13,544 research outputs found
Nuclear electric propulsion: An integral part of NASA's nuclear propulsion project
NASA has initiated a technology program to establish the readiness of nuclear propulsion technology for the Space Exploration Initiative (SEI). This program was initiated with a very modest effort identified with nuclear thermal propulsion (NTP); however, nuclear electric propulsion (NEP) is also an integral part of this program and builds upon NASA's Base Research and Technology Program in power and electric propulsion as well as the SP-100 space nuclear power program. Although the Synthesis Group On America's SEI has identified NEP only as an option for cargo missions, recent studies conducted by NASA-Lewis show that NEP offers the potential for early manned Mars missions as well. Lower power NEP is also of current interest for outer planetary robotic missions. Current plans are reviewed for the overall nuclear propulsion project, with emphasis on NEP and those elements of NTP program which have synergism with NEP
Nuclear and Particle Astrophysics at CIPANP 2003
In the nuclear and particle astrophysics session of CIPANP 2003 we heard
talks on a number of topics, focused for the most part into four broad areas.
Here we outline the discussions of the standard cosmological model, dark matter
searches, cosmic rays, and neutrino astrophysics. The robustness of theoretical
and experimental programs in all of these areas is very encouraging, and we
expect to have many questions answered, and new ones asked, in time for CIPANP
2006.Comment: 5 pages, uses aipproc.cls, parallel session summary to appear in
proceedings of CIPANP 200
Propulsion Working Group report
Existing technology limits and performances, high payoff technologies, propulsion technologies, electric propulsion systems, and advanced bipropellant systems are outlined
Wind-driven Accretion in Protoplanetary Disks. I: Suppression of the Magnetorotational Instability and Launching of the Magnetocentrifugal Wind
We perform local, vertically stratified shearing-box MHD simulations of
protoplanetary disks (PPDs) at a fiducial radius of 1 AU that take into account
the effects of both Ohmic resistivity and ambipolar diffusion (AD). The
magnetic diffusion coefficients are evaluated self-consistently from a look-up
table based on equilibrium chemistry. We first show that the inclusion of AD
dramatically changes the conventional picture of layered accretion. Without net
vertical magnetic field, the system evolves into a toroidal field dominated
configuration with extremely weak turbulence in the far-UV ionization layer
that is far too inefficient to drive rapid accretion. In the presence of a weak
net vertical field (plasma beta~10^5 at midplane), we find that the MRI is
completely suppressed, resulting in a fully laminar flow throughout the
vertical extent of the disk. A strong magnetocentrifugal wind is launched that
efficiently carries away disk angular momentum and easily accounts for the
observed accretion rate in PPDs. Moreover, under a physical disk wind geometry,
all the accretion flow proceeds through a strong current layer with thickness
of ~0.3H that is offset from disk midplane with radial velocity of up to 0.4
times the sound speed. Both Ohmic resistivity and AD are essential for the
suppression of the MRI and wind launching. The efficiency of wind transport
increases with increasing net vertical magnetic flux and the penetration depth
of the FUV ionization. Our laminar wind solution has important implications on
planet formation and global evolution of PPDs.Comment: 23 pages, 13 figures, accepted to Ap
Liquid acrobatics
We experiment with injecting a continuous stream of gas into a shallow
liquid, similar to how one might blow into a straw placed at the bottom of a
near-empty drink. By varying the angle of the straw (here a metal needle), we
observe a variety of dynamics, which we film using a high-speed camera. Most
noteworthy is an intermediate regime in which cyclical jets erupt from the
air-liquid interface and breakup into air-born droplets. These droplets trace
out a parabolic trajectory and bounce on the air-liquid interface before
eventually coalescing. The shape of each jet, as well as the time between jets,
is remarkably similar and leads to droplets with nearly identical trajectories.
The following article accompanies the linked fluid dynamics video submitted to
the Gallery of Fluid Motion in 2008.Comment: Accompanies video submission to APS DFD 2008 Gallery of Fluid Motion,
low
http://ecommons.library.cornell.edu/bitstream/1813/11469/3/Bird_DFD2008_mpeg1.mpg
, and high resolution
http://ecommons.library.cornell.edu/bitstream/1813/11469/2/Bird_DFD2008_mpeg2.mp
Dynamics of Solids in the Midplane of Protoplanetary Disks: Implications for Planetesimal Formation
(Abridged) We present local 2D and 3D hybrid numerical simulations of
particles and gas in the midplane of protoplanetary disks (PPDs) using the
Athena code. The particles are coupled to gas aerodynamically, with
particle-to-gas feedback included. Magnetorotational turbulence is ignored as
an approximation for the dead zone of PPDs, and we ignore particle self-gravity
to study the precursor of planetesimal formation. Our simulations include a
wide size distribution of particles, ranging from strongly coupled particles
with dimensionless stopping time tau_s=Omega t_stop=1e-4 to marginally coupled
ones with tau_s=1 (where Omega is the orbital frequency, t_stop is the particle
friction time), and a wide range of solid abundances. Our main results are: 1.
Particles with tau_s>=0.01 actively participate in the streaming instability,
generate turbulence and maintain the height of the particle layer before
Kelvin-Helmholtz instability is triggered. 2. Strong particle clumping as a
consequence of the streaming instability occurs when a substantial fraction of
the solids are large (tau_s>=0.01) and when height-integrated solid to gas mass
ratio Z is super-solar. 3. The radial drift velocity is reduced relative to the
conventional Nakagawa-Sekiya-Hayashi (NSH) model, especially at high Z. We
derive a generalized NSH equilibrium solution for multiple particle species
which fits our results very well. 4. Collision velocity between particles with
tau_s>=0.01 is dominated by differential radial drift, and is strongly reduced
at larger Z. 5. There exist two positive feedback loops with respect to the
enrichment of local disk solid abundance and grain growth. All these effects
promote planetesimal formation.Comment: 25 pages (emulate apj), accepted to Ap
Distributed representations accelerate evolution of adaptive behaviours
Animals with rudimentary innate abilities require substantial learning to transform those abilities into useful skills, where a skill can be considered as a set of sensory - motor associations. Using linear neural network models, it is proved that if skills are stored as distributed representations, then within- lifetime learning of part of a skill can induce automatic learning of the remaining parts of that skill. More importantly, it is shown that this " free- lunch'' learning ( FLL) is responsible for accelerated evolution of skills, when compared with networks which either 1) cannot benefit from FLL or 2) cannot learn. Specifically, it is shown that FLL accelerates the appearance of adaptive behaviour, both in its innate form and as FLL- induced behaviour, and that FLL can accelerate the rate at which learned behaviours become innate
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