8,298 research outputs found
Large wind energy converter: Growian 3 MW
The main features of the Growian wind energy converter are presented. Energy yield, environmental impact, and construction of the energy converter are discussed. Reliability of the windpowered system is assessed
Understanding climate: A strategy for climate modeling and predictability research, 1985-1995
The emphasis of the NASA strategy for climate modeling and predictability research is on the utilization of space technology to understand the processes which control the Earth's climate system and it's sensitivity to natural and man-induced changes and to assess the possibilities for climate prediction on time scales of from about two weeks to several decades. Because the climate is a complex multi-phenomena system, which interacts on a wide range of space and time scales, the diversity of scientific problems addressed requires a hierarchy of models along with the application of modern empirical and statistical techniques which exploit the extensive current and potential future global data sets afforded by space observations. Observing system simulation experiments, exploiting these models and data, will also provide the foundation for the future climate space observing system, e.g., Earth observing system (EOS), 1985; Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) North, et al. NASA, 1984
Effect of the orientational relaxation on the collective motion of patterns formed by self-propelled particles
We investigate the collective behavior of self-propelled particles (SPPs)
undergoing competitive processes of pattern formation and rotational relaxation
of their self-propulsion velocities. In full accordance with previous work, we
observe transitions between different steady states of the SPPs caused by the
intricate interplay among the involved effects of pattern formation,
orientational order, and coupling between the SPP density and orientation
fields. Based on rigorous analytical and numerical calculations, we prove that
the rate of the orientational relaxation of the SPP velocity field is the main
factor determining the steady states of the SPP system. Further, we determine
the boundaries between domains in the parameter plane that delineate
qualitatively different resting and moving states. In addition, we analytically
calculate the collective velocity of the SPPs and show that it
perfectly agrees with our numerical results. We quantitatively demonstrate that
does not vanish upon approaching the transition boundary between the
moving pattern and homogeneous steady states.Comment: 3 Figure
Thin film evolution equations from (evaporating) dewetting liquid layers to epitaxial growth
In the present contribution we review basic mathematical results for three
physical systems involving self-organising solid or liquid films at solid
surfaces. The films may undergo a structuring process by dewetting,
evaporation/condensation or epitaxial growth, respectively. We highlight
similarities and differences of the three systems based on the observation that
in certain limits all of them may be described using models of similar form,
i.e., time evolution equations for the film thickness profile. Those equations
represent gradient dynamics characterized by mobility functions and an
underlying energy functional.
Two basic steps of mathematical analysis are used to compare the different
system. First, we discuss the linear stability of homogeneous steady states,
i.e., flat films; and second the systematics of non-trivial steady states,
i.e., drop/hole states for dewetting films and quantum dot states in epitaxial
growth, respectively. Our aim is to illustrate that the underlying solution
structure might be very complex as in the case of epitaxial growth but can be
better understood when comparing to the much simpler results for the dewetting
liquid film. We furthermore show that the numerical continuation techniques
employed can shed some light on this structure in a more convenient way than
time-stepping methods.
Finally we discuss that the usage of the employed general formulation does
not only relate seemingly not related physical systems mathematically, but does
as well allow to discuss model extensions in a more unified way
Modelling the evaporation of thin films of colloidal suspensions using Dynamical Density Functional Theory
Recent experiments have shown that various structures may be formed during
the evaporative dewetting of thin films of colloidal suspensions. Nano-particle
deposits of strongly branched `flower-like', labyrinthine and network
structures are observed. They are caused by the different transport processes
and the rich phase behaviour of the system. We develop a model for the system,
based on a dynamical density functional theory, which reproduces these
structures. The model is employed to determine the influences of the solvent
evaporation and of the diffusion of the colloidal particles and of the liquid
over the surface. Finally, we investigate the conditions needed for
`liquid-particle' phase separation to occur and discuss its effect on the
self-organised nano-structures
Solidification in soft-core fluids: disordered solids from fast solidification fronts
Using dynamical density functional theory we calculate the speed of
solidification fronts advancing into a quenched two-dimensional model fluid of
soft-core particles. We find that solidification fronts can advance via two
different mechanisms, depending on the depth of the quench. For shallow
quenches, the front propagation is via a nonlinear mechanism. For deep
quenches, front propagation is governed by a linear mechanism and in this
regime we are able to determine the front speed via a marginal stability
analysis. We find that the density modulations generated behind the advancing
front have a characteristic scale that differs from the wavelength of the
density modulation in thermodynamic equilibrium, i.e., the spacing between the
crystal planes in an equilibrium crystal. This leads to the subsequent
development of disorder in the solids that are formed. For the one-component
fluid, the particles are able to rearrange to form a well-ordered crystal, with
few defects. However, solidification fronts in a binary mixture exhibiting
crystalline phases with square and hexagonal ordering generate solids that are
unable to rearrange after the passage of the solidification front and a
significant amount of disorder remains in the system.Comment: 18 pages, 14 fig
Conditions for duality between fluxes and concentrations in biochemical networks
Mathematical and computational modelling of biochemical networks is often
done in terms of either the concentrations of molecular species or the fluxes
of biochemical reactions. When is mathematical modelling from either
perspective equivalent to the other? Mathematical duality translates concepts,
theorems or mathematical structures into other concepts, theorems or
structures, in a one-to-one manner. We present a novel stoichiometric condition
that is necessary and sufficient for duality between unidirectional fluxes and
concentrations. Our numerical experiments, with computational models derived
from a range of genome-scale biochemical networks, suggest that this
flux-concentration duality is a pervasive property of biochemical networks. We
also provide a combinatorial characterisation that is sufficient to ensure
flux-concentration duality. That is, for every two disjoint sets of molecular
species, there is at least one reaction complex that involves species from only
one of the two sets. When unidirectional fluxes and molecular species
concentrations are dual vectors, this implies that the behaviour of the
corresponding biochemical network can be described entirely in terms of either
concentrations or unidirectional fluxes
- …