substructures archives until . In such
a high-redshift universe, the Einstein-de Sitter universe is still a good
approximation for a recently favored -dominated universe, and then our
results does not depend on the choice of cosmology. In order to resolve small
gravitationally-bound clumps around galaxies and consider radiative cooling
below , we adopt a fine mass resolution (m_{\rm SPH} = 1.12 \times
10^3 \Msun). Because of the cooling, each clump immediately forms a
`core-halo' structure which consists of a baryonic core and a dark matter halo.
The tidal force from the host galaxy mainly strips the dark matter halo from
clumps and, as a result, theses clumps get dominated by baryons. Once a clump
is captured by the host halo, its mass drastically decreases each pericenter
passage. At , more than half of the clumps become baryon dominated
systems (baryon mass/total mass ). Our results support the tidal
evolution scenario of the formation of globular clusters and baryon dominated
dwarf galaxies in the context of the cold dark matter universe.Comment: 9page, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ. A high-resolution
PDF of the paper can be obtained from http://th.nao.ac.jp/~takayuki/ApJ05
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