6,650 research outputs found
Ceramic and coating applications in the hostile environment of a high temperature hypersonic wind tunnel
A Mach 7, blowdown wind tunnel was used to investigate aerothermal structural phenomena on large to full scale high speed vehicle components. The high energy test medium, which provided a true temperature simulation of hypersonic flow at 24 to 40 km altitude, was generated by the combustion of methane with air at high pressures. Since the wind tunnel, as well as the models, must be protected from thermally induced damage, ceramics and coatings were used extensively. Coatings were used both to protect various wind tunnel components and to improve the quality of the test stream. Planned modifications for the wind tunnel included more extensive use of ceramics in order to minimize the number of active cooling systems and thus minimize the inherent operational unreliability and cost that accompanies such systems. Use of nonintrusive data acquisition techniques, such as infrared radiometry, allowed more widespread use of ceramics for models to be tested in high energy wind tunnels
Dissipative Dynamics of Collisionless Nonlinear Alfven Wave Trains
The nonlinear dynamics of collisionless Alfven trains, including resonant
particle effects is studied using the kinetic nonlinear Schroedinger (KNLS)
equation model. Numerical solutions of the KNLS reveal the dynamics of Alfven
waves to be sensitive to the sense of polarization as well as the angle of
propagation with respect to the ambient magnetic field. The combined effects of
both wave nonlinearity and Landau damping result in the evolutionary formation
of stationaryOA S- and arc-polarized directional and rotational
discontinuities. These waveforms are freqently observed in the interplanetary
plasma.Comment: REVTeX, 6 pages (including 5 figures). This and other papers may be
found at http://sdphpd.ucsd.edu/~medvedev/papers.htm
Helical structures from an isotropic homopolymer model
We present Monte Carlo simulation results for square-well homopolymers at a
series of bond lengths. Although the model contains only isotropic pairwise
interactions, under appropriate conditions this system shows spontaneous chiral
symmetry breaking, where the chain exists in either a left- or a right-handed
helical structure. We investigate how this behavior depends upon the ratio
between bond length and monomer radius.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication by Physical Review
Letter
Effects of lattice distortion and Jahn–Teller coupling on the magnetoresistance of La0.7Ca0.3MnO3 and La0.5Ca0.5CoO3 epitaxial films
Studies of La0.7Ca0.3MnO3 epitaxial films on substrates with a range of lattice constants reveal two dominant contributions to the occurrence of colossal negative magnetoresistance (CMR) in these manganites: at high temperatures (T → TC, TC being the Curie temperature), the magnetotransport properties are predominantly determined by the conduction of lattice polarons, while at low temperatures (T ≪ TC/, the residual negative magnetoresistance is correlated with the substrate-induced lattice distortion which incurs excess magnetic domain wall scattering. The importance of lattice polaron conduction associated with the presence of Jahn–Teller coupling in the manganites is further verified by comparing the manganites with epitaxial films of another ferromagnetic perovskite, La0.5Ca0.5CoO3. Regardless of the differences in the substrate-induced lattice distortion, the cobaltite films exhibit much smaller negative magnetoresistance, which may be attributed to the absence of Jahn–Teller coupling and the high electron mobility that prevents the formation of lattice polarons. We therefore suggest that lattice polaron conduction associated with the Jahn–Teller coupling is essential for the occurrence of CMR, and that lattice distortion further enhances the CMR effects in the manganites
Effective gravity from a quantum gauge theory in Euclidean space-time
We consider a gauge theory in an Euclidean -dimensional
space-time, which is known to be renormalizable to all orders in perturbation
theory for . Then, with the help of a space-time representation of
the gauge group, the gauge theory is mapped into a curved space-time with
linear connection. Further, in that mapping the gauge field plays the role of
the linear connection of the curved space-time and an effective metric tensor
arises naturally from the mapping. The obtained action, being quadratic in the
Riemann-Christoffel tensor, at a first sight, spoils a gravity interpretation
of the model. Thus, we provide a sketch of a mechanism that breaks the
color invariance and generates the Einstein-Hilbert term, as well as a
cosmological constant term, allowing an interpretation of the model as a
modified gravity in the Palatini formalism. In that sense, gravity can be
visualized as an effective classical theory, originated from a well defined
quantum gauge theory. We also show that, in the four dimensional case, two
possibilities for particular solutions of the field equations are the de Sitter
and Anti de Sitter space-times.Comment: 20 pages; Final version accepted for publication in Class.Quant.Gra
Convective Fingering of an Autocatalytic Reaction Front
We report experimental observations of the convection-driven fingering
instability of an iodate-arsenous acid chemical reaction front. The front
propagated upward in a vertical slab; the thickness of the slab was varied to
control the degree of instability. We observed the onset and subsequent
nonlinear evolution of the fingers, which were made visible by a {\it p}H
indicator. We measured the spacing of the fingers during their initial stages
and compared this to the wavelength of the fastest growing linear mode
predicted by the stability analysis of Huang {\it et. al.} [{\it Phys. Rev. E},
{\bf 48}, 4378 (1993), and unpublished]. We find agreement with the thickness
dependence predicted by the theory.Comment: 11 pages, RevTex with 3 eps figures. To be published in Phys Rev E,
[email protected], [email protected], [email protected]
- …