120,963 research outputs found
An Experimental and Numerical Investigation of Swirling Flows in a Rectangular Nozzle
The high thrust to weight ratios now possible for military aircraft have made thrust vector pitch control more attractive and versatile than aerodynamic surface pitch control. Use of a rectangular nozzle is a natural consequence because articulation and sealing problems are less formidable than for conventional circular ones. The rectangular nozzle offers the additional possibility that the exhaust may mix rapidly with the ambient air and thereby reduce the radiative signature of the exhaust. A detailed experimental investigation is described, which demonstrates that the formation of axial vortices in the nozzle is dependent on the vorticity distribution at the turbine exhaust. Further, three mechanisms which provide for the formation of axial vortices are identified. A parallel computational investigation was carried out which not only confirmed the relationship between the turbine exhaust vorticity and the vortex pattern formed in the nozzle but also provided details of the flow field between the turbine discharge and the nozzle exit. On the basis of this more detailed understanding, it is now possible to tailor the vortex distribution at the nozzle exit by design of the turbine discharge and the intervening passage
Archaeological Investigation at the Marshall Powder Mill (41HS17), Confederate States of America 1863-1865, Harrison County, Texas: 1994 Season
The Northeast Texas Archeological Society, in conjunction with the East Texas, Dallas, and Tarrant County archeological societies, reinstated archaeological investigations at the Marshall Powder Mill (41HS17) in 1994 following several years of delicate negotiations with the landowner about the value of preserving this archaeological site. The Marshall Powder Mill manufactured gunpowder, small arms and cannon, and refurbished weaponry, and was one of several arsenals that served the Trans-Mississippi Department of the Confederate States of America from 1863 to 1865. None have been thoroughly investigated archaeologically, however, thereby ignoring a major aspect of the Confederacy\u27s war effort, and an important industrial enterprise.
Building foundations, earthworks, roads, and an artificial channel race remain essentially undisturbed within the Loop 390 corridor and the privately-owned portions of the site; the eastern one-third of the site has been destroyed by a modern lumber mill. Although the site is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, there is no concerted plan for preservation of this Civil War military-industrial complex.
Little historical documentation exists as to the number and types of buildings, their locations, or the activities that were conducted at the Marshall Powder Mill. The single map in the National Archives was captured by Federal troops in 1864, and only indicates a few of the buildings and none of the earthworks. Apparently the Confederates were concerned with security, and the commander, Major George D. Alexander, destroyed or removed all records prior to Federal occupation of the site in 1865. Therefore, the archaeological remains speak the clearest about the Marshall Powder Mill\u27s buildings and their functions, and may be the only sure means of reconstructing the layout and design of the arsenal, as well as ancillary fortifications, buildings, and structures around Marshall that date to the Civil War period
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Geochelone carbonaria
Number of Pages: 7Integrative BiologyGeological Science
Nurse telephone triage in out of hours primary care: a pilot study
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A New X-ray Selected Sample of Very Extended Galaxy Groups from the ROSAT All-Sky Survey
Some indications for tension have long been identified between cosmological
constraints obtained from galaxy clusters and primary CMB measurements.
Typically, assuming the matter density and fluctuations, as parameterized with
Omega_m and sigma_8, estimated from CMB measurements, many more clusters are
expected than those actually observed. One possible explanation could be that
certain types of galaxy groups or clusters were missed in samples constructed
in previous surveys, resulting in a higher incompleteness than estimated. We
aim to determine if a hypothetical class of very extended, low surface
brightness, galaxy groups or clusters have been missed in previous X-ray
cluster surveys based on the ROSAT All-Sky Survey (RASS). We applied a
dedicated source detection algorithm sensitive also to more unusual group or
cluster surface brightness distributions. We found many known but also a number
of new group candidates, which are not included in any previous X-ray / SZ
cluster catalogs. In this paper, we present a pilot sample of 13 very extended
groups discovered in the RASS at positions where no X-ray source has been
detected previously and with clear optical counterparts. The X-ray fluxes of at
least 5 of these are above the nominal flux-limits of previous RASS cluster
catalogs. They have low mass (; i.e., galaxy
groups), are at low redshift (z<0.08), and exhibit flatter surface brightness
distributions than usual. We demonstrate that galaxy groups were missed in
previous RASS surveys, possibly due to the flat surface brightness
distributions of this potential new population. Analysis of the full sample
will show if this might have a significant effect on previous cosmological
parameter constraints based on RASS cluster surveys. (This is a shortened
version of the abstract - full text in the article)Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, accepted by A&
Handbook on Hypergolic Propellant Discharges and Disposal
The efficiency of all treatment methods formerly or currently used in treating chemical wastes is assessed with emphasis on the disposal of hypergolic propellants. Maximum focus is on the space shuttle propellants MMH and N2O4. Except for hydrogen peroxide oxidizers, all the propellants are nitrogen based and can be potentially reduced to valuable plant nutrients. In theory, all the propellants can be reduced to carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen, except of fuming nitric acid which contains a small amount of fluorine. Appendices cover: (1) a general design criteria for disposal ponds; (2) thermal aspects of reaction in dilute solution; (3) gas bubble growth, detachment, and rise (4) absorption scrubber fundamentals and descriptions; (5) separation of a propellant vapor from a helium stream by permeation; and (6) atmospheric emission limits
Population Differentiation In Daphnia Alters Community Assembly In Experimental Ponds
Most studies of community assembly ignore how genetic differentiation within species affects their colonization and extinction. However, genetic differentiation in ecologically relevant traits may be substantial enough to alter the colonization and extinction processes that drive community assembly. We measured significant molecular genetic and quantitative trait differentiation among three Daphnia pulex X pulicaria populations in southwestern Michigan ponds and investigated whether this differentiation could alter the assembly of pond zooplankton communities in experimental mesocosms. In this study, we monitored the invasion success of different D. pulex x pulicaria populations after their introduction into an established zooplankton community. We also monitored the invasion success of a diverse array of zooplankton species into different D. pulex x pulicaria populations. Zooplankton community composition depended on the D. pulex X pulicaria source population. Daphnia pulex X pulicaria from one population failed to invade zooplankton communities, while those from other populations successfully invaded similar communities. If population differentiation in other species plays a role in community assembly similar to that demonstrated in our study, assembly may be more sensitive to evolutionary processes than has been previously generally considered.Integrative Biolog
Bulk viscosity of a gas of neutrinos and coupled scalar particles, in the era of recombination
Bulk viscosity may serve to damp sound waves in a system of neutrinos coupled
to very light scalar particles, in the era after normal neutrino decoupling but
before recombination. We calculate the bulk viscosity parameter in a minimal
scheme involving the coupling of the two systems. We add some remarks on the
bulk viscosity of a system of fully ionized hydrogen plus photons.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Some Constraints On the Effects of Age and Metallicity on the Low Mass X-ray Binary Formation Rate
We have studied the low mass X-ray binary (LMXB) populations within and
outside globular clusters (GC) in NGC 4365 and NGC 3115. Using published age
and metallicity constraints from optical and IR observations of their GCs, we
do not find any evidence for an increase in the LMXB formation rate in the
intermediate age cluster population of NGC 4365, as has been proposed in some
scenarios of dynamical LMXB formation in GCs. The old, metal-rich, red
population of GCs in NGC 3115 on the other hand is {\it at least} three times
as efficient at creating LMXBs as the old, metal-poor, blue clusters. These
data suggest that the higher formation efficiency of LMXBs in the red GC
subsystems of many galaxies is largely a consequence of their higher
metallicity. A comparison of the densities of field LMXBs in different galaxies
does not reveal an obvious correlation with the age of the field stars as
predicted by models in which the LMXB formation rate in the field drops
monotonically with time after an initial burst. This suggests that either a
significant fraction of the field LMXBs are created in GCs and subsequently
injected into the field, or the LMXB formation rate has a more complex time
evolution pattern.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters. 7 pages including 5 figure
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