686 research outputs found
Considerations of some critical ejector problems
Some aspects of ejector design and application, including, three dimensional effects and cross flow effects are presented
Jet-diffuser Ejector - Attached Nozzle Design
Attached primary nozzles were developed to replace the detached nozzles of jet-diffuser ejectors. Slotted primary nozzles located at the inlet lip and injecting fluid normal to the thrust axis, and rotating the fluid into the thrust direction using the Coanda Effect were investigated. Experiments indicated excessive skin friction or momentum cancellation due to impingement of opposing jets resulted in performance degradation. This indicated a desirability for location and orientation of the injection point at positions removed from the immediate vicinity of the inlet surface, and at an acute angle with respect to the thrust axis. Various nozzle designs were tested over a range of positions and orientations. The problems of aircraft integration of the ejector, and internal and external nozzle losses were also considered and a geometry for the attached nozzles was selected. The effect of leaks, protrusions, and asymmetries in the ejector surfaces was examined. The results indicated a relative insensitivity to all surface irregularities, except for large protrusions at the throat of the ejector
A Jet-diffuser ejector for a V/STOL fighter
A single ejector equipped with only one vector control jet and a diffuser flap was installed close to the leading edge of the strake of a one-fifth scale, semi-span model of the aircraft, without wing, canard, or tail surface. Tests of the system at a nozzle pressure ratio of 1.24 indicated a thrust augmentation of 1.92 and a thrust in the flight direction of about 12% of the total thrust under static conditions. An ejector stall occured at a ratio of tunnel dynamic pressure to nozzle gage pressure of about 0.008. Ejector stall speed can be delayed by using a boundary layer control jet at the front inlet lip of the ejector
Neutron diffraction study of lunar materials Final report
Apollo 12 lunar samples studied with neutron diffraction at room and cryogenic temperature
The carbon cycle in an anoxic marine sediment: concentrations, rates, isotope ratios, and diagenetic models
Thesis (Ph.D.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 198
Applications of Commutator-Type Operators to -Groups
For a p-group G admitting an automorphism of order with exactly
fixed points such that has exactly fixed points,
we prove that G has a fully-invariant subgroup of m-bounded nilpotency class
with -bounded index in G. We also establish its analogue for Lie
p-rings. The proofs make use of the theory of commutator-type operators.Comment: 11 page
The Role of Benthic Fluxes of Dissolved Organic Carbon in Oceanic and Sedimentary Carbon Cycling
Benthic fluxes (sediment-water exchange) of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) represent a poorly quantified component of sedimentary and oceanic carbon cycling. In this paper we use pore water DOC data and direct DOC benthic flux measurements to begin to quantitatively examine this problem. These results suggest that marine sediments represent a significant source of DOC to the oceans, as a lower limit of the globally-integrated benthic DOC flux is comparable in magnitude to riverine inputs of organic carbon to the oceans. Benthic fluxes of DOC also appear to be similar in magnitude to other sedimentary processes such as organic carbon oxidation (remineralization) in surface sediments and organic carbon burial with depth
Vertex and source determine the block variety of an indecomposable module
AbstractThe block variety VG,b(M) of a finitely generated indecomposable module M over the block algebra of a p-block b of a finite group G, introduced in (J. Algebra 215 (1999) 460), can be computed in terms of a vertex and a source of M. We use this to show that VG,b(M) is connected, and that every closed homogeneous subvariety of the affine variety VG,b defined by block cohomology H*(G,b) (cf. Algebras Rep. Theory 2 (1999) 107) is the variety of a module over the block algebra. This is analogous to the corresponding statements on Carlson's cohomology varieties in (Invent. Math. 77 (1984) 291)
An automaton-theoretic approach to the representation theory of quantum algebras
We develop a new approach to the representation theory of quantum algebras
supporting a torus action via methods from the theory of finite-state automata
and algebraic combinatorics. We show that for a fixed number , the
torus-invariant primitive ideals in quantum matrices can be seen as
a regular language in a natural way. Using this description and a semigroup
approach to the set of Cauchon diagrams, a combinatorial object that
paramaterizes the primes that are torus-invariant, we show that for fixed,
the number of torus-invariant primitive ideals in quantum matrices
satisfies a linear recurrence in over the rational numbers. In the case we give a concrete description of the torus-invariant primitive ideals
and use this description to give an explicit formula for the number P(3,n).Comment: 31 page
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