185 research outputs found
A linearly controlled direct-current power source for high-current inductive loads in a magnetic suspension wind tunnel
The NASA Langley 6 inch magnetic suspension and balance system (MSBS) requires an independently controlled bidirectional DC power source for each of six positioning electromagnets. These electromagnets provide five-degree-of-freedom control over a suspended aerodynamic test model. Existing power equipment, which employs resistance coupled thyratron controlled rectifiers as well as AC to DC motor generator converters, is obsolete, inefficient, and unreliable. A replacement six phase bidirectional controlled bridge rectifier is proposed, which employs power MOSFET switches sequenced by hybrid analog/digital circuits. Full load efficiency is 80 percent compared to 25 percent for the resistance coupled thyratron system. Current feedback provides high control linearity, adjustable current limiting, and current overload protection. A quenching circuit suppresses inductive voltage impulses. It is shown that 20 kHz interference from positioning magnet power into MSBS electromagnetic model position sensors results predominantly from capacitively coupled electric fields. Hence, proper shielding and grounding techniques are necessary. Inductively coupled magnetic interference is negligible
First International Symposium on Strain Gauge Balances
The first International Symposium on Strain Gauge Balances was sponsored and held at NASA Langley Research Center during October 22-25, 1996. The symposium provided an open international forum for presentation, discussion, and exchange of technical information among wind tunnel test technique specialists and strain gauge balance designers. The Symposium also served to initiate organized professional activities among the participating and relevant international technical communities. Over 130 delegates from 15 countries were in attendance. The program opened with a panel discussion, followed by technical paper sessions, and guided tours of the National Transonic Facility (NTF) wind tunnel, a local commercial balance fabrication facility, and the LaRC balance calibration laboratory. The opening panel discussion addressed "Future Trends in Balance Development and Applications." Forty-six technical papers were presented in 11 technical sessions covering the following areas: calibration, automatic calibration, data reduction, facility reports, design, accuracy and uncertainty analysis, strain gauges, instrumentation, balance design, thermal effects, finite element analysis, applications, and special balances. At the conclusion of the Symposium, a steering committee representing most of the nations and several U.S. organizations attending the Symposium was established to initiate planning for a second international balance symposium, to be held in 1999 in the UK
High-precision buffer circuit for suppression of regenerative oscillation
Precision analog signal conditioning electronics have been developed for wind tunnel model attitude inertial sensors. This application requires low-noise, stable, microvolt-level DC performance and a high-precision buffered output. Capacitive loading of the operational amplifier output stages due to the wind tunnel analog signal distribution facilities caused regenerative oscillation and consequent rectification bias errors. Oscillation suppression techniques commonly used in audio applications were inadequate to maintain the performance requirements for the measurement of attitude for wind tunnel models. Feedback control theory is applied to develop a suppression technique based on a known compensation (snubber) circuit, which provides superior oscillation suppression with high output isolation and preserves the low-noise low-offset performance of the signal conditioning electronics. A practical design technique is developed to select the parameters for the compensation circuit to suppress regenerative oscillation occurring when typical shielded cable loads are driven
Effects of yaw and pitch motion on model attitude measurements
This report presents a theoretical analysis of the dynamic effects of angular motion in yaw and pitch on model attitude measurements in which inertial sensors were used during wind tunnel tests. A technique is developed to reduce the error caused by these effects. The analysis shows that a 20-to-1 reduction in model attitude measurement error caused by angular motion is possible with this technique
Summary Report of the First International Symposium on Strain Gauge Balances and Workshop on AoA/Model Deformation Measurement Techniques
The first International Symposium on Strain Gauge Balances was sponsored under the auspices of the NASA Langley Research Center (LaRC), Hampton, Virginia during October 22-25, 1996. Held at the LaRC Reid Conference Center, the Symposium provided an open international forum for presentation, discussion, and exchange of technical information among wind tunnel test technique specialists and strain gauge balance designers. The Symposium also served to initiate organized professional activities among the participating and relevant international technical communities. The program included a panel discussion, technical paper sessions, tours of local facilities, and vendor exhibits. Over 130 delegates were in attendance from 15 countries. A steering committee was formed to plan a second international balance symposium tentatively scheduled to be hosted in the United Kingdom in 1998 or 1999. The Balance Symposium was followed by the half-day Workshop on Angle of Attack and Model Deformation on the afternoon of October 25. The thrust of the Workshop was to assess the state of the art in angle of attack (AoA) and model deformation measurement techniques and to discuss future developments
The Galactic Environment of the NeVIII Absorber toward HE0226-4110
We report the discovery of a small galaxy system in the vicinity of the
NeVIII absorber at z=0.20701 toward HE0226-4110. The galaxy system consists of
two 0.25 L* disk galaxies and a 0.05 L* galaxy all within \Delta v < 300 km/s
and rho< 200 h^{-1} physical kpc of the absorber. We consider various scenarios
for the origin of the NeVIII absorption, including photo-ionized gas from a
AGN, a starburst driven wind, a hot intragroup medium, hot gas in a galaxy
halo, and a conductive front produced by cool clouds moving at high speed
through a hot medium. We argue that the conductive front scenario is most
likely responsible for producing the NeVIII feature, because it is consistent
with the observed galactic environment around the absorber and because it
naturally explains the multi-phase nature of the gas and the kinematic
signatures of the absorption profiles. Although our preferred scenario suggests
that NeVIII may not be directly probing the warm-hot intergalactic medium, it
does imply the existence of an extended hot confining medium around a disk
galaxy that may contain a significant reservoir of baryons in the form of hot
gas.Comment: Accepted for Publication in ApJ Letters; 5 journal-style pages and 1
figure; full-resolution version is available at
http://lambda.uchicago.edu/public/tmp/ne8_mc09.pd
Hop and Acacia Phytochemicals Decreased Lipotoxicity in 3T3-L1 Adipocytes, db/db Mice, and Individuals with Metabolic Syndrome
The plant-based compounds rho-iso-alpha acids (RIAA) from Humulus lupulus (hops) and proanthocyanidins (PAC) from Acacia nilotica have been shown to modulate insulin signaling in vitro. We investigated their effects on triglyceride (TG) deposition in 3T3-L1 adipocytes, glucose and insulin in obese mouse models, and metabolic syndrome markers in adults with metabolic syndrome. The combination of RIAA and PAC synergistically increased TG content and adiponectin secretion in 3T3-L1 adipocytes under hyperinsulinemic conditions and reduced glucose or insulin in obese mice. In a clinical trial, tablets containing 100 mg RIAA and 500 mg PAC or placebo were administered to metabolic syndrome subjects (3 tablets/day, n = 35; 6 tablets/day, n = 34; or placebo, n = 35) for 12 weeks. Compared to placebo, subjects taking 3 tablets daily showed greater reductions in TG, TG : HDL, fasting insulin, and HOMA scores. The combination of RIAA : PAC at 1 : 5 (wt : wt) favorably modulates dysregulated lipids in insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome
The COS-Halos Survey: Physical Conditions and Baryonic Mass in the Low-Redshift Circumgalactic Medium
We analyze the physical conditions of the cool, photoionized (T
K) circumgalactic medium (CGM) using the COS-Halos suite of gas column density
measurements for 44 gaseous halos within 160 kpc of galaxies at . These data are well described by simple photoionization models, with
the gas highly ionized (n/n) by the
extragalactic ultraviolet background (EUVB). Scaling by estimates for the
virial radius, R, we show that the ionization state (tracked by the
dimensionless ionization parameter, U) increases with distance from the host
galaxy. The ionization parameters imply a decreasing volume density profile
n = (10)(R/R. Our derived
gas volume densities are several orders of magnitude lower than predictions
from standard two-phase models with a cool medium in pressure equilibrium with
a hot, coronal medium expected in virialized halos at this mass scale. Applying
the ionization corrections to the HI column densities, we estimate a lower
limit to the cool gas mass M
M for the volume within R R. Allowing for an
additional warm-hot, OVI-traced phase, the CGM accounts for at least half of
the baryons purported to be missing from dark matter halos at the 10
M scale.Comment: 19 pages, 12 Figures, and a 37-page Appendix with 36 additional
figures. Accepted to ApJ June 21 201
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