7,314 research outputs found
Effects of a nonadiabatic wall on supersonic shock/boundary-layer interactions
Direct numerical simulations are employed to investigate a shock wave impinging on a turbulent boundary layer at free-stream Mach number M=2.28 with different wall thermal conditions, including adiabatic, cooled, and heated, for a wide range of deflection angles. It is found that the thermal boundary condition at the wall has a large effect on the size of the interaction region and on the level of pressure fluctuations. The distribution of the Stanton number shows a good agreement with prior experimental studies and confirms the strong heat transfer and complex pattern within the interaction region. An effort was also made to describe the unsteady features of the flow by means of wall pressure and heat flux spectra. Numerical results indicate that the changes in the interaction length due to the wall thermal condition are mainly linked to the incoming boundary layer, which is in agreement with previous experimental studies
Dependence of the drag over super hydrophobic and liquid infused surfaces on the textured surface and Weber number
Direct Numerical Simulations of a turbulent channel flow have been performed. The lower wall of the channel is made of staggered cubes with a second fluid locked in the cavities. Two viscosity ratios have been considered, m=μ1/μ2=0.02 and 0.4 (the subscript 1 indicates the fluid in the cavities and 2 the overlying fluid) mimicking the viscosity ratio in super–hydrophobic surfaces (SHS) and liquid infused surfaces (LIS) respectively. A first set of simulations with a slippery interface has been performed and results agree well with those in literature for perfect slip conditions and Stokes approximations. To assess how the dynamics of the interface affects the drag, a second set of DNS has been carried out at We=40 and 400 corresponding to We+≃10−3 and 10−2. The deformation of the interface is fully coupled to the Navier-Stokes equation and tracked in time using a Level Set Method. Two gas fractions, GF=0.5 and 0.875, have been considered to assess how the spacing between the cubes affects the deformation of the interface and therefore the drag. For the dimensions of the substrate here considered, under the ideal assumption of flat interface, staggered cubes with GF=0.875 provide about 20% drag reduction for We=0. However, a rapid degradation of the performances is observed when the dynamics of the interface is considered, and the same geometry increases the drag of about 40% with respect to a smooth wall. On the other hand, the detrimental effect of the dynamics of the interface is much weaker for GF=0.5 because of the reduced pitch between the cubes
Heat transfer and wall temperature effects in shock wave turbulent boundary layer interactions
Direct numerical simulations are carried out to investigate the effect of the
wall temperature on the behavior of oblique shock-wave/turbulent boundary layer
interactions at freestream Mach number and shock angle of the wedge
generator . Five values of the
wall-to-recovery-temperature ratio () are considered, corresponding to
cold, adiabatic and hot wall thermal conditions. We show that the main effect
of cooling is to decrease the characteristic scales of the interaction in terms
of upstream influence and extent of the separation bubble. The opposite
behavior is observed in the case of heating, that produces a marked dilatation
of the interaction region. The distribution of the Stanton number shows that a
strong amplification of the heat transfer occurs across the interaction, and
the maximum values of thermal and dynamic loads are found in the case of cold
wall. The analysis reveals that the fluctuating heat flux exhibits a strong
intermittent behavior, characterized by scattered spots with extremely high
values compared to the mean. Furthermore, the analogy between momentum and heat
transfer, typical of compressible, wall-bounded, equilibrium turbulent flows
does not apply for most part of the interaction domain. The pre-multiplied
spectra of the wall heat flux do not show any evidence of the influence of the
low-frequency shock motion, and the primary mechanism for the generation of
peak heating is found to be linked with the turbulence amplification in the
interaction region.Comment: submitted to PRFluid
The X-ray light curve of Gamma-ray bursts: clues to the central engine
We present the analysis of a large sample of gamma-ray burst (GRB) X-ray
light curves in the rest frame to characterise their intrinsic properties in
the context of different theoretical scenarios. We determine the morphology,
time scales, and energetics of 64 long GRBs observed by \emph{Swift}/XRT
\emph{without} flaring activity. We furthermore provide a one-to-one comparison
to the properties of GRBs \emph{with} X-ray flares. We find that the steep
decay morphology and its connection with X-ray flares favour a scenario in
which a central engine origin. We show that this scenario can also account for
the shallow decay phase, provided that the GRB progenitor star has a
self-similar structure with a constant envelope-to-core mass ratio . However, difficulties arise for very long duration
( s) shallow phases. Alternatively, a spinning-down magnetar
whose emitted power refreshes the forward shock can quantitatively account for
the shallow decay properties. In particular we demonstrate that this model can
account for the plateau luminosity vs. end time anticorrelation.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Development of a decision analytic model to support decision making and risk communication about thrombolytic treatment
Background
Individualised prediction of outcomes can support clinical and shared decision making. This paper describes the building of such a model to predict outcomes with and without intravenous thrombolysis treatment following ischaemic stroke.
Methods
A decision analytic model (DAM) was constructed to establish the likely balance of benefits and risks of treating acute ischaemic stroke with thrombolysis. Probability of independence, (modified Rankin score mRS ≤ 2), dependence (mRS 3 to 5) and death at three months post-stroke was based on a calibrated version of the Stroke-Thrombolytic Predictive Instrument using data from routinely treated stroke patients in the Safe Implementation of Treatments in Stroke (SITS-UK) registry. Predictions in untreated patients were validated using data from the Virtual International Stroke Trials Archive (VISTA). The probability of symptomatic intracerebral haemorrhage in treated patients was incorporated using a scoring model from Safe Implementation of Thrombolysis in Stroke-Monitoring Study (SITS-MOST) data.
Results
The model predicts probabilities of haemorrhage, death, independence and dependence at 3-months, with and without thrombolysis, as a function of 13 patient characteristics. Calibration (and inclusion of additional predictors) of the Stroke-Thrombolytic Predictive Instrument (S-TPI) addressed issues of under and over prediction. Validation with VISTA data confirmed that assumptions about treatment effect were just. The C-statistics for independence and death in treated patients in the DAM were 0.793 and 0.771 respectively, and 0.776 for independence in untreated patients from VISTA.
Conclusions
We have produced a DAM that provides an estimation of the likely benefits and risks of thrombolysis for individual patients, which has subsequently been embedded in a computerised decision aid to support better decision-making and informed consent
Macroscopic polarization and band offsets at nitride heterojunctions
Ab initio electronic structure studies of prototypical polar interfaces of
wurtzite III-V nitrides show that large uniform electric fields exist in
epitaxial nitride overlayers, due to the discontinuity across the interface of
the macroscopic polarization of the constituent materials. Polarization fields
forbid a standard evaluation of band offsets and formation energies: using new
techniques, we find a large forward-backward asymmetry of the offset (0.2 eV
for AlN/GaN (0001), 0.85 eV for GaN/AlN (0001)), and tiny interface formation
energies.Comment: RevTeX 4 pages, 2 figure
Maximal correlation between flavor entanglement and oscillation damping due to localization effects
Localization effects and quantum decoherence driven by the mass-eigenstate
wave packet propagation are shown to support a statistical correlation between
quantum entanglement and damped oscillations in the scenario of three-flavor
quantum mixing for neutrinos. Once the mass-eigenstates that support flavor
oscillations are identified as three-{\em qubit} modes, a decoherence scale can
be extracted from correlation quantifiers, namely the entanglement of formation
and the logarithmic negativity. Such a decoherence scale is compared with the
coherence length of damped oscillations. Damping signatures exhibited by flavor
transition probabilities as an effective averaging of the oscillating terms are
then explained as owing to loss of entanglement between mass modes involved in
the relativistic propagation.Comment: 13 pages, 03 figure
Formation and stability of a two-dimensional nickel silicide on Ni (111) an Auger, LEED, STM, and high-resolution photoemission Study
Using low energy electron diffraction (LEED), Auger electron spectroscopy
(AES), scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) and high resolution photo-electron
spectroscopy (HR-PES) techniques we have studied the annealing effect of one
silicon monolayer deposited at room temperature onto a Ni (111) substrate. The
variations of the Si surface concentration, recorded by AES at 300{\deg}C and
400{\deg}C, show at the beginning a rapid Si decreasing followed by a slowing
down up to a plateau equivalent to about 1/3 silicon monolayer. STM images and
LEED patterns, both recorded at room temperature just after annealing, reveal
the formation of an ordered hexagonal superstructure(rot3xrot3)R30{\deg}-type.
From these observations and from a quantitative analysis of HR-PES data,
recorded before and after annealing, we propose that the (rot3 x
rot3)R30{\deg}superstructure corresponds to a two dimensional (2D) Ni2Si
surface silicide.Comment: Journal Physical Review B (2012
- …