12,960 research outputs found
Effects of vibration and shock on the performance of gas-bearing space-power Brayton cycle turbomachinery. Part 4: Suppression of rotor-bearing system vibrations through flexible bearing support damping
A bearing damper, operating on the support flexure of a pivoted pad in a tilting-pad type gas-lubricated journal bearing, has been designed, built, and tested under externally-applied random vibrations. The NASA Brayton Rotating Unit (BRU), a 36,000 rpm, 10-Kwe turbogenerator had previously been subjected in the MTI Vibration Test Laboratory to external random vibrations, and vibration response data had been recorded and analyzed for amplitude distribution and frequency content at a number of locations in the machine. Based on data from that evaluation, a piston-type damper was designed and developed for each of the two flexibly-supported journal bearing pads (one in each of the two three-pad bearings). A modified BRU, with dampers installed, has been re-tested under random vibration conditions. Root-mean-square vibration amplitudes were determined from the test data, and displacement power spectral density analyses have been performed. Results of these data reduction efforts have been compared with vibration tolerance limits. Results of the tests indicate significant reductions in vibration levels in the bearing gas-lubricant films, particularly in the rigidly-mounted pads. The utility of the gas-lubricated damper for limiting rotor-bearing system vibrations in high-speed turbomachinery has thus been demonstrated
Search for doubly charged Higgs bosons using the same-sign diboson mode at the LHC
Doubly charged Higgs bosons are predicted in many new physics models with an
extended Higgs sector that contains a Higgs triplet field. Current experimental
searches have been focusing mainly on the scenario in which the same-sign
dilepton decay modes are the dominant ones. We study the scenario where the
vacuum expectation value of the triplet field is sufficiently large so that the
associated charged Higgs bosons decay dominantly to a pair of weak gauge bosons
instead. A detailed simulation of the signal and the backgrounds is performed
for the CERN Large Hadron Collider at the collision energy of 8 TeV and 14 TeV.
We find that different cuts should be imposed for the events, depending on
whether the doubly charged Higgs boson mass is greater than about 200 GeV. In
the higher mass region, the forward jet tagging proves to be useful in
enhancing the signal significance. We show the discovery reach of the LHC
running at 8 and 14 TeV, with two benchmark triplet vacuum expectation values.
With an integrated luminosity of 10 fb at 8 TeV, the doubly charged
Higgs boson with a mass of GeV can be tested at level in
such a scenario.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures; published in Physical Review
Spin Information from Vector-Meson Decay in Photoproduction
For the photoproduction of vector mesons, all single and double spin
observables involving vector meson two-body decays are defined consistently in
the center of mass. These definitions yield a procedure for
extracting physically meaningful single and double spin observables that are
subject to known rules concerning their angle and energy evolution. As part of
this analysis, we show that measuring the two-meson decay of a photoproduced
or does not determine the vector meson's vector polarization, but
only its tensor polarization. The vector meson decay into lepton pairs is also
insensitive to the vector meson's vector polarization, unless one measures the
spin of one of the leptons. Similar results are found for all double spin
observables which involve observation of vector meson decay. To access the
vector meson's vector polarization, one therefore needs to either measure the
spin of the decay leptons, make an analysis of the background interference
effects or relate the vector meson's vector polarization to other accessible
spin observables.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figure
Creep of Uncoated and Cu-Cr Coated NARloy-Z
Stress rupture creep tests were performed on uncoated and Cu-30vol%Cr coated NARloy-Z copper alloy specimens exposed to air at 482 C to 704 C. The results showed that creep failure in air of unprotected NARloy-Z was precipitated by brittle intergranular surface cracking produced by strain assisted grain boundary oxidation (SAGBO) which in turn caused early onset of tertiary creep. For the protected specimens, the Cu-Cr coating remained adherent throughout the tests and was effective in slowing down the rate of oxygen absorption, particularly at the higher temperatures, by formation of a continuous chromium oxide scale. As the result of reducing oxygen ingress, the coating prevented SAGBO initiated early creep failure, extended creep deformation and increased the creep rupture life of NARloy-Z over the entire 482 C to 704 C test temperature range
High Rayleigh number convection with double diffusive fingers
An electrodeposition cell is used to sustain a destabilizing concentration
difference of copper ions in aqueous solution between the top and bottom
boundaries of the cell. The resulting convecting motion is analogous to
Rayleigh-B\'enard convection at high Prandtl numbers. In addition, a
stabilizing temperature gradient is imposed across the cell. Even for thermal
buoyancy two orders of magnitude smaller than chemical buoyancy, the presence
of the weak stabilizing gradient has a profound effect on the convection
pattern. Double diffusive fingers appear in all cases. The size of these
fingers and the flow velocities are independent of the height of the cell, but
they depend on the ion concentration difference between top and bottom
boundaries as well as on the imposed temperature gradient. The scaling of the
mass transport is compatible with previous results on double diffusive
convection
STUDY OF VIBRATIONAL WAVES OF VARIOUS TENNIS RACKET MATERIALS AND THEIR RELATION TO PERFORMANCE CONTROL
This study investigated vibrational waves of various tennis racket grip materials by studying maximum amplitude and settling times. Five different kinds of tennis racket grips were used, and the materials were composed by mixing carbon and glass fiber. A second purpose was to distinguish performance control by the five kinds of tennis racket. The results of this study indicated that the pure carbon fiber racket had a shorter settling time (
PAN AIR: A computer program for predicting subsonic or supersonic linear potential flows about arbitrary configurations using a higher order panel method. Volume 4: Maintenance document (version 1.1)
The Maintenance Document is a guide to the PAN AIR software system, a system which computes the subsonic or supersonic linear potential flow about a body of nearly arbitrary shape, using a higher order panel method. The document describes the over-all system and each program module of the system. Sufficient detail is given for program maintenance, updating and modification. It is assumed that the reader is familiar with programming and CDC (Control Data Corporation) computer systems. The PAN AIR system was written in FORTRAN 4 language except for a few COMPASS language subroutines which exist in the PAN AIR library. Structured programming techniques were used to provide code documentation and maintainability. The operating systems accommodated are NOS 1.2, NOS/BE and SCOPE 2.1.3 on the CDC 6600, 7600 and Cyber 175 computing systems. The system is comprised of a data management system, a program library, an execution control module and nine separate FORTRAN technical modules. Each module calculates part of the posed PAN AIR problem. The data base manager is used to communicate between modules and within modules. The technical modules must be run in a prescribed fashion for each PAN AIR problem. In order to ease the problem of supplying the many JCL cards required to execute the modules, a separate module called MEC (Module Execution Control) was created to automatically supply most of the JCL cards. In addition to the MEC generated JCL, there is an additional set of user supplied JCL cards to initiate the JCL sequence stored on the system
Density Matrices for a Chain of Oscillators
We consider chains with an optical phonon spectrum and study the reduced
density matrices which occur in density-matrix renormalization group (DMRG)
calculations. Both for one site and for half of the chain, these are found to
be exponentials of bosonic operators. Their spectra, which are correspondingly
exponential, are determined and discussed. The results for large systems are
obtained from the relation to a two-dimensional Gaussian model.Comment: 15 pages,8 figure
Photoemission studies of GaMnAs: Mn-concentration dependent properties
Using angle-resolved photoemission, we have investigated the development of
the electronic structure and the Fermi level pinnning in GaMnAs
with Mn concentrations in the range 1--6%. We find that the Mn-induced changes
in the valence-band spectra depend strongly on the Mn concentration, suggesting
that the interaction between the Mn ions is more complex than assumed in
earlier studies. The relative position of the Fermi level is also found to be
concentration-dependent. In particular we find that for concentrations around
3.5--5% it is located very close to the valence-band maximum, which is in the
range where metallic conductivity has been reported in earlier studies. For
concentration outside this range, larger as well as smaller, the Fermi level is
found to be pinned at about 0.15 eV higher energy.Comment: REVTeX style; 7 pages, 3 figure
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