277 research outputs found
Submillimetre-sized dust aggregate collision and growth properties
The collisional and sticking properties of sub-mm-sized aggregates composed
of protoplanetary dust analogue material are measured, including the
statistical threshold velocity between sticking and bouncing, their surface
energy and tensile strength within aggregate clusters. We performed an
experiment on the REXUS 12 suborbital rocket. The protoplanetary dust analogue
materials were micrometre-sized monodisperse and polydisperse SiO2 particles
prepared into aggregates with sizes around 120 m and 330 m,
respectively and volume filling factors around 0.37. During the experimental
run of 150 s under reduced gravity conditions, the sticking of aggregates and
the formation and fragmentation of clusters of up to a few millimetres in size
was observed. The sticking probability of the sub-mm-sized dust aggregates
could be derived for velocities decreasing from 22 to 3 cm/s. The transition
from bouncing to sticking collisions happened at 12.7 cm/s for the smaller
aggregates composed of monodisperse particles and at 11.5 and 11.7 cm/s for the
larger aggregates composed of mono- and polydisperse dust particles,
respectively. Using the pull-off force of sub-mm-sized dust aggregates from the
clusters, the surface energy of the aggregates composed of monodisperse dust
was derived to be 1.6x10-5 J/m2, which can be scaled down to 1.7x10-2 J/m2 for
the micrometre-sized monomer particles and is in good agreement with previous
measurements for silica particles. The tensile strengths of these aggregates
within the clusters were derived to be 1.9 Pa and 1.6 Pa for the small and
large dust aggregates, respectively. These values are in good agreement with
recent tensile strength measurements for mm-sized silica aggregates. Using our
data on the sticking-bouncing threshold, estimates of the maximum aggregate
size can be given. For a minimum mass solar nebula model, aggregates can reach
sizes of 1 cm.Comment: 21 pages (incl. 6 pages of appendix), 23 figure
Low-velocity collision behaviour of clusters composed of sub-mm sized dust aggregates
The experiments presented aim to measure the outcome of collisions between
sub-mm sized protoplanetary dust aggregate analogues. We also observed the
clusters formed from these aggregates and their collision behaviour. The
experiments were performed at the drop tower in Bremen. The protoplanetary dust
analogue materials were micrometre-sized monodisperse and polydisperse SiO
particles prepared into aggregates with sizes between 120~m and
250~m. One of the dust samples contained aggregates that were previously
compacted through repeated bouncing. During three flights of 9~s of
microgravity each, individual collisions between aggregates and the formation
of clusters of up to a few millimetres in size were observed. In addition, the
collisions of clusters with the experiment cell walls leading to compaction or
fragmentation were recorded. We observed collisions amongst dust aggregates and
collisions between dust clusters and the cell aluminium walls at speeds ranging
from about 0.1 cm/s to 20 cm/s. The velocities at which sticking occurred
ranged from 0.18 to 5.0 cm/s for aggregates composed of monodisperse dust, with
an average value of 2.1 cm/s for reduced masses ranging from 1.2x10-6 to
1.8x10-3 g with an average value of 2.2x10-4 g. From the restructuring and
fragmentation of clusters composed of dust aggregates colliding with the
aluminium cell walls, we derived a collision recipe for dust aggregates
(100 m) following the model of Dominik \& Thielens (1997) developed
for microscopic particles. We measured a critical rolling energy of 1.8x10-13 J
and a critical breaking energy of 3.5x10-13 J for 100 m-sized
non-compacted aggregates.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figure
High density flow-through culturing of brine shrimp <i>Artemia</i> on inert feeds: preliminary results with a modified culture system
A modified filter system is described for the intensive culturing of Artemia in a continuously renewed medium. Extrapolated to a 1 m³ tank, 25 kg live weight Artemia could be produced over a culture period of two weeks on a diet of micronized and defatted rice bran using the salt enriched effluent of an abandoned geothermal well as a culture medium
Space-mapping techniques applied to the optimization of a safety isolating transformer
Space-mapping optimization techniques allow to allign low-fidelity and high-fidelity models in order to reduce the computational time and increase the accuracy of the solution. The main idea is to build an approximate model from the difference of response between both models. Therefore the optimization process is computed on the surrogate model. In this paper, some recent approaches of space-mapping techniques such as agressive-space-mapping, output-mapping and manifold-mapping algorithms are applied to optimize a safety insulating transformer. The electric, magnetic and thermal phenomena of the device are modeled by an analytical model and a 3D finite element model. It is considered as a benchmark for multi-level optimization to test different algorithms
Histolocalization and physico-chemical characterization of dihydrochalcones: Insight into the role of apple major flavonoids
Flavonoids, like other metabolites synthesized via the phenylpropanoid pathway, possess a wide range of biological activities including functions in plant development and its interaction with the environment. Dihydrochalcones (mainly phloridzin, sieboldin, trilobatin, phloretin) represent the major flavonoid subgroup in apple green tissues. Although this class of phenolic compounds is found in very large amounts in some tissues (≈200 mg/g of leaf DW), their physiological significance remains unclear. In the present study, we highlight their tissue-specific localization in young growing shoots suggesting a specific role in important physiological processes, most notably in response to biotic stress. Indeed, dihydrochalcones could constitute a basal defense, in particular phloretin which exhibits a strong broad-range bactericidal and fungicidal activity. Our results also indicate that sieboldin forms complexes with iron with strong affinity, reinforcing its antioxidant properties and conferring to this dihydrochalcone a potential for iron seclusion and/or storage. The importance of localization and biochemical properties of dihydrochalcones are discussed in view of the apple tree defense strategy against both biotic and abiotic stresses
Regolith behavior under asteroid-level gravity conditions: Low-velocity impacts into mm- and cm-sized grain targets
In situ observations of small asteroids show that surfaces covered by
boulders and coarse terrain are frequent on such bodies. Regolith grain sizes
have distributions on approximately mm and cm scales, and the behavior of such
large grains in the very low-gravity environments of small body surfaces
dictates their morphology and evolution. In order to support the understanding
of natural processes (e.g., the recapturing of impact ejecta) or
spacecraft-induced interactions (e.g., the fate of a small lander), we aim to
experimentally investigate the response of coarse-grained target surfaces to
very-low-speed impacts (below 2 m/s). We present the outcome of 86 low-speed
impacts of a cm-sized spherical projectile into a bed of simulated regolith,
composed of irregular mm- and cm-sized grains. These impacts were performed
under vacuum and microgravity conditions. Our results include measurements for
the projectile coefficient of restitution and penetration depth, as well as
ejecta production, speed, and mass estimation. We find that impact outcomes
include the frequent occurrence of projectile bouncing and tangential rolling
on the target surface upon impact. Ejecta is produced for impact speeds higher
than about 12 cm/s, and ejecta speeds scale with the projectile to target the
grain size ratio and the impact speed. Ejected mass estimations indicate that
ejecta is increasingly difficult to produce for increasing grain sizes.
Coefficients of restitution of rebounding projectiles do not display a
dependency on the target grain size, unlike their maximum penetration depth,
which can be scaled with the projectile to target grain size ratio. Finally, we
compare our experimental measurements to spacecraft data and numerical work on
Hayabusa 2's MASCOT landing on the surface of the asteroid Ryugu
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