9,439 research outputs found
Numerical Description of Dilute Particle-Laden FLows by a Quadrature-Based Moment Method
The numerical simulation of gas-particle flows is divided into two families of methods. In Euler-Lagrange methods individual particle trajectories are computed, whereas in Euler-Euler methods particles are characterized by statistical descriptors. Lagrangian methods are very precise but their computational cost increases with instationarity and particle volume fraction. In Eulerian methods (also called moment methods) the particle-phase computational cost is comparable to that of the fluid phase but requires strong simplificaions. Existing Eulerian models consider unimodal or close-to-equilibrium particle velocity distributions and then fail when the actual distribution is far from equilibrium. Quadrature-based Eulerian methods introduce a new reconstruction of the velocity distribution, written as a sum of delta functions in phase space constrained to give the right values for selected low-order moments. Two of the quadrature-based Eulerian methods, differing by the reconstruction algorithm, are the focus of this work. Computational results for two academic cases (crossing jets, Taylor-Green flow) are compared to those of a Lagrangian method (considered as the reference solution) and of an existing second-order moment method. With the quadrature-based Eulerian methods, significant qualitative improvement is noticed compared to the second-order moment method in the two test cases
Numerical wave propagation for the triangular - finite element pair
Inertia-gravity mode and Rossby mode dispersion properties are examined for
discretisations of the linearized rotating shallow-water equations using the
- finite element pair on arbitrary triangulations in planar
geometry. A discrete Helmholtz decomposition of the functions in the velocity
space based on potentials taken from the pressure space is used to provide a
complete description of the numerical wave propagation for the discretised
equations. In the -plane case, this decomposition is used to obtain
decoupled equations for the geostrophic modes, the inertia-gravity modes, and
the inertial oscillations. As has been noticed previously, the geostrophic
modes are steady. The Helmholtz decomposition is used to show that the
resulting inertia-gravity wave equation is third-order accurate in space. In
general the \pdgp finite element pair is second-order accurate, so this leads
to very accurate wave propagation. It is further shown that the only spurious
modes supported by this discretisation are spurious inertial oscillations which
have frequency , and which do not propagate. The Helmholtz decomposition
also allows a simple derivation of the quasi-geostrophic limit of the
discretised - equations in the -plane case, resulting in a
Rossby wave equation which is also third-order accurate.Comment: Revised version prior to final journal submissio
You are what you eat? Vegetarianism, health and identity
This paper examines the views of ‘health vegetarians’ through a qualitative study of an online vegetarian message board. The researcher participated in discussions on the board, gathered responses to questions from 33 participants, and conducted follow-up e-mail interviews with 18 of these participants. Respondents were predominantly from the United States, Canada and the UK. Seventy per cent were female, and ages ranged from 14 to 53 years, with a median of 26 years. These data are interrogated within a theoretical framework that asks, ‘what can a vegetarian body do?’ and explores the physical, psychic, social and conceptual relations of participants. This provides insights into the identities of participants, and how diet and identity interact. It is concluded that vegetarianism is both a diet and a bodily practice with consequences for identity formation and stabilisation
Mt. Suhora M dwarf survey - Detection of eight short-period variable stars
The Mt. Suhora M\,dwarf survey searching for pulsations in low mass main
sequence stars has acquired CCD photometry of 46 M\,dwarf stars during the
first year of the project (Baran et al 2011). As a by-product of this search
hundreds field stars have been checked for variability. This paper presents our
initial result of a search for periodic variables in field stars observed in
the course of the survey. On the basis of the periodicity and the shape of the
light curves, eight new variables has been detected, among which five are
Scuti stars and three likely RR Lyrae stars. Although variation in one
of the stars has been previously detected, it was classified incorrectly. To
support our classification, in August 2010, we performed spectroscopic
observations to derive spectral types and luminosity classes for all eight
variable stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in New Astronomy, 12 pages, 1 table, 9
figure
New search strategy for high z intervening absorbers: GRB021004, a pilot study
We present near-infrared narrow- and broad-band imaging of the field of
GRB021004, performed with ISAAC on the UT1 of the ESO Very Large Telescope. The
narrow-band filters were chosen to match prominent emission lines at the
redshift of the absorption-line systems found against the early-time afterglow
of GRB021004: [OIII] at z=1.38 and Halpha at z=1.60, respectively. For the
z=1.38 system we find an emission-line source at an impact parameter of 16",
which is somewhat larger than the typical impact parameters of a sample of MgII
absorbers at redshifts around unity. Assuming that this tentative
redshift-identification is correct, the star formation rate of the galaxy is 13
+- 2 Msun/year. Our study reaches star-formation rate limits (5 sigma) of 5.7
Msun/year at z=1.38, and 7.7 Msun/year at z=1.60. These limits correspond to a
depth of roughly 0.13 L*. Any galaxy counterpart of the absorbers nearer to the
line of sight either has to be fainter than this limit or not be an
emission-line source.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in A&A letter
Constrained Generative Sampling of 6-DoF Grasps
Most state-of-the-art data-driven grasp sampling methods propose stable and
collision-free grasps uniformly on the target object. For bin-picking,
executing any of those reachable grasps is sufficient. However, for completing
specific tasks, such as squeezing out liquid from a bottle, we want the grasp
to be on a specific part of the object's body while avoiding other locations,
such as the cap. This work presents a generative grasp sampling network, VCGS,
capable of constrained 6 Degrees of Freedom (DoF) grasp sampling. In addition,
we also curate a new dataset designed to train and evaluate methods for
constrained grasping. The new dataset, called CONG, consists of over 14 million
training samples of synthetically rendered point clouds and grasps at random
target areas on 2889 objects. VCGS is benchmarked against GraspNet, a
state-of-the-art unconstrained grasp sampler, in simulation and on a real
robot. The results demonstrate that VCGS achieves a 10-15% higher grasp success
rate than the baseline while being 2-3 times as sample efficient. Supplementary
material is available on our project website.Comment: Accepted at the International Conference on Intelligent Robots and
Systems (IROS 2023
Fractional Generalization of Kac Integral
Generalization of the Kac integral and Kac method for paths measure based on
the Levy distribution has been used to derive fractional diffusion equation.
Application to nonlinear fractional Ginzburg-Landau equation is discussed.Comment: 16 pages, LaTe
Multi-Phase Equilibrium of Crystalline Solids
A continuum model of crystalline solid equilibrium is presented in which the
underlying periodic lattice structure is taken explicitly into account. This
model also allows for both point and line defects in the bulk of the lattice
and at interfaces, and the kinematics of such defects is discussed in some
detail. A Gibbsian variational argument is used to derive the necessary bulk
and interfacial conditions for multi-phase equilibrium (crystal-crystal and
crystal-melt) where the allowed lattice variations involve the creation and
transport of defects in the bulk and at the phase interface. An interfacial
energy, assumed to depend on the interfacial dislocation density and the
orientation of the interface with respect to the lattices of both phases, is
also included in the analysis. Previous equilibrium results based on nonlinear
elastic models for incoherent and coherent interfaces are recovered as special
cases for when the lattice distortion is constrained to coincide with the
macroscopic deformation gradient, thereby excluding bulk dislocations. The
formulation is purely spatial and needs no recourse to a fixed reference
configuration or an elastic-plastic decomposition of the strain. Such a
decomposition can be introduced however through an incremental elastic
deformation superposed onto an already dislocated state, but leads to
additional equilibrium conditions. The presentation emphasizes the role of
{configurational forces} as they provide a natural framework for the
description and interpretation of singularities and phase transitions.Comment: 32 pages, to appear in Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solid
Observations of electron phase-space holes driven during magnetic reconnection in a laboratory plasma
Author's final manuscript February 10, 2012This work presents detailed experimental observations of electron phase-space holes driven during magnetic reconnection events on the Versatile Toroidal Facility. The holes are observed to travel on the order of or faster than the electron thermal speed, and are of large size scale, with diameter of order 60 Debye lengths. In addition, they have 3D spheroidal structure with approximately unity aspect ratio. We estimate the direct anomalous resistivity due to ion interaction with the holes and find it to be too small to affect the reconnection rate; however, the holes may play a role in reining in a tail of accelerated electrons and they indicate the presence of other processes in the reconnection layer, such as electron energization and electron beam formation.United States. Dept. of Energy. Center for Multiscale Plasma Dynamics (Grant DEFC02-04ER54786)United States. Dept. of Energy (National Science Foundation (U.S.) Junior Faculty Grant DE-FG02-06ER54878)Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Educatio
X-shooter, NACO, and AMBER observations of the LBV Pistol Star \footnote{Based on ESO runs 85.D-0182A, 085.D-0625AC}
We present multi-instruments and multi-wavelengths observations of the famous
LBV star Pistol Star. These observations are part of a larger program about
early O stars at different metallicities. The Pistol star has been claimed as
the most massive star known, with 250 solar masses. We present the preliminary
results based on X-Shooter spectra, as well as the observations performed with
the VLTI-AMBER and the VLT-NACO adaptive optics. The X-shooter spectrograph
allows to obtain simultaneously a spectrum from the UV to the K-band with a
resolving power of 15000. The preliminary results obtained indicate that
Pistol Star has similar properties of Eta Car, including shells of matter, but
also the binarity. Other objects of the program, here briefly presented, were
selected for their particular nature: early O stars with mass discrepancies
between stellar evolution models and observations, discrepancies with the wind
momentum luminosity relation.Comment: Poster at the 39th LIAC, submitted version of the proceeding
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