11,088 research outputs found
Opto-mechanical subsystem with temperature compensation through isothemal design
An opto-mechanical subsystem for supporting a laser structure which minimizes changes in the alignment of the laser optics in response to temperature variations is described. Both optical and mechanical structural components of the system are formed of the same material, preferably beryllium, which is selected for high mechanical strength and good thermal conducting qualities. All mechanical and optical components are mounted and assembled to provide thorough thermal coupling throughout the subsystem to prevent the development of temperature gradients
Apollo PLSS: Environmental control of the smallest manned space vehicle
The production of a portable life support system (PLSS) and associated backup equipment for supporting an astronaut working outside of the lunar module (LM) either in space or on the lunar surface is reported. Described are the system, the philosophy behind its design, basic requirements imposed on the system, and some of the evolutionary processes that led to the present configuration
Initial behavioural and attitudinal responses to influenza A, H1N1 ('swine flu')
Copyright © 2010 by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. All rights reserved.This study was sponsored by Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR), and
supported by the Community Coalition Concerned about SARS and other community organisations in the great Toronto area
Deep space network
Background, current status, and sites of Deep Space Network stations are briefly discussed
Extending the memory times of trapped-ion qubits with error correction and global entangling operations
The technical demands to perform quantum error correction are considerable.
The task requires the preparation of a many-body entangled state, together with
the ability to make parity measurements over subsets of the physical qubits of
the system to detect errors. Here we propose two trapped-ion experiments to
realise error-correcting codes of variable size to protect a single encoded
qubit from dephasing errors. Novel to our schemes is the use of a global
entangling phase gate, which could be implemented in both Penning traps and
Paul traps. We make use of this entangling operation to significantly reduce
the experimental complexity of state preparation and syndrome measurements. We
also show, in our second scheme, that storage times can be increased further by
repeatedly teleporting the logical information between two codes supported by
the same ion Coulomb crystal to learn information about the locations of
errors. We estimate that a logical qubit encoded in such a crystal will
maintain high coherence for times more than an order of magnitude longer than
each physical qubit would.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures. The authors list has changed since the first
version of this draf
A computer program to calculate the longitudinal aerodynamic characteristics of wing-flap configurations with externally blown flaps
A vortex lattice lifting-surface method is used to model the wing and multiple flaps. Each lifting surface may be of arbitrary planform having camber and twist, and the multiple-slotted trailing-edge flap system may consist of up to ten flaps with different spans and deflection angles. The engine wakes model consists of a series of closely spaced vortex rings with circular or elliptic cross sections. The rings are normal to a wake centerline which is free to move vertically and laterally to accommodate the local flow field beneath the wing and flaps. The two potential flow models are used in an iterative fashion to calculate the wing-flap loading distribution including the influence of the waves from up to two turbofan engines on the semispan. The method is limited to the condition where the flow and geometry of the configurations are symmetric about the vertical plane containing the wing root chord. The calculation procedure starts with arbitrarily positioned wake centerlines and the iterative calculation continues until the total configuration loading converges within a prescribed tolerance. Program results include total configuration forces and moments, individual lifting-surface load distributions, including pressure distributions, individual flap hinge moments, and flow field calculation at arbitrary field points
Tracking and data systems support for the Helios project. Volume 3: DSN support of Project Helios May 1976 - June 1977
Spacecraft extended mission coverage does not generally carry a high priority, but Helios was fortunate in that a combination of separated viewperiods and unique utilization of the STDN Goldstone antenna have provided a considerable amount of additional science data return, particularly at key times such a perihelion and/or solar occultation
Calculation of laminar boundary layer-shock wave interaction on cooled walls by the method of integral relations
Calculation of laminar boundary layer shock wave interaction on cooled walls by method of integral relatio
How to identify the youngest protostars
We study the transition from a prestellar core to a Class 0 protostar, using
SPH to simulate the dynamical evolution, and a Monte Carlo radiative transfer
code to generate the SED and isophotal maps. For a prestellar core illuminated
by the standard interstellar radiation field, the luminosity is low and the SED
peaks at ~190 micron. Once a protostar has formed, the luminosity rises (due to
a growing contribution from accretion onto the protostar) and the peak of the
SED shifts to shorter wavelengths (~80-100 micron). However, by the end of the
Class 0 phase, the accretion rate is falling, the luminosity has decreased, and
the peak of the SED shifts back towards longer wavelengths (90-150 micron). In
our simulations, the density of material around the protostar remains
sufficiently high well into the Class 0 phase that the protostar only becomes
visible in the NIR if it is displaced from the centre dynamically. Raw submm/mm
maps of Class 0 protostars tend to be much more centrally condensed than those
of prestellar cores. However, when convolved with a typical telescope beam, the
difference in central concentration is less marked, although the Class 0
protostars appear more circular. Our results suggest that, if a core is deemed
to be prestellar on the basis of having no associated IRAS source, no cm radio
emission, and no outflow, but it has a circular appearance and an SED which
peaks at wavelengths below ~170 micron, it may well contain a very young Class
0 protostar.Comment: Accepted by A&A (avaliable with high-res images at
http://carina.astro.cf.ac.uk/pub/Dimitrios.Stamatellos/publications
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