740 research outputs found
Limited-duty-cycle Satellite Formation Control via Differential Drag
As CubeSat formation flying missions relying on differential drag control become increasingly common, additional missions based on this control must be studied. A mission planning tool is investigated to control the relative spacing of a CubeSat formation where differential drag is the sole control mechanism. System performance is investigated under varying perturbations and a range of system parameters, including limiting the control duty cycle. Optimal solutions based on using a pseudo spectral numerical solver, GPOPS-II, to minimize maneuver time. This study includes the development of a mission planning tool to work with the modeled CubeSat mission to calculate optimal maneuvers for its mission architecture. The effects of mission altitude, solar cycle, various maneuver sizes and formations, limited control, various computational methods, and error checkers were evaluated. The mission planning tool developed can properly execute all desired run parameters and options, though it suffers from computational complexity. Pseudo spectral methods executed in MatLab were determined to be poorly suited to the problem due to memory requirements involved. Limited duty cycle control can be applied with differential drag with varying effectiveness dependent on mission parameters
Diagnoses to unravel secular hydrodynamical processes in rotating main sequence stars
(Abridged) We present a detailed analysis of the main physical processes
responsible for the transport of angular momentum and chemical species in the
radiative regions of rotating stars. We focus on cases where meridional
circulation and shear-induced turbulence only are included in the simulations.
Our analysis is based on a 2-D representation of the secular hydrodynamics,
which is treated using expansions in spherical harmonics. We present a full
reconstruction of the meridional circulation and of the associated fluctuations
of temperature and mean molecular weight along with diagnosis for the transport
of angular momentum, heat and chemicals. In the present paper these tools are
used to validate the analysis of two main sequence stellar models of 1.5 and 20
Msun for which the hydrodynamics has been previously extensively studied in the
literature. We obtain a clear visualization and a precise estimation of the
different terms entering the angular momentum and heat transport equations in
radiative zones. This enables us to corroborate the main results obtained over
the past decade by Zahn, Maeder, and collaborators concerning the secular
hydrodynamics of such objects. We focus on the meridional circulation driven by
angular momentum losses and structural readjustements. We confirm
quantitatively for the first time through detailed computations and separation
of the various components that the advection of entropy by this circulation is
very well balanced by the barotropic effects and the thermal relaxation during
most of the main sequence evolution. This enables us to derive simplifications
for the thermal relaxation on this phase. The meridional currents in turn
advect heat and generate temperature fluctuations that induce differential
rotation through thermal wind thus closing the transport loop.Comment: 16 pages, 18 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
Effects of rotational mixing on the asteroseismic properties of solar-type stars
The influence of rotational mixing on the evolution and asteroseismic
properties of solar-type stars is studied. Rotational mixing changes the global
properties of a solar-type star with a significant increase of the effective
temperature resulting in a shift of the evolutionary track to the blue part of
the HR diagram. These differences are related to changes of the chemical
composition, because rotational mixing counteracts the effects of atomic
diffusion leading to larger helium surface abundances for rotating models than
for non-rotating ones. Higher values of the large frequency separation are then
found for rotating models than for non-rotating ones at the same evolutionary
stage, because the increase of the effective temperature leads to a smaller
radius and hence to an increase of the stellar mean density. Rotational mixing
also has a considerable impact on the structure and chemical composition of the
central stellar layers by bringing fresh hydrogen fuel to the core, thereby
enhancing the main-sequence lifetime. The increase of the central hydrogen
abundance together with the change of the chemical profiles in the central
layers result in a significant increase of the values of the small frequency
separations and of the ratio of the small to large separations for models
including shellular rotation. This increase is clearly seen for models with the
same age sharing the same initial parameters except for the inclusion of
rotation as well as for models with the same global stellar parameters and in
particular the same location in the HR diagram. By computing rotating models of
solar-type stars including the effects of a dynamo that possibly occurs in the
radiative zone, we find that the efficiency of rotational mixing is strongly
reduced when the effects of magnetic fields are taken into account, in contrast
to what happens in massive stars.Comment: 11 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Impact of internal gravity waves on the rotation profile inside pre-main sequence low-mass stars
We study the impact of internal gravity waves (IGW), meridional circulation,
shear turbulence, and stellar contraction on the internal rotation profile and
surface velocity evolution of solar metallicity low-mass pre-main sequence
stars. We compute a grid of rotating stellar evolution models with masses
between 0.6 and 2.0Msun taking these processes into account for the transport
of angular momentum, as soon as the radiative core appears and assuming no more
disk-locking from that moment on.IGW generation along the PMS is computed
taking Reynolds-stress and buoyancy into account in the bulk of the stellar
convective envelope and convective core (when present). Redistribution of
angular momentum within the radiative layers accounts for damping of prograde
and retrograde IGW by thermal diffusivity and viscosity in corotation
resonance. Over the whole mass range considered, IGW are found to be
efficiently generated by the convective envelope and to slow down the stellar
core early on the PMS. In stars more massive than ~ 1.6Msun, IGW produced by
the convective core also contribute to angular momentum redistribution close to
the ZAMS. Overall, IGW are found to significantly change the internal rotation
profile of PMS low-mass stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A (15 pages
3He-Driven Mixing in Low-Mass Red Giants: Convective Instability in Radiative and Adiabatic Limits
We examine the stability and observational consequences of mixing induced by
3He burning in the envelopes of first ascent red giants. We demonstrate that
there are two unstable modes: a rapid, nearly adiabatic mode that we cannot
identify with an underlying physical mechanism, and a slow, nearly radiative
mode that can be identified with thermohaline convection. We present
observational constraints that make the operation of the rapid mode unlikely to
occur in real stars. Thermohaline convection turns out to be fast enough only
if fluid elements have finger-like structures with a length to diameter ratio
l/d > 10. We identify some potentially serious obstacles for thermohaline
convection as the predominant mixing mechanism for giants. We show that
rotation-induced horizontal turbulent diffusion may suppress the 3He-driven
thermohaline convection. Another potentially serious problem for it is to
explain observational evidence of enhanced extra mixing. The 3He exhaustion in
stars approaching the red giant branch (RGB) tip should make the 3He mixing
inefficient on the asymptotic giant branch (AGB). In spite of this, there are
observational data indicating the presence of extra mixing in low-mass AGB
stars similar to that operating on the RGB. Overmixing may also occur in
carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures, modified version, accepted by Ap
Local Axisymmetric Diffusive Stability of Weakly-Magnetized, Differentially-Rotating, Stratified Fluids
We study the local stability of stratified, differentially-rotating fluids to
axisymmetric perturbations in the presence of a weak magnetic field and of
finite resistivity, viscosity and heat conductivity. This is a generalization
of the Goldreich-Schubert-Fricke (GSF) double-diffusive analysis to the
magnetized and resistive, triple-diffusive case. Our fifth-order dispersion
relation admits a novel branch which describes a magnetized version of
multi-diffusive modes. We derive necessary conditions for axisymmetric
stability in the inviscid and perfect-conductor (double-diffusive) limits. In
each case, rotation must be constant on cylinders and angular velocity must not
decrease with distance from the rotation axis for stability, irrespective of
the relative strength of viscous, resistive and heat diffusion. Therefore, in
both double-diffusive limits, solid body rotation marginally satisfies our
stability criteria. The role of weak magnetic fields is essential to reach
these conclusions. The triple-diffusive situation is more complex, and its
stability criteria are not easily stated. Numerical analysis of our general
dispersion relation confirms our analytic double-diffusive criteria, but also
shows that an unstable double-diffusive situation can be significantly
stabilized by the addition of a third, ostensibly weaker, diffusion process. We
describe a numerical application to the Sun's upper radiative zone and
establish that it would be subject to unstable multi-diffusive modes if
moderate or strong radial gradients of angular velocity were present.Comment: 29 pages, 1 table, accepted for publication in Ap
On the Coupling between Helium Settling and Rotation-Induced Mixing in Stellar Radiative Zones: II- Application to light elements in population I main-sequence stars
In the two previous papers of this series, we have discussed the importance
of t he -gradients due to helium settling on rotation-induced mixing,
first in a n approximate analytical way, second in a 2D numerical simulation.
We have found that, for slowly rotating low mass stars, a process of ``creeping
paralysis" in which the circulation and the diffusion are nearly frozen may
take place below the convective zone. Here we apply this theory to the case of
lithium and beryll ium in galactic clusters and specially the Hyades. We take
into account the rota tional braking with rotation velocities adjusted to the
present observations. We find that two different cells of meridional
circulation appear on the hot side of the "lithium dip" and that the "creeping
paralysis" process occurs, not dir ectly below the convective zone, but deeper
inside the radiative zone, at the to p of the second cell. As a consequence,
the two cells are disconnected, which ma y be the basic reason for the lithium
increase with effective temperature on thi s side of the dip. On the cool side,
there is just one cell of circulation and t he paralysis has not yet set down
at the age of the Hyades; the same modelisatio n accounts nicely for the
beryllium observations as well as for the lithium ones .Comment: 13 printed pages, 10 figures. ApJ, in press (April 20, 2003
Au-Cu/SBA(Ti) based catalysts for photocatalytic applications
ComunicaciĂłn a congresoIn this work, it has been synthesized several Au and Au-Cu alloy photocatalysts supported on two
different mesoporous supports: a non-commercial SBA-15 and a post-synthesis TiO2 modified SBA-15
(TiSBA-15), with which a high dispersion of TiO2 species have been achieved maintaining the SBA-15
structure. In addition, it has also been obtained highly dispersed Au nanoparticles confined in SBA-15
pore channels, as can be observed in Figure 1. The photocatalysts have been preliminary tested in the
preferential CO oxidation in a H2-rich stream (CO-PROX) at room temperature and atmospheric pressure
under simulated solar light irradiation. In spite of the very low gold and copper loading (1.5 wt% and
0.5wt% respectively), the catalysts resulted active and selective in the low temperature photo-CO-PROX.Universidad de Málaga, Campus de Excelencia Internacional AndalucĂa Tec
A Model of Magnetic Braking of Solar Rotation That Satisfies Observational Constraints
The model of magnetic braking of solar rotation considered by Charbonneau &
MacGregor (1993) has been modified so that it is able to reproduce for the
first time the rotational evolution of both the fastest and slowest rotators
among solar-type stars in open clusters of different ages, without coming into
conflict with other observational constraints, such as the time evolution of
the atmospheric Li abundance in solar twins and the thinness of the solar
tachocline. This new model assumes that rotation-driven turbulent diffusion,
which is thought to amplify the viscosity and magnetic diffusivity in stellar
radiative zones, is strongly anisotropic with the horizontal components of the
transport coefficients strongly dominating over those in the vertical
direction. Also taken into account is the poloidal field decay that helps to
confine the width of the tachocline at the solar age. The model's properties
are investigated by numerically solving the azimuthal components of the coupled
momentum and magnetic induction equations in two dimensions using a finite
element methodComment: 39 pages, 11 figures, submitted to Ap
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