1,687 research outputs found
CFD modelling of wind turbine airfoil aerodynamics
This paper reports the first findings of an ongoing research programme on wind turbine computational aerodynamics at the
University of Glasgow. Several modeling aspects of wind turbine airfoil aerodynamics based on the solution of the Reynoldsaveraged
Navier-Stokes (RANS) equations are addressed.
One of these is the effect of an a priori method for structured grid adaptation aimed at improving the wake resolution.
Presented results emphasize that the proposed adaptation strategy greatly improves the wake resolution in the far-field,
whereas the wake is completely diffused by the non-adapted grid with the same number and distribution of grid nodes. A grid
refinement analysis carried out with the adapted grid shows that the improvements of flow resolution thus achieved are of a
smaller magnitude with respect to those accomplished by adapting the grid keeping constant the number of nodes. The
proposed adaptation approach can be easily included in the structured generation process of both commercial and in-house
structured mesh generators systems.
The study also aims at quantifying the solution inaccuracy arising from not modeling the laminar-to-turbulent transition. It
is found that the drag forces obtained by considering the flow as transitional or fully turbulent may differ by 50 %.
The impact of various turbulence models on the predicted aerodynamic forces is also analyzed.
All these issues are investigated using a special-purpose hyperbolic grid generator and a multi-block structured finitevolume
RANS code. The numerical experiments consider the flow field past a wind turbine airfoil for which an exhaustive
campaign of steady and unsteady experimental measurements was conducted. The predictive capabilities of the CFD solver
are validated by comparing experimental data and numerical predictions for selected flow regimes. The incompressible
analysis and design code XFOIL is also used to support the findings of the comparative analysis of numerical RANS-based
results and experimental data
Generalized Hyper-Ramsey Resonance with separated oscillating fields
An exact generalization of the Ramsey transition probability is derived to
improve ultra-high precision measurement and quantum state engineering when a
particle is subjected to independently-tailored separated oscillating fields.
The phase-shift accumulated at the end of the interrogation scheme offering
high-level control of quantum states throughout various laser parameters
conditions. The Generalized Hyper-Ramsey Resonance based on independent
manipulation of interaction time, field amplitude, phase and frequency detuning
is presented to increase the performance of next generation of atomic,
molecular and nuclear clocks, to upgrade high resolution frequency measurement
in Penning trap mass spectrometry and for a better control of light induced
frequency shifts in matter wave interferometers or quantum information
processing.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Composite pulses in Hyper-Ramsey spectroscopy for the next generation of atomic clocks
The next generation of atomic frequency standards based on an ensemble of
neutral atoms or a single-ion will provide very stringent tests in metrology,
applied and fundamental physics requiring a new step in very precise control of
external systematic corrections. In the proceedings of the 8th Symposium on
Frequency Standards and Metrology, we present a generalization of the recent
Hyper-Ramsey spectroscopy with separated oscillating fields using composites
pulses in order to suppress field frequency shifts induced by the interrogation
laser itself. Sequences of laser pulses including specific selection of phases,
frequency detunings and durations are elaborated to generate spectroscopic
signals with a strong reduction of the light-shift perturbation by off resonant
states. New optical clocks based on weakly allowed or completely forbidden
transitions in atoms, ions, molecules and nuclei will benefit from these
generalized Ramsey schemes to reach relative accuracies well below the
10 level.Comment: accepted as proceedings of the 8th Symposium on Frequency Standards
and Metrology (Potsdam Germany, 12-16 october 2015
Synthetic Frequency Protocol in the Ramsey Spectroscopy of Clock Transitions
We develop an universal method to significantly suppress probe-induced shifts
in any types of atomic clocks using the Ramsey spectroscopy. Our approach is
based on adaptation of the synthetic frequency concept [V. I. Yudin, et al.,
Phys. Rev. Lett. 107, 030801 (2011)] (previously developed for BBR shift
suppression) to the Ramsey spectroscopy with the use of interrogations for
different dark time intervals. Universality of the method consists in
arbitrariness of the possible Ramsey schemes. However, most extremal results
are obtained in combination with so-called hyper-Ramsey spectroscopy [V. I.
Yudin, et al., Phys. Rev. A 82, 011804(R) (2010)]. In the latter case, the
probe-induced frequency shifts can be suppressed considerably below a
fractional level of 10 practically for any optical atomic clocks, where
this shift previously was metrologically significant. The main advantage of our
method in comparison with other radical hyper-Ramsey approaches [R. Hobson, et
al., Phys. Rev. A 93, 010501(R) (2016); T. Zanon-Willette, et al., Phys. Rev. A
93, 042506 (2016)] consist in much greater efficiency and resistibility in the
presence of decoherentization.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Quantum engineering of atomic phase-shifts in optical clocks
Quantum engineering of time-separated Raman laser pulses in three-level
systems is presented to produce an ultra-narrow optical transition in bosonic
alkali-earth clocks free from light shifts and with a significantly reduced
sensitivity to laser parameter fluctuations. Based on a quantum artificial
complex-wave-function analytical model, and supported by a full density matrix
simulation including a possible residual effect of spontaneous emission from
the intermediate state, atomic phase-shifts associated to Ramsey and
Hyper-Ramsey two-photon spectroscopy in optical clocks are derived. Various
common-mode Raman frequency detunings are found where the frequency shifts from
off-resonant states are canceled, while strongly reducing their uncertainties
at the 10 level of accuracy.Comment: accepted for publication in PR
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