9,406 research outputs found
ADVANCED NUMERICAL METHODS FOR THE DYNAMIC OPTIMISATION OF MECHANICAL COMPONENTS
This PhD thesis concerns the development and assessment
of innovative methodologies for simulating and improving the
dynamic behaviour of mechanical components. In particular, two
correlated issues are addressed herein: hybrid FE/LP gear pump
modelling as a tool for foreseeing and optimising vibration
behaviour in operational conditions; a new methodology for
vibration reduction by applying damping patches in appropriate
positions.
In the field of positive displacement pump modelling,
external gear pumps were analysed with the aim of developing
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advanced methodologies which accurately predict of the dynamic
behaviour of these components. Indeed, the first part of this thesis
(PART A) is about external gear pumps for steering systems; the
research activity concerning gear pumps was carried out in
collaboration with the Dept. of Engineering at the University of
Ferrara in co-operation with TRW Automotive Italia S.p.A –
Divisione Automotive Pumps (Ostellato, Ferrara, Italy). This
research pertains to the creation of a hybrid model, obtained
through the integration of a nonlinear elastodynamic model with
lumped parameters in relation to moving bodies, and an FE pump
model. The model referred to bodies in motion takes into account
the most important phenomena involved in pump operations,
such as time-varying oil pressure distribution on gears, timevarying
meshing stiffness, tooth profile errors, the possibility of
tooth contact, bush displacement and hydrodynamic journal
bearing reactions. Coupling the FE with the various parts which
make up the pump, as well as coupling the lumped-parameter
model and the FE model required the development of specific
advanced techniques; thus several problems related to the
combination of the different models employed in order to form a
single hybrid LP/FE model were studied and resolved. Using
particular techniques based on comparisons between simulations
and experimental results concerning acceleration, forces and
moments, the model was experimentally validated.
Although this hybrid model is an excellent tool for improving
the dynamic behaviour of gear pumps and for optimising the early
stages of prototype design, some problems can still remain related
to unwanted vibrations into precise frequency ranges. Thus, once
the first part of the research was completed, it was decided to
delve into the problem of structural optimisation. In particular, a
methodology for surface damping treatment was created and
applied. Indeed, the second part of the research activity (PART B)
was about the optimisation of mechanical components and
systems through the application of high damping material
components known as patches; this research activity is being
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carried out by the Dept. of Mechanical Engineering (laboratoire
vibrations acoustique) at the INSA institute (Institute National
des Sciences Appliquées) in Lyon (France) where I spent thirteen
months between the second and third year of my doctoral studies.
Such treatment can be applied to existing structures and provides
high damping capability over wide temperature and frequency
ranges. In many practical plate and machinery casing structures,
it is difficult to treat the whole surface with constrained layer
viscoelastic material, due to reduced areas or inaccessible parts.
Furthermore, it may indeed be desirable to selectively apply one
or more damping patches to control certain resonances. Patch
damping design is an efficient and cost effective concept for
solving noise and vibration problems. As a result of these
considerations, the research was focused on finding a general
methodology, based on a purely energetic approach, to reduce the
unwanted amplitude vibration level in mechanical components
through the application of appropriate elements characterized by
high damping properties. The methodology was enforced using IDEAS
v7! software which makes it possible to address modelling
in terms of energy distribution within a structure. Advanced
methodologies were developed to reduce the vibration amplitude
in components such as plate and bracket by applying patches.
Specifically, potential energy estimations will precisely and
accurately define the exact locations on the surface of the
components which should be covered by the patches. As a result,
these studies enable a reduction in vibration amplitude, in
reference both to a single component and/or a complex system. In
addition, this methodology makes it possible to improve the
vibratory behaviour of a component in certain frequency ranges
while reducing, at the same time, the effect of dangerous
resonances, acting specifically on the location, extent and
quantity of the patches to be applied on the surface of the base
component.
During this thesis, different fields were contemporarily
studied: definition and identification of structural modification
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methods, theoretical aspects of material damping characteristics,
vibrational propagation methods and applicative aspects relating
to the implementation of models for the vibratory optimisation of
mechanical components.
This thesis was developed within the LVA research and
technology transfer laboratories at the INSA institute (Lyon,
France) and InterMech (Division Acoustic and Vibrations – LAV);
and was carried out with the contribution of the Emilia Romagna
Region – Assessorato Attività Produttive, Sviluppo Economico,
Piano telematico, PRRIITT misura 3.4 azione A
Ultracold collisions of metastable helium atoms
We report scattering lengths for the singlet Sigma g +, triplet Sigma u + and
quintet Sigma g + adiabatic molecular potentials relevant to collisions of two
metastable (n=2 triplet S) helium atoms as a function of the uncertainty in
these potentials. These scattering lengths are used to calculate experimentally
observable scattering lengths, elastic cross sections and inelastic rates for
any combination of states of the colliding atoms, at temperatures where the
Wigner threshold approximation is valid.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, RevTeX, epsf. Small additions of tex
Signaling in the Rhizosphere.
Signaling studies in the rhizosphere have focused on close interactions between plants and symbiotic microorganisms. However, this focus is likely to expand to other microorganisms because the rhizomicrobiome is important for plant health and is able to influence the structure of the microbial community. We discuss here the shaping of the rhizomicrobiome and define which aspects can be considered signaling. We divide signaling in the rhizosphere into three categories: (i) between microbes, (ii) from plants to microorganisms, and (iii) from microorganisms to plants. Signals act on diverse organisms including the plant. Mycorrhizal and rhizobial interkingdom signaling has revealed its pivotal role in establishing associations, and the recent discovery of signaling with non-symbiotic microorganisms indicates the important role of communication in shaping the rhizomicrobiome
Creation of a molecular condensate by dynamically melting a Mott-insulator
We propose creation of a molecular Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) by loading
an atomic BEC into an optical lattice and driving it into a Mott insulator (MI)
with exactly two atoms per site. Molecules in a MI state are then created under
well defined conditions by photoassociation with essentially unit efficiency.
Finally, the MI is melted and a superfluid state of the molecules is created.
We study the dynamics of this process and photoassociation of tightly trapped
atoms.Comment: minor revisions, 5 pages, 3 figures, REVTEX4, accepted by PRL for
publicatio
Second Order Gauge-Invariant Perturbations during Inflation
The evolution of gauge invariant second-order scalar perturbations in a
general single field inflationary scenario are presented. Different second
order gauge invariant expressions for the curvature are considered. We evaluate
perturbatively one of these second order curvature fluctuations and a second
order gauge invariant scalar field fluctuation during the slow-roll stage of a
massive chaotic inflationary scenario, taking into account the deviation from a
pure de Sitter evolution and considering only the contribution of super-Hubble
perturbations in mode-mode coupling. The spectra resulting from their
contribution to the second order quantum correlation function are nearly
scale-invariant, with additional logarithmic corrections to the first order
spectrum. For all scales of interest the amplitude of these spectra depend on
the total number of e-folds. We find, on comparing first and second order
perturbation results, an upper limit to the total number of e-folds beyond
which the two orders are comparable.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures. Final version to appear in Phys. Rev.
On the occurrence of Radio Halos in galaxy clusters - Insight from a mass-selected sample
Giant radio halos (RH) are diffuse Mpc-scale synchrotron sources detected in
a fraction of massive and merging galaxy clusters. An unbiased study of the
statistical properties of RHs is crucial to constrain their origin and
evolution. We aim at investigating the occurrence of RHs and its dependence on
the cluster mass in a SZ-selected sample of galaxy clusters, which is as close
as possible to be a mass-selected sample. Moreover, we analyse the connection
between RHs and merging clusters. We select from the Planck SZ catalogue
(Planck Collaboration XXIX 2014) clusters with
at z=0.08-0.33 and we search for the presence of RHs using the NVSS for z<0.2
and the GMRT RH survey (GRHS, Venturi et al. 2007, 2008) and its extension
(EGRHS, Kale et al. 2013, 2015) for 0.2<z<0.33. We use archival Chandra X-ray
data to derive information on the clusters dynamical status. We confirm that RH
clusters are merging systems while the majority of clusters without RH are
relaxed, thus supporting the idea that mergers play a fundamental role in the
generation of RHs. We find evidence for an increase of the fraction of clusters
with RHs with the cluster mass and this is in line with expectations derived on
the basis of the turbulence re-acceleration scenario. Finally, we discuss the
effect of the incompleteness of our sample on this result.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Method of comparison equations for cosmological perturbations
We apply the method of comparison equations to study cosmological
perturbations during inflation, obtaining the full power spectra of scalar and
tensor perturbations to first and to second order in the slow-roll parameters.
We compare our results with those derived by means of other methods, in
particular the Green's function method and the improved WKB approximation, and
find agreement for the slow-roll structure. The method of comparison equations,
just as the improved WKB approximation, can however be applied to more general
situations where the slow-roll approximation fails.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figure
Regulation of the p-hydroxybenzoic acid hydroxylase gene (pobA) in plant-growth-promoting Pseudomonas putida WCS358
The regulation of the p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase gene (pobA) of Pseudomonas putida WC5358 involved in the catabolism of p-hydroxybenzoic acid (PHB) to the central intermediate protocatechuate was studied. Protocatechuic acid (PCA) is then degraded via the beta -ketoadipate pathway to form tricarboxylic acid intermediates. In several Gram-negative bacteria pobA has been found genetically linked to a regulator called pobR which activates pobA expression in response to PHB, In this study the identification and characterization of the pobC-pobA locus of P, putida WCS358 is presented. The p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PobA) is highly identical to other identified PobA proteins, whereas the regulatory protein PobC did not display very high identity to other PobR proteins studied and belonged to the AraC family of regulatory proteins, hence it has been designated PobC, Using the pobA promoter transcriptionally fused to a promoterless lad gene it was observed that induction via PobC occurred very efficiently when PHB was present and to a lesser but still significant level also in the presence of PCA, This PobC-PCA response was genetically demonstrated by making use of pobC::Tn5 and pcaH::Tn5 mutants of strain WC5358 constructed in this study. In pobC mutants both the p-hydroxybenzoic and PCA response were not observed, whereas in the pcaH mutant, which lacks a functional protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase, the protocatechuic-acid-dependent pobA activation was still observed. Finally, the activation of pobA by PHB varied according to the concentration and it was observed that in the pcaR::Tn5 regulatory mutant of strain WCS358 the pobA promoter activity was reduced. PcaR is a regulator involved in the regulation of several loci of the beta -ketoadipate pathway, one of which is pcaK, It was postulated that the reduction of pobA activation in pcaR::Tn5 mutants was because there was no expression of the pcaK gene encoding the PHB transport protein resulting in lower levels of PHB present inside the cell
New giant radio sources and underluminous radio halos in two galaxy clusters
The aim of this work is to analyse the radio properties of the massive and
dynamical disturbed clusters Abell 1451 and Zwcl 0634.1+4750, especially
focusing on the possible presence of diffuse emission. We present new GMRT 320
MHz and JVLA 1.5 GHz observations of these two clusters. We found that both
Abell 1451 and Zwcl 0634.1+4750 host a radio halo with a typical spectrum
(). Similarly to a few other cases reported in the recent
literature, these radio halos are significantly fainter in radio luminosity
with respect to the current radio power-mass correlations and they are smaller
than classical giant radio halos. These underluminous sources might contribute
to shed light on the complex mechanisms of formation and evolution of radio
halos. Furthermore, we detected a candidate radio relic at large distance from
the cluster center in Abell 1451 and a peculiar head tail radio galaxy in Zwcl
0634.1+4750, which might be interacting with a shock front.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The Extended GMRT Radio Halo Survey II: Further results and analysis of the full sample
The intra-cluster medium contains cosmic rays and magnetic fields that are
manifested through the large scale synchrotron sources, termed as radio halos,
relics and mini-halos. The Extended Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT)
Radio Halo Survey (EGRHS) is an extension of the GMRT Radio Halo Survey (GRHS)
designed to search for radio halos using GMRT 610/235 MHz observations. The
GRHS+EGRHS consists of 64 clusters in the redshift range 0.2 -- 0.4 that have
an X-ray luminosity larger than 5x10^44 erg/s in the 0.1 -- 2.4 keV band and
with declinations > -31 deg in the REFLEX and eBCS X-ray cluster catalogues. In
this second paper in the series, GMRT 610/235 MHz data on the last batch of 11
galaxy clusters and the statistical analysis of the full sample are presented.
A new mini-halo in RXJ2129.6+0005 and candidate diffuse sources in Z5247, A2552
and Z1953 are discovered. A unique feature of this survey are the upper limits
on the detections of 1 Mpc sized radio halos; 4 new are presented here making a
total of 31 in the survey. Of the sample, 58 clusters that have adequately
sensitive radio information were used to obtain the most accurate occurrence
fractions so far. The occurrence of radio halos in our X-ray selected sample is
~22%, that of mini-halos is 13% and that of relics is ~5%. The radio power -
X-ray luminosity diagrams for the radio halos and mini-halos with the
detections and upper limits are presented. The morphological estimators namely,
centroid shift (w), concentration parameter (c) and power ratios (P_3/P_0)
derived from the Chandra X-ray images are used as proxies for the dynamical
states of the GRHS+EGRHS clusters. The clusters with radio halos and mini-halos
occupy distinct quadrants in the c-w, c-P_3/P_0 and w - P_3/P_0 planes,
corresponding to the more and less morphological disturbance, respectively. The
non-detections span both the quadrants.Comment: 24 pages, 5 tables, 25 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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