32,726 research outputs found
Characteristics of lightly loaded fan rotor blade wakes
Low subsonic and incompressible wake flow downstream of lightly loaded rotor was studied. Measurements of mean velocity, turbulence intensity, Reynolds stress, and static variations across the rotor wake at various axial and radial locations were investigated. Wakes were measured at various rotor blade incidences to discern the effect of blade loading on the rotor wake. Mean velocity and turbulence measurements were carried out with a triaxial hot wire probe both rotating with the rotor and stationary behind the rotor. Results indicate that increased loading slows the decay rates of axial and tangential mean velocity defects and radial velocities in the wake. The presence of large radial velocities in the rotor wake indicate the extent of the interactions between one radius and another. Appreciable static pressure variations across the rotor wake were found in the near wake region. Similarity in the profile shape was found for the axial and tangential components of the mean velocity and in the outer layer for axial, tangential, and radial turbulence intensities
Art-making and identity work: A qualitative study of women living with chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME)
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final published article is available from the link below. Copyright @ 2010 Taylor & Francis.Aims: Identity is at risk in chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME) because of physical dysfunction, role loss and stigmatisation. This qualitative study explored the contributions of leisure-based art-making to the positive reconstruction of identity for women living with this condition.
Method: Thirteen women with CFS/ME participated. They offered reflective accounts about their engagement in art-making in interviews or in writing, which were then thematically analysed.
Findings: All described identity loss since becoming ill, and described art-making as offering restorative experiences. Some contrasting themes emerged. About half of the sample portrayed their art projects as constrained by ill-health, and as demonstrating the reality of CFS/ME to others. This sub-group struggled with limited aspirations, tended to create art alone and did not identify themselves as being artists. They were interpreted as âsalvagingâ aspects of identity through their art-making. Art-making appeared to offer others more substantial identity reconstruction, despite continuing ill-health. Participants in this sub-group described more positive aspirations, fellowship with other art-makers and typically perceived themselves as having become artists since the onset of illness.
Conclusion: The study contributes new understandings of the contribution of art-making to the protection and reformulation of identity of people living with CFS/ME
The NASA Suborbital Program: A status review
The status of the NASA suborbital program is reviewed and its importance to astrophysical and geophysical programs is assessed. A survey of past scientific and developmental accomplishments, an examination of the trends in program costs, and an analysis of current and future program roles are included. The technical disciplines examined are primarily those of astronomy/astrophysics/solar physics and magnetospheric/ionospheric/ atmospheric physics
Women's experiences of increasing subjective well-being in CFS/ME through leisure-based arts and crafts activities: A qualitative study
This is the author's accepted manuscript. The final published article is available from the link below. Copyright © 2008 Informa Plc.Purpose. To understand the meanings of art-making among a group of women living with the occupational constraints and stigma of CFS/ME. The study explored their initial motives for art-making, and then examined how art-making had subsequently influenced their subjective well-being.
Method. Ten women with CFS/ME were interviewed; three provided lengthy written accounts to the interview questions.
Findings. Illness had resulted in devastating occupational and role loss. Participants took many years to make positive lifestyle changes. Art-making was typically discovered once participants had accepted the long-term nature of CFS/ME, accommodated to illness, and reprioritized occupations. Several factors then attracted participants specifically to art-making. It was perceived as manageable within the constraints of ill-health. Participants also tended to be familiar with craft skills; had family members interested in arts and crafts, and some desired a means to express grief and loss. Once established as a leisure activity, art-making increased subjective well-being mainly through providing increased satisfaction in daily life, positive self-image, hope, and contact with the outside world. Participants recommended provision of occupational/recreational counselling earlier in the illness trajectory.
Conclusions. Creative art-making occurred as part of a broader acceptance and adjustment process to CFS/ME, and allowed some psychological escape from a circumscribed lifeworld
Fearless: V Rosenberger and Tori Reynolds
âGetting Out,â the compelling prison drama by Marsha Norman, is opening tonight at 7:30pm on Kline Theater at Gettysburg, and bringing this play to life are two very fearless women. [excerpt
Constraints on hot metals in the Vicinity of the Galaxy
We have searched for evidence of soft X-ray absorption by hot metals in the
vicinity of the Galaxy in the spectra of a small sample of fifteen Type I AGN
observed with the high resolution X-ray gratings on board Chandra. This is an
extension of our previous survey of hot OVII and OVIII absorbing gas in the
vicinity of the Galaxy. The strongest absorption signatures within a few
hundred km/s of their rest-frame energies are most likely due to warm absorbing
outflows from the nearest AGN, which are back-lighting the local hot gas. We
emphasize that absorption signatures in the spectra of some distant AGN that
are kinematically consistent with the recessional velocity of the AGN are most
likely to be due to hot local gas. Along the sightline towards PG 1211+143, PDS
456 and MCG-6-30-15 there is a very large absorbing Fe column density which is
kinematically consistent with absorption by hot, local Fe. The sightlines to
these three AGN pass through the limb of the Northern Polar Spur (NPS), a local
bubble formed from several supernovae which, if rich in Fe, may account for a
large local Fe column.
We obtain limits on the column density of local, highly ionized N, Ne, Mg, Si
along all of the sightlines in our sample. We correlate the column density
limits with those of highly ionized O along the same sightlines. Assuming the
hot local gas is in collisionally ionized equilibrium, we obtain limits on the
temperature and relative abundances of the metals in the hot local gas. Our
limits on the ionic column densities in the local hot gas seem to be consistent
with those observed in the hot halo gas of edge-on normal spiral galaxies.Comment: 9 pages,2 figures, MNRAS (accepted
Compressor and fan wake characteristics
A triaxial probe and a rotating conventional probe, mounted on a traverse gear operated by two step motors were used to measure the mean velocities and turbulence quantities across a rotor wake at various radial locations and downstream stations. The data obtained was used in an analytical model developed to study how rotor flow and blade parameters and turbulence properties such as energy, velocity correlations, and length scale affect the rotor wake characteristics and its diffusion properties. The model, includes three dimensional attributes, can be used in predicting the discrete as well as broadband noise generated in a fan rotor, as well as in evaluating the aerodynamic losses, efficiency and optimum spacing between a rotor and stator in turbomachinery
WHAM Observations of H-Alpha, [S II], and [N II] toward the Orion and Perseus Arms: Probing the Physical Conditions of the Warm Ionized Medium
A large portion of the Galaxy (l = 123 deg to 164 deg, b = -6 deg to -35
deg), which samples regions of the Local (Orion) spiral arm and the more
distant Perseus arm, has been mapped with the Wisconsin H-Alpha Mapper (WHAM)
in the H-Alpha, [S II] 6716, and [N II] 6583 lines. Several trends noticed in
emission-line investigations of diffuse gas in other galaxies are confirmed in
the Milky Way and extended to much fainter emission. We find that the [S
II]/H-Alpha and [N II]/H-Alpha ratios increase as absolute H-Alpha intensities
decrease. For the more distant Perseus arm emission, the increase in these
ratios is a strong function of Galactic latitude and thus, of height above the
Galactic plane. The [S II]/[N II] ratio is relatively independent of H-Alpha
intensity. Scatter in this ratio appears to be physically significant, and maps
of it suggest regions with similar ratios are spatially correlated. The Perseus
arm [S II]/[N II] ratio is systematically lower than Local emission by 10%-20%.
With [S II]/[N II] fairly constant over a large range of H-Alpha intensities,
the increase of [S II]/H-Alpha and [N II]/H-Alpha with |z| seems to reflect an
increase in temperature. Such an interpretation allows us to estimate the
temperature and ionization conditions in our large sample of observations. We
find that WIM temperatures range from 6,000 K to 9,000 K with temperature
increasing from bright to faint H-Alpha emission (low to high [S II]/H-Alpha
and [N II]/H-Alpha) respectively. Changes in [S II]/[N II] appear to reflect
changes in the local ionization conditions (e.g. the S+/S++ ratio). We also
measure the electron scale height in the Perseus arm to be 1.0+/-0.1 kpc,
confirming earlier, less accurate determinations.Comment: 28 pages, 10 figures. Figures 2 and 3 are full color--GIFs provided
here, original PS figures at link below. Accepted for publication in ApJ.
More information about the WHAM project can be found at
http://www.astro.wisc.edu/wham/ . REVISION: Figure 6, bottom panel now
contains the proper points. No other changes have been mad
Searching for additional heating - [OII] emission in the diffuse ionized gas of NGC891, NGC4631 and NGC3079
We present spectroscopic data of ionized gas in the disk--halo regions of
three edge-on galaxies, NGC 891, NGC 4631 and NGC 3079, covering a wavelength
range from [\ion{O}{2}] 3727\AA to [\ion{S}{2}] 6716.4\AA.
The inclusion of the [\ion{O}{2}] emission provides new constraints on the
properties of the diffuse ionized gas (DIG), in particular, the origin of the
observed spatial variations in the line intensity ratios. We used three
different methods to derive electron temperatures, abundances and ionization
fractions along the slit. The increase in the [\ion{O}{2}]/H line ratio
towards the halo in all three galaxies requires an increase either in electron
temperature or in oxygen abundance. Keeping the oxygen abundance constant
yields the most reasonable results for temperature, abundances, and ionization
fractions. Since a constant oxygen abundance seems to require an increase in
temperature towards the halo, we conclude that gradients in the electron
temperature play a significant role in the observed variations in the optical
line ratios from extraplanar DIG in these three spiral galaxies.Comment: 43 pages, 29 figure
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