12,631 research outputs found
Application of quasi-homogeneous anisotropic laminates in grid-stiffened panel design
Composite laminates are derived for standard configurations with quasi-homogeneous anisotropic properties, whereby in-plane and out-of-plane stiffness properties are concomitant. Dimensionless parameters, and their relationship to the well-known ply- orientation-dependent lamination parameters, are also developed from which the elements of the extensional and bending stiffness matrices are readily calculated for any fiber/resin properties. The definitive list of laminate configurations for up to 21 plies is presented, together with graphical representations of the lamination parameter design space for standard ply orientations +45, -45, 0 and 90 degrees. Finally, the potential of quasi-homogeneous anisotropic laminates as an optimum design solution for anisogid structures is explored for cases where buckling and strength constraints are both active
The effects of magnetic nozzle configurations on plasma thrusters
Magnetoplasmadynamics (MPD) arc devices have been operated at power levels from 10 KW to 0.1 MW. When these devices have magnetic fields applied to them, they show marked increases in thrust in direct proportion to the magnitide of the applied field. Electrode erosion may be influenced by applied fields. This proposal will study the application of variable magnetic fields over a range of thruster powers, gas densities, and thruster configurations. It is proposed to examine this behavior with numerical codes and limited but relevant experimental tests
The Fragile Balance of Power and Leadership
The aim of this article is to first define effective leadership and power, highlighting the differences between the two. The focal point is that power and effective leadership are not interchangeable and should not be treated as such. Power is a tool while effective leadership is a skill. Simply because a person wields power does not necessarily mean that he or she is an effective leader. Conversely, we will discuss how a leader is unquestionably endowed with a certain degree of power in order to maintain that particular position. Finally, because leaders have power at their disposal, we will explore ways in which power can negatively affect a leader, rendering that individual largely ineffective and exposing the extremely fragile relationship between these two terms
Observations of interstellar zinc
The International Ultraviolet Explorer observations of interstellar zinc toward 10 stars are examined. It is found that zinc is at most only slightly depleted in the interstellar medium; its abundance may serve as a tracer of the true metallicity in the gas. The local interstellar medium has abundances that apparently are homogeneous to within a factor of two, when integrated over paths of about 500 pc, and this result is important for understanding the history of nucleosynthesis in the solar neighborhood. The intrinsic errors in detecting weak interstellar lines are analyzed and suggestions are made as to how this error limit may be lowered to 5 mA per target observation
DLAs and Galaxy Formation
Damped Lyman-alpha systems (DLAs) are useful probes of star formation and
galaxy formation at high redshift. We study the physical properties of DLAs and
their relationship to Lyman-break galaxies using cosmological hydrodynamic
simulations based on the concordance Lambda cold dark matter model. Fundamental
statistics such as global neutral hydrogen (HI) mass density, HI column density
distribution function, DLA rate-of-incidence and mean halo mass of DLAs are
reproduced reasonably well by the simulations, but with some deviations that
need to be understood better in the future. We discuss the feedback effects by
supernovae and galactic winds on the DLA distribution. We also compute the
[C_II] emission from neutral gas in high-z galaxies, and make predictions for
the future observations by ALMA and SPICA. Agreement and disagreement between
simulations and observations are discussed, as well as the future directions of
our DLA research.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures. Invited brief review for Modern Physics Letters
A, in pres
Path Integral Over Black Hole Fluctuations
Evaluating a functional integral exactly over a subset of metrics that
represent the quantum fluctuations of the horizon of a black hole, we obtain a
Schroedinger equation in null coordinate time for the key component of the
metric. The equation yields a current that preserves probability if we use the
most natural choice of functional measure. This establishes the existence of
blurred horizons and a thermal atmosphere. It has been argued previously that
the existence of a thermal atmosphere is a direct concomitant of the thermal
radiation of black holes when the temperature of the hole is greater than that
of its larger environment, which we take as zero.Comment: 5 pages, added a couple of clarification
Social Cognition in Sports-Related Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
Introduction: There is increasing interest in the potential long-term consequences of sports-related concussion (SRC). Research indicates that SRC is associated with cognitive, behavioural and emotional outcomes. Additionally, studies show SRC is associated with increased risk for neurodegeneration such as Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (Manley et al., 2017). Although behavioural and personality changes such as emotional lability, apathy and increased aggression in mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) such as SRC and neurodegenerative conditions are well documented, understanding of these changes is poorly understood. It is proposed that the changes observed may be indicative of underlying impairments in social cognition.
Aims: This preliminary study aimed to assess the relationship between social cognition and SRC and their association with general cognitive abilities.
Method: Twenty-one rugby players with a history of SRC were administered a neuropsychological test battery and social cognition tests (Theory of Mind (ToM), Emotional Recognition and Empathy). Data obtained using standardised measures were quantitatively and descriptively analysed.
Results: Analysis revealed relative weaknesses in ToM and emotional recognition in the context of ‘average or above average’ scores on domains of general cognition when compared to normative data. Group level analyses indicated poorer performance on all measures of social cognition compared with overall performance on general cognition.
Implications: Preliminary findings suggest that social cognition should be routinely tested in the management of SRC. The findings indicate that future research should explore the relationship between social cognition and SRC
A Survey of Metal Lines at High-redshift (I) : SDSS Absorption Line Studies - The Methodology and First Search Results for OVI
We report the results of a systematic search for signatures of metal lines in
quasar spectra of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 3(DR3),
focusing on finding intervening absorbers via detection of their OVI doublet.
Here we present the search algorithm, and criteria for distinguishing
candidates from spurious Lyman {} forest lines. In addition, we compare
our findings with simulations of the Lyman {} forest in order to
estimate the detectability of OVI doublets over various redshift intervals. We
have obtained a sample of 1756 OVI doublet candidates with rest-frame
equivalent width > 0.05 \AA{} in 855 AGN spectra (out of 3702 objects with
redshifts in the accessible range for OVI detection). This sample is further
subdivided into 3 groups according to the likelihood of being real and the
potential for follow-up observation of the candidate. The group with the
cleanest and most secure candidates is comprised of 145 candidates. 69 of these
reside at a velocity separation > 5000 km/s from the QSO, and can therefore be
classified tentatively as intervening absorbers. Most of these absorbers have
not been picked up by earlier, automated QSO absorption line detection
algorithms. This sample increases the number of known OVI absorbers at
redshifts beyond z$_{abs} > 2.7 substantially.Comment: 41 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables, accepted by AJ. This is a
substantially altered version, including an appendix with details on the
validity of the search algorithm on one pixel rather than binning. Also note
that M. Pieri was added as autho
Dynamical evolution of unstable self-gravitating scalar solitons
Recently, static and spherically symmetric configurations of globally regular
self-gravitating scalar solitons were found. These configurations are unstable
with respect to radial linear perturbations. In this paper we study the
dynamical evolution of such configurations and show that, depending on the sign
of the initial perturbation, the solitons either collapse to a Schwarzschild
black hole or else ``explode'' into an outward moving domain wall.Comment: 11 pages, 16 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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