20,463 research outputs found
Numerical and experimental investigation of a new film cooling geometry with high P/D ratio
In order to improve the coolant surface coverage, in the past years new geometries have been proposed with higher lateral fan-shaped angle and/or greater inter-hole pitch distance (P/D). Unfortunately it is not possible to increase the fan angle or the pitch distance even further without inducing a coolant separation and a drop in the overall effectiveness. This study proposes an innovative design which improves the lateral coverage and reduces the jet lift off. The results have been validated by a combination of numerical and experimental analyses: the experimental work has been assessed on a flat plate using thermo chromic liquid crystals and the results have been confirmed numerically by the CFD with the same conditions. The CFD simulations have been carried out considering a stochastic distribution for the free stream Mach number and the coolant blowing ratio. The experimental and computational results show that the inducing lateral pressure gradients there is a minimum increase in lateral averaged adiabatic effectiveness of +30% than the baseline case until a distance downstream of 20 times the coolant diameter. © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Coronal heating by stochastic magnetic pumping
Recent observational data cast serious doubt on the widely held view that the Sun's corona is heated by traveling waves (acoustic or magnetohydrodynamic). It is proposed that the energy responsible for heating the corona is derived from the free energy of the coronal magnetic field derived from motion of the 'feet' of magnetic field lines in the photosphere. Stochastic motion of the feet of magnetic field lines leads, on the average, to a linear increase of magnetic free energy with time. This rate of energy input is calculated for a simple model of a single thin flux tube. The model appears to agree well with observational data if the magnetic flux originates in small regions of high magnetic field strength. On combining this energy input with estimates of energy loss by radiation and of energy redistribution by thermal conduction, we obtain scaling laws for density and temperature in terms of length and coronal magnetic field strength
Linear-response theory of the longitudinal spin Seebeck effect
We theoretically investigate the longitudinal spin Seebeck effect, in which
the spin current is injected from a ferromagnet into an attached nonmagnetic
metal in a direction parallel to the temperature gradient. Using the fact that
the phonon heat current flows intensely into the attached nonmagnetic metal in
this particular configuration, we show that the sign of the spin injection
signal in the longitudinal spin Seebeck effect can be opposite to that in the
conventional transverse spin Seebeck effect when the electron-phonon
interaction in the nonmagnetic metal is sufficiently large. Our linear-response
approach can explain the sign reversal of the spin injection signal recently
observed in the longitudinal spin Seebeck effect.Comment: Proc. of ICM 2012 (Accepted for publication in J. Korean Phys. Soc.),
typos correcte
Pulses of chaos synchronization in coupled map chains with delayed transmission
Pulses of synchronization in chaotic coupled map lattices are discussed in
the context of transmission of information. Synchronization and
desynchronization propagate along the chain with different velocities which are
calculated analytically from the spectrum of convective Lyapunov exponents.
Since the front of synchronization travels slower than the front of
desynchronization, the maximal possible chain length for which information can
be transmitted by modulating the first unit of the chain is bounded.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, updated version as published in PR
Isochronal synchrony and bidirectional communication with delay-coupled nonlinear oscillators
We propose a basic mechanism for isochronal synchrony and communication with
mutually delay-coupled chaotic systems. We show that two Ikeda ring oscillators
(IROs), mutually coupled with a propagation delay, synchronize isochronally
when both are symmetrically driven by a third Ikeda oscillator. This
synchronous operation, unstable in the two delay-coupled oscillators alone,
facilitates simultaneous, bidirectional communication of messages with chaotic
carrier waveforms. This approach to combine both bidirectional and
unidirectional coupling represents an application of generalized
synchronization using a mediating drive signal for a spatially distributed and
internally synchronized multi-component system
On the Superradiance of Spin-1 Waves in an Equatorial Wedge around a Kerr Hole
Recently Van Putten has suggested that superradiance of magnetosonic waves in
a toroidal magnetosphere around a Kerr black hole may play a role in the
central engine of gamma-ray bursts. In this context, he computed (in the WKB
approximation) the superradiant amplification of scalar waves confined to a
thin equatorial wedge around a Kerr hole and found that the superradiance is
higher than for radiation incident over all angles. This paper presents
calculations of both spin-0 (scalar) superradiance (integrating the radial
equation rather than using the WKB method) and and spin-1
(electromagnetic/magnetosonic) superradiance, in Van Putten's wedge geometry.
In contrast to the scalar case, spin-1 superradiance decreases in the wedge
geometry, decreasing the likelihood of its astrophysical importance.Comment: Submitted to The Astrophysical Journal Letter
Distribution of Faraday Rotation Measure in Jets from Active Galactic Nuclei II. Prediction from our Sweeping Magnetic Twist Model for the Wiggled Parts of AGN Jets and Tails
Distributions of Faraday rotation measure (FRM) and the projected magnetic
field derived by a 3-dimensional simulation of MHD jets are investigated based
on our "sweeping magnetic twist model". FRM and Stokes parameters were
calculated to be compared with radio observations of large scale wiggled AGN
jets on kpc scales. We propose that the FRM distribution can be used to discuss
the 3-dimensional structure of magnetic field around jets and the validity of
existing theoretical models, together with the projected magnetic field derived
from Stokes parameters. In the previous paper, we investigated the basic
straight part of AGN jets by using the result of a 2-dimensional axisymmetric
simulation. The derived FRM distribution has a general tendency to have a
gradient across the jet axis, which is due to the toroidal component of the
magnetic field generated by the rotation of the accretion disk. In this paper,
we consider the wiggled structure of the AGN jets by using the result of a
3-dimensional simulation. Our numerical results show that the distributions of
FRM and the projected magnetic field have a clear correlation with the large
scale structure of the jet itself, namely, 3-dimensional helix. Distributions,
seeing the jet from a certain direction, show a good matching with those in a
part of 3C449 jet. This suggests that the jet has a helical structure and that
the magnetic field (especially the toroidal component) plays an important role
in the dynamics of the wiggle formation because it is due to a current-driven
helical kink instability in our model.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
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