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Dynamic Load and Storage Integration
Modern technology combined with the desire to minimize the size and weight of a shipâs power system are leading to renewed interest in more electric or all electric ships. An important characteristic of the emerging ship power system is an increasing level of load variability, with some future pulsed loads requiring peak power in excess of the available steadyâ state power. This inevitably leads to the need for some additional energy storage beyond that inherent in the fuel. With the current and evolving technology, it appears that storage will be in the form of batteries, rotating machines, and capacitors. All of these are in use on ships today and all have enjoyed significant technological improvements over the last decade. Moreover all are expected to be further enhanced by todayâs materials research. A key benefit of storage is that, when it can be justified for a given load, it can have additional beneficial uses such as ride-through capability to restart a gas turbine if there is an unanticipated power loss; alternatively, storage can be used to stabilize the power grid when switching large loads. Knowing when to stage gas turbine utilization versus energy storage is a key subject in this paper. The clear need for storage has raised the opportunity to design a comprehensive storage system, sometimes called an energy magazine, that can combine intermittent generation as well as any or all of the other storage technologies to provide a smaller, lighter and better performing system than would individual storage solutions for each potential application.Center for Electromechanic
Benchmark calculations for elastic fermion-dimer scattering
We present continuum and lattice calculations for elastic scattering between
a fermion and a bound dimer in the shallow binding limit. For the continuum
calculation we use the Skorniakov-Ter-Martirosian (STM) integral equation to
determine the scattering length and effective range parameter to high
precision. For the lattice calculation we use the finite-volume method of
L\"uscher. We take into account topological finite-volume corrections to the
dimer binding energy which depend on the momentum of the dimer. After
subtracting these effects, we find from the lattice calculation kappa a_fd =
1.174(9) and kappa r_fd = -0.029(13). These results agree well with the
continuum values kappa a_fd = 1.17907(1) and kappa r_fd = -0.0383(3) obtained
from the STM equation. We discuss applications to cold atomic Fermi gases,
deuteron-neutron scattering in the spin-quartet channel, and lattice
calculations of scattering for nuclei and hadronic molecules at finite volume.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
Effects of diamagnetic levitation on bacterial growth in liquid
Diamagnetic levitation is a technique that uses a strong, spatially-varying magnetic field to levitate diamagnetic materials, such as water and biological cells. This technique has the potential to simulate aspects of weightlessness, on the Earth. In common with all ground-based techniques to simulate weightlessness, however, there are effects introduced by diamagnetic levitation that are not present in space. Since there have been few studies that systematically investigate these differences, diamagnetic levitation is not yet being fully exploited. For the first time, we critically assess the effect of diamagnetic levitation on a bacterial culture in liquid. We used a superconducting magnet to levitate growing bacterial cultures for up to 18 hours, in a series of experiments to determine the effect of diamagnetic levitation on all phases of the bacterial growth cycle. We find that diamagnetic levitation increases the rate of population growth in a liquid culture. The speed of sedimentation of the bacterial cells to the bottom of the container is considerably reduced. Further experiments and microarray gene analysis show that the growth enhancement is due to greater oxygen availability in the magnetically levitated sample. We demonstrate that the magnetic field that levitates the cells also induces convective stirring in the liquid, an effect not present in microgravity. We present a simple theoretical model, showing how the paramagnetic force on dissolved oxygen can cause the liquid to become unstable to convection when the consumption of oxygen by the bacteria generates an oxygen concentration gradient. We propose that this convection enhances oxygen availability by transporting oxygen around the sample. Since convection is absent in space, these results are of significant importance and timeliness to researchers considering using diamagnetic levitation to explore weightless effects on living organisms and a broad range of other topics in the physical and life sciences
The Post-Eruptive Evolution of a Coronal Dimming
We discuss the post-eruptive evolution of a "coronal dimming" based on
observations of the EUV corona from the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory and
the Transition Region and Coronal Explorer. This discussion highlights the
roles played by magnetoconvection-driven magnetic reconnection and the global
magnetic environment of the plasma in the "filling" and apparent motion of the
region following the eruption of a coronal mass ejection (CME). A crucial
element in our understanding of the dimming region evolution is developed by
monitoring the disappearance and reappearance of bright TRACE "moss" around the
active region giving rise to the CME. We interpret the change in the TRACE moss
as a proxy of the changing coronal magnetic field topology behind the CME
front. We infer that the change in global magnetic topology also results in a
shift of energy balance in the process responsible for the production of the
moss emission while the coronal magnetic topology evolves from closed, to open
and back to closed again because, following the eruption, the moss reforms
around the active region in almost exactly its pre-event configuration. As a
result of the moss evolution, combining our discussion with recent
spectroscopic results of an equatorial coronal hole, we suggest that the
interchangeable use of the term "transient coronal hole" to describe a coronal
dimming is more than just a simple coincidence.Comment: In Press ApJ [May 2007] - 15 pages, 5 figures, 7 movies that are
available upon request [contact author
Spectral decomposition for the Dirac system associated to the DSII equation
A new (scalar) spectral decomposition is found for the Dirac system in two
dimensions associated to the focusing Davey--Stewartson II (DSII) equation.
Discrete spectrum in the spectral problem corresponds to eigenvalues embedded
into a two-dimensional essential spectrum. We show that these embedded
eigenvalues are structurally unstable under small variations of the initial
data. This instability leads to the decay of localized initial data into
continuous wave packets prescribed by the nonlinear dynamics of the DSII
equation
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