13,015 research outputs found
Emergency relief venting of the infrared telescope liquid helium dewar
An analysis is made of the emergency relief venting of the liquid helium dewar of the Spacelab 2 infrared telescope experiment in the event of a massive failure of the dewar guard vacuum. Such a failure, resulting from a major accident, could cause rapid heating and pressurization of the liquid helium in the dewar and lead to relief venting through the emergency relief system. The heat input from an accident is estimated for various fluid conditions in the dewar and the relief process as it takes place through one or both of the emergency relief paths is considered. It is shown that under all reasonable circumstances the dewar will safely relieve itself, and the pressure will not exceed 85 percent of the proof pressure or 63 percent of the burst pressure
Emergency relief venting of the infrared telescope liquid helium dewar, second edition
An updated analysis is made of the emergency relief venting of the liquid helium dewar of the Spacelab 2 Infrared Telescope experiment in the event of a massive failure of the dewar guard vacuum. Such a failure, resulting from a major accident, could cause rapid heating and pressurization of the liquid helium in the dewar and lead to relief venting through the emergency relief system. The heat input from an accident is estimated for various fluid conditions in the dewar and the relief process considered as it takes place through one or both of the emergency relief paths. It was previously assumed that the burst diaphragms in the dewar relief paths would rupture at a pressure of 65 psi differential or 4.4 atmospheres. In fact, it has proved necessary to use burst diaphragms in the dewar which rupture at 115 psid or 7.8 atmospheres. An analysis of this case was carried out and shows that when the high pressure diaphragm rupture occurs, the dewar pressure falls within 8 s to below the 4.4 atmospheres for which the original analysis was performed, and thereafter it remains below that level
Quantum fluids in nanopores
We describe calculations of the properties of quantum fluids inside nanotubes
of various sizes. Very small radius () pores confine the gases to a line, so
that a one-dimensional (1D) approximation is applicable; the low temperature
behavior of 1D He is discussed. Somewhat larger pores permit the particles
to move off axis, resulting eventually in a transition to a cylindrical shell
phase--a thin film near the tube wall; we explored this behavior for H. At
even larger nm, both the shell phase and an axial phase are present.
Results showing strong binding of cylindrical liquids He and He are
discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, uses ws-ijmpb, graphicx, xspace; minor revisions
from version published in Proc. 13th Intl. Conference on Recent Progress in
Many-Body Theories (QMBT13), Buenos Aires, 200
Harnessing the power of cell transplantation to target respiratory dysfunction following spinal cord injury.
The therapeutic benefit of cell transplantation has been assessed in a host of central nervous system (CNS) diseases, including disorders of the spinal cord such as traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI). The promise of cell transplantation to preserve and/or restore normal function can be aimed at a variety of therapeutic mechanisms, including replacement of lost or damaged CNS cell types, promotion of axonal regeneration or sprouting, neuroprotection, immune response modulation, and delivery of gene products such as neurotrophic factors, amongst other possibilities. Despite significant work in the field of transplantation in models of SCI, limited attention has been directed at harnessing the therapeutic potential of cell grafting for preserving respiratory function after SCI, despite the critical role pulmonary compromise plays in patient outcome in this devastating disease. Here, we will review the limited number of studies that have demonstrated the therapeutic potential of intraspinal transplantation of a variety of cell types for addressing respiratory dysfunction in SCI
Massless Dirac-Weyl Fermions in a T_3 Optical Lattice
We propose an experimental setup for the observation of quasi-relativistic
massless Fermions. It is based on a T_3 optical lattice, realized by three
pairs of counter-propagating lasers, filled with fermionic cold atoms. We show
that in the long wavelength approximation the T_3 Hamiltonian generalizes the
Dirac-Weyl Hamiltonian for the honeycomb lattice, however, with a larger value
of the pseudo-spin S=1. In addition to the Dirac cones, the spectrum includes a
dispersionless branch of localized states producing a finite jump in the atomic
density. Furthermore, implications for the Landau levels are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Why Study the Educational Policies Commission?
It is an honor to be asked to give this address at GERA. To acknowledge that honor briefly, and with my tongue in my cheek a bit, let me start with a brief account of my own contact with GERA, and its parent organization, AERA. This account is offered to indicate how one like me who does historical research in education has interacted with the movers and shakers in our professional educational research organizations, who largely do not do such research, over the past three decades
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