1,588 research outputs found
Intensified array camera imaging of solid surface combustion aboard the NASA Learjet
An intensified array camera was used to image weakly luminous flames spreading over thermally thin paper samples in a low gravity environment aboard the NASA-Lewis Learjet. The aircraft offers 10 to 20 sec of reduced gravity during execution of a Keplerian trajectory and allows the use of instrumentation that is delicate or requires higher electrical power than is available in drop towers. The intensified array camera is a charge intensified device type that responds to light between 400 and 900 nm and has a minimum sensitivity of 10(exp 6) footcandles. The paper sample, either ashless filter paper or a lab wiper, burns inside a sealed chamber which is filled with 21, 18, or 15 pct. oxygen in nitrogen at one atmosphere. The camera views the edge of the paper and its output is recorded on videotape. Flame positions are measured every 0.1 sec to calculate flame spread rates. Comparisons with drop tower data indicate that the flame shapes and spread rates are affected by the residual g level in the aircraft
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Dual Thermographic Monitoring of Ti-6Al-4V Cylinders During Direct Laser Deposition
Understanding the thermal phenomena associated with Direct Laser Deposition (DLD) is
necessary to begin manipulating fabricated part properties. In this study, a thermally monitored
Laser Engineered Net Shaping (LENS) system is used with time-invariant (uncontrolled) build
parameters to construct Ti-6Al-4V cylinders with two different build paths. Both paths utilize a
circular contour with serpentine hatch fill; however, successive layer patterns are varied and the
effects compared between 90° and 120° angular pattern shifts. During fabrication, the partâs
thermal history and melt pool temperature are recorded via an in-chamber infrared (IR) camera
and a dual-wavelength (DW) pyrometer, respectively. These tools are used for non-destructive
thermographic inspection (NTI) of the part to ensure target quality and/or microstructure. A
unique calibration method for the IR camera utilizing the DW pyrometer data is presented and a
calibration correction factor was utilized for high temperature ranges. The melt pool was found
to be 40-50% superheated reaching temperatures up to 2500 ÂșC at times. Temperature
characteristics of two different layers were compared for different hatching patters, and the
results show that for a given point in time, maximum temperatures can vary based on laser raster.
Temperature gradients varied and peaked at about 1000 ÂșC/mm along the diameter of the small
rods. This can lead to anisotropy in microstructural and mechanical properties allowing for
unique property growth per build path. Cooling rates within the melt pool appear to increase as
maximum melt pool temperature increases, for instance, from 16,000 ÂșC/s â 41,000 ÂșC/s.Mechanical Engineerin
Shift in critical temperature for random spatial permutations with cycle weights
We examine a phase transition in a model of random spatial permutations which
originates in a study of the interacting Bose gas. Permutations are weighted
according to point positions; the low-temperature onset of the appearance of
arbitrarily long cycles is connected to the phase transition of Bose-Einstein
condensates. In our simplified model, point positions are held fixed on the
fully occupied cubic lattice and interactions are expressed as Ewens-type
weights on cycle lengths of permutations. The critical temperature of the
transition to long cycles depends on an interaction-strength parameter
. For weak interactions, the shift in critical temperature is expected
to be linear in with constant of linearity . Using Markov chain
Monte Carlo methods and finite-size scaling, we find .
This finding matches a similar analytical result of Ueltschi and Betz. We also
examine the mean longest cycle length as a fraction of the number of sites in
long cycles, recovering an earlier result of Shepp and Lloyd for non-spatial
permutations.Comment: v2 incorporated reviewer comments. v3 removed two extraneous figures
which appeared at the end of the PDF
Prenatal diagnosis of morquio disease type A using a simple fluorometric enzyme assay
A new fluorogenic substrate, 4 methylumbelliferyl B-D-6-sulphogalactoside, was used for the
assay of galactose-6-sulphate sulphatase activity in chorionic villi, cultured villus cells, and
amniocytes. The fluorometric assay is much more convenient than the conventional assay
using radiolabelled, sulphated oligosaccharides. Both types of substrate were used in the
prenatal diagnosis of three pregnancies at risk for Morquio type A disease using amniocytes.
These enzyme tests, as well as electrophoresis of glycosaminoglycans in the amniotic fluid,
indicated affected fetuses in two pregnancies and a non-affected fetus in one
Living for the weekend: youth identities in northeast England
Consumption and consumerism are now accepted as key contexts for the construction of youth identities in de-industrialized Britain. This article uses empirical evidence from interviews with young people to suggest that claims of `new community' are overstated, traditional forms of friendship are receding, and increasingly atomized and instrumental youth identities are now being culturally constituted and reproduced by the pressures and anxieties created by enforced adaptation to consumer capitalism. Analysis of the data opens up the possibility of a critical rather than a celebratory exploration of the wider theoretical implications of this process
Precise calculation of parity nonconservation in cesium and test of the standard model
We have calculated the 6s-7s parity nonconserving (PNC) E1 transition
amplitude, E_{PNC}, in cesium. We have used an improved all-order technique in
the calculation of the correlations and have included all significant
contributions to E_{PNC}. Our final value E_{PNC} = 0.904 (1 +/- 0.5 %) \times
10^{-11}iea_{B}(-Q_{W}/N) has half the uncertainty claimed in old calculations
used for the interpretation of Cs PNC experiments. The resulting nuclear weak
charge Q_{W} for Cs deviates by about 2 standard deviations from the value
predicted by the standard model.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figure
Seriation and Multidimensional Scaling: A Data Analysis Approach to Scaling Asymmetric Proximity Matrices
A number of model-based scaling methods have been developed that apply to asymmetric proximity matrices. A flexible data analysis approach is pro posed that combines two psychometric proceduresâ seriation and multidimensional scaling (MDS). The method uses seriation to define an empirical order ing of the stimuli, and then uses MDS to scale the two separate triangles of the proximity matrix defined by this ordering. The MDS solution con tains directed distances, which define an "extra" dimension that would not otherwise be portrayed, because the dimension comes from relations between the two triangles rather than within triangles. The method is particularly appropriate for the analysis of proximities containing temporal information. A major difficulty is the computa tional intensity of existing seriation algorithms, which is handled by defining a nonmetric seriation algorithm that requires only one complete itera tion. The procedure is illustrated using a matrix of co-citations between recent presidents of the Psychometric Society.Yeshttps://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/manuscript-submission-guideline
Monte Carlo investigations of phase transitions: status and perspectives
Using the concept of finite-size scaling, Monte Carlo calculations of various
models have become a very useful tool for the study of critical phenomena, with
the system linear dimension as a variable. As an example, several recent
studies of Ising models are discussed, as well as the extension to models of
polymer mixtures and solutions. It is shown that using appropriate cluster
algorithms, even the scaling functions describing the crossover from the Ising
universality class to the mean-field behavior with increasing interaction range
can be described. Additionally, the issue of finite-size scaling in Ising
models above the marginal dimension (d*=4) is discussed.Comment: 23 pages, including 14 PostScript figures. Presented at
StatPhys-Taiwan, August 9-16, 1999. Also available as PDF file at
http://www.cond-mat.physik.uni-mainz.de/~luijten/erikpubs.htm
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