10,525 research outputs found
A study of methods which predict supersonic flow fields from body geometry, distance, and Mach number
A study of seven methods for predicting flow-field pressure signatures from the parameters Mach number, body geometry, and field-path distance has been made. The methods included the method of characteristics, which served as a standard of comparison; a shock-capturing method; three Whitham theory methods; a modified characteristics method; and a bicharacteristics method. Results from each method were also compared with recently obtained wind-tunnel data for a cone-cylinder model at Mach numbers of 2.96 and 4.63 with ratios of radial distance to cone length of 2 and 5. The comparisons at a Mach number of 2.96 showed that signatures from all the methods correlated well with wind-tunnel data and with the signatures predicted by the method of characteristics. At a Mach number of 4.63, however, the agreement between the signatures obtained in the wind tunnel and those predicted by theory varied from good to poor, as did the agreement between the signatures obtained by the method of characteristics and the other six methods. It should be noted that these results and comparisons indicate pressure prediction capabilities only for the near-field flow about bodies of revolution
Derived Equivalences of K3 Surfaces and Twined Elliptic Genera
We use the unique canonically-twisted module over a certain distinguished
super vertex operator algebra---the moonshine module for Conway's group---to
attach a weak Jacobi form of weight zero and index one to any symplectic
derived equivalence of a projective complex K3 surface that fixes a stability
condition in the distinguished space identified by Bridgeland. According to
work of Huybrechts, following Gaberdiel--Hohenegger--Volpato, any such derived
equivalence determines a conjugacy class in Conway's group, the automorphism
group of the Leech lattice. Conway's group acts naturally on the module we
consider.
In physics the data of a projective complex K3 surface together with a
suitable stability condition determines a supersymmetric non-linear sigma
model, and supersymmetry preserving automorphisms of such an object may be used
to define twinings of the K3 elliptic genus. Our construction recovers the K3
sigma model twining genera precisely in all available examples. In particular,
the identity symmetry recovers the usual K3 elliptic genus, and this signals a
connection to Mathieu moonshine. A generalization of our construction recovers
a number of the Jacobi forms arising in umbral moonshine.
We demonstrate a concrete connection to supersymmetric non-linear K3 sigma
models by establishing an isomorphism between the twisted module we consider
and the vector space underlying a particular sigma model attached to a certain
distinguished K3 surface.Comment: 62 pages including 7 pages of tables; updated references and minor
editing in v.2; to appear in Research in the Mathematical Science
The Moonshine Module for Conway's Group
We exhibit an action of Conway's group---the automorphism group of the Leech
lattice---on a distinguished super vertex operator algebra, and we prove that
the associated graded trace functions are normalized principal moduli, all
having vanishing constant terms in their Fourier expansion. Thus we construct
the natural analogue of the Frenkel--Lepowsky--Meurman moonshine module for
Conway's group.
The super vertex operator algebra we consider admits a natural
characterization, in direct analogy with that conjectured to hold for the
moonshine module vertex operator algebra. It also admits a unique
canonically-twisted module, and the action of the Conway group naturally
extends. We prove a special case of generalized moonshine for the Conway group,
by showing that the graded trace functions arising from its action on the
canonically-twisted module are constant in the case of Leech lattice
automorphisms with fixed points, and are principal moduli for genus zero groups
otherwise.Comment: 54 pages including 11 pages of tables; minor revisions in v2,
submitte
Wind-tunnel investigation of the validity of a sonic-boom-minimization concept
The Langley unitary plan unitary plan wind tunnel was used to determine the validity of a sonic-boom-minimization theory. Five models - two reference and three low-boom constrained - were tested at design Mach numbers of 1.5 and 2.7. Results show that the pressure signatures generated by the low-boom models had significantly lower overpressure levels than those produced by the reference models and that small changes in the Mach number and/or the lift caused relatively small changes in the signature shape and overpressure level. Boundary-layer effects were found in the signature shape and overpressure level. Boundary-layer effects were found to be sizable on the low-boom models, and when viscous corrections were included in the analysis, improved agreement between the predicted and the measured signatures was noted. Since this agreement was better at Mach 1.5 than at Mach 2.7, it was concluded that the minimization method was definitely valid at Mach 1.5 and was probably valid at Mach 2.7, with further work needed to resolve the uncertainty
A study of the sonic-boom characteristics of a blunt body at a Mach number of 4.14
An experimental and theoretical study has shown that the applicability of far-field sonic-boom theory previously demonstrated for more slender shapes may now be extended to bodies with ratios of diameter to length as great as 2 and to Mach numbers at least as high as 4.14. This finding is of special significance in view of the limitations to the use of existing methods for the extrapolation of close-in experimental data
Estimation of wing nonlinear aerodynamic characteristics at supersonic speeds
A computational system for estimation of nonlinear aerodynamic characteristics of wings at supersonic speeds was developed and was incorporated in a computer program. This corrected linearized theory method accounts for nonlinearities in the variation of basic pressure loadings with local surface slopes, predicts the degree of attainment of theoretical leading edge thrust, and provides an estimate of detached leading edge vortex loadings that result when the theoretical thrust forces are not fully realized
Separation of two bodies in space. A machine programmed analysis using the Lagrange equations and Eulerian angles
Fortran computer program and Lagrangian motion equations for separation analysis of two bodies in spac
Current research in sonic-boom minimization
A review is given of several questions as yet unanswered in the area of sonic-boom research. Efforts, both here at Langley and elsewhere, in the area of minimization, human response, design techniques and in developing higher order propagation methods are discussed. In addition, a wind-tunnel test program being conducted to assess the validity of minimization methods based on a forward spike in the F-function is described
Separation of two bodies in space
Computer program analyzes the motion of two rigid bodies in space, separating as a result of any one, or a combination of, the following mechanisms - springs with ball ends, springs with one end guided, pyrotechnics, rockets, cold-gas jets, air pistons, and Coulomb drag
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