3,998 research outputs found
Aerodynamic properties of turbulent combustion fields
Flow fields involving turbulent flames in premixed gases under a variety of conditions are modeled by the use of a numerical technique based on the random vortex method to solve the Navier-Stokes equations and a flame propagation algorithm to trace the motion of the front and implement the Huygens principle, both due to Chorin. A successive over-relaxation hybrid method is applied to solve the Euler equation for flows in an arbitrarily shaped domain. The method of images, conformal transformation, and the integral-equation technique are also used to treat flows in special cases, according to their particular requirements. Salient features of turbulent flame propagation in premixed gases are interpreted by relating them to the aerodynamic properties of the flow field. Included among them is the well-known cellular structure of flames stabilized by bluff bodies, as well as the formation of the characteristic tulip shape of flames propagating in ducts. In its rudimentary form, the mechanism of propagation of a turbulent flame is shown to consist of: (1) rotary motion of eddies at the flame front, (2) self-advancement of the front at an appropriate normal burning speed, and (3) dynamic effects of expansion due to exothermicity of the combustion reaction. An idealized model is used to illustrate these fundamental mechanisms and to investigate basic aerodynamic features of flames in premixed gases. The case of a confined flame stabilized behind a rearward-facing step is given particular care and attention. Solutions are shown to be in satisfactory agreement with experimental results, especially with respect to global properties such as the average velocity profiles and reattachment length
Measuring impact of academic research in computer and information science on society
Academic research in computer & information science (CIS) has
contributed immensely to all aspects of society. As academic
research today is substantially supported by various government
sources, recent political changes have created ambivalence
amongst academics about the future of research funding. With
uncertainty looming, it is important to develop a framework to
extract and measure the information relating to impact of CIS
research on society to justify public funding, and demonstrate the
actual contribution and impact of CIS research outside academia.
A new method combining discourse analysis and text mining of a
collection of over 1000 pages of impact case study documents
written in free-text format for the Research Excellence
Framework (REF) 2014 was developed in order to identify the
most commonly used categories or headings for reporting impact
of CIS research by UK Universities (UKU). According to the
research reported in REF2014, UKU acquired 83 patents in
various areas of CIS, created 64 spin-offs, generated £857.5
million in different financial forms, created substantial
employment, reached over 6 billion users worldwide and has
helped save over £1 billion Pounds due to improved processes etc.
to various sectors internationally, between 2008 and 2013
Statistics of statisticians: Critical mass of statistics and operational research groups in the UK
Using a recently developed model, inspired by mean field theory in
statistical physics, and data from the UK's Research Assessment Exercise, we
analyse the relationship between the quality of statistics and operational
research groups and the quantity researchers in them. Similar to other academic
disciplines, we provide evidence for a linear dependency of quality on quantity
up to an upper critical mass, which is interpreted as the average maximum
number of colleagues with whom a researcher can communicate meaningfully within
a research group. The model also predicts a lower critical mass, which research
groups should strive to achieve to avoid extinction. For statistics and
operational research, the lower critical mass is estimated to be 9 3. The
upper critical mass, beyond which research quality does not significantly
depend on group size, is about twice this value
Information locking in black holes
The black hole information loss paradox has plagued physicists since
Hawking's discovery that black holes evaporate thermally in contradiction to
the unitarity expected by quantum mechanics. Here we show that one of the
central presumptions of the debate is incorrect. Ensuring that information not
escape during the semi-classical evaporation process does not require that all
the information remain in the black hole until the final stages of evaporation.
Using recent results in quantum information theory, we find that the amount of
information that must remain in the black hole until the final stages of
evaporation can be very small, even though the amount already radiated away is
negligible. Quantum effects mean that information need not be additive: a small
number of quanta can lock a large amount of information, making it
inaccessible. When this small number of locking quanta are finally emitted, the
full information (and unitarity) is restored. Only if the number of initial
states is restricted will the locking mechanism leak out information early.Comment: 5 pages, to appear in PRL. Presented at the Newton Institute's
workshop on Quantum gravity and quantum information, Dec. 17th, 200
Modeling Interface Motion Of Combustion (MINOC). A computer code for two-dimensional, unsteady turbulent combustion
A computer code for calculating the flow field and flame propagation in a turbulent combustion tunnel is described. The model used in the analysis is the random vortex model, which allows the turbulent field to evolve as a fundamental solution to the Navier-Stokes equations without averaging or closure modeling. The program was used to study the flow field in a model combustor, formed by a rearward-facing step in a channel, in terms of the vorticity field, the turbulent shear stresses, the flame contours, and the concentration field. Results for the vorticity field reveal the formation of large-scale eddy structures in the turbulent flow downstream from the step. The concentration field contours indicate that most burning occurred around the outer edges of the large eddies of the shear layer
Effects of ion magnetization on the Farley-Buneman instability in the solar chromosphere
Intense heating in the quiet-Sun chromosphere raises the temperature from 4000 to 6500 K but, despite decades of study, the underlying mechanism remains a mystery. This study continues to explore the possibility that the Farley–Buneman instability contributes to chromospheric heating. This instability occurs in weakly ionized collisional plasmas in which electrons are magnetized, but ions are not. A mixture of metal ions generate the plasma density in the coolest parts of the chromosphere; while some ions are weakly magnetized, others are demagnetized by neutral collisions. This paper incorporates the effects of multiple, arbitrarily magnetized species of ions to the theory of the Farley–Buneman instability and examines the ramifications on instability in the chromosphere. The inclusion of magnetized ions introduces new restrictions on the regions in which the instability can occur in the chromosphere—in fact, it confines the instability to the regions in which heating is observed. For a magnetic field of 30 G, the minimum ambient electric field capable of driving the instability is 13.5 V/m at the temperature minimum.This work was supported by NSF-AGS Postdoctoral Research Fellowship Award No. 1433536 and NSF/DOE grant No. PHY-1500439. The authors also acknowledge a recent contribution from William Longley. (1433536 - NSF-AGS Postdoctoral Research Fellowship Award; PHY-1500439 - NSF/DOE grant)First author draftPublished versio
Can the frequency-dependent specific heat be measured by thermal effusion methods?
It has recently been shown that plane-plate heat effusion methods devised for
wide-frequency specific-heat spectroscopy do not give the isobaric specific
heat, but rather the so-called longitudinal specific heat. Here it is shown
that heat effusion in a spherical symmetric geometry also involves the
longitudinal specific heat.Comment: Paper presented at the Fifth International Workshop on Complex
Systems (Sendai, September, 2007), to appear in AIP Conference Proceeding
Supernarrow spectral peaks near a kinetic phase transition in a driven, nonlinear micromechanical oscillator
We measure the spectral densities of fluctuations of an underdamped nonlinear
micromechanical oscillator. By applying a sufficiently large periodic
excitation, two stable dynamical states are obtained within a particular range
of driving frequency. White noise is injected into the excitation, allowing the
system to overcome the activation barrier and switch between the two states.
While the oscillator predominately resides in one of the two states for most
excitation frequencies, a narrow range of frequencies exist where the
occupations of the two states are approximately equal. At these frequencies,
the oscillator undergoes a kinetic phase transition that resembles the phase
transition of thermal equilibrium systems. We observe a supernarrow peak in the
power spectral densities of fluctuations of the oscillator. This peak is
centered at the excitation frequency and arises as a result of noise-induced
transitions between the two dynamical states.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
A practical scheme for error control using feedback
We describe a scheme for quantum error correction that employs feedback and
weak measurement rather than the standard tools of projective measurement and
fast controlled unitary gates. The advantage of this scheme over previous
protocols (for example Ahn et. al, PRA, 65, 042301 (2001)), is that it requires
little side processing while remaining robust to measurement inefficiency, and
is therefore considerably more practical. We evaluate the performance of our
scheme by simulating the correction of bit-flips. We also consider
implementation in a solid-state quantum computation architecture and estimate
the maximal error rate which could be corrected with current technology.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures. Minor typographic change
Extremal distributions under approximate majorization
Although an input distribution may not majorize a target distribution, it may majorize a distribution which is close to the target. Here we consider a notion of approximate majorization. For any distribution, and given a distance δ, we find the approximate distributions which majorize (are majorized by) all other distributions within the distance δ. We call these the steepest and flattest approximation. This enables one to compute how close one can get to a given target distribution under a process governed by majorization. We show that the flattest and steepest approximations preserve ordering under majorization. Furthermore, we give a notion of majorization distance. This has applications ranging from thermodynamics, entanglement theory, and economics
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