111,817 research outputs found
High amplitude sinusoidal pressure generator
Generator is an inlet-area-modulated, gas-flow-through device utilizing hydrogen gas and a rotating disk for operation. Design enables generator to produce pressure oscillations as high as 120, 18, and 12 percent of the mean chamber pressure at frequencies of 1, 10, and 15 kHz, respectively
Equations of motion in the linear approximation
Gauge invariant theory of motion of singularities in linear approximatio
Open sets satisfying systems of congruences
A famous result of Hausdorff states that a sphere with countably many points
removed can be partitioned into three pieces A,B,C such that A is congruent to
B (i.e., there is an isometry of the sphere which sends A to B), B is congruent
to C, and A is congruent to (B union C); this result was the precursor of the
Banach-Tarski paradox. Later, R. Robinson characterized the systems of
congruences like this which could be realized by partitions of the (entire)
sphere with rotations witnessing the congruences. The pieces involved were
nonmeasurable. In the present paper, we consider the problem of which systems
of congruences can be satisfied using open subsets of the sphere (or related
spaces); of course, these open sets cannot form a partition of the sphere, but
they can be required to cover "most of" the sphere in the sense that their
union is dense. Various versions of the problem arise, depending on whether one
uses all isometries of the sphere or restricts oneself to a free group of
rotations (the latter version generalizes to many other suitable spaces), or
whether one omits the requirement that the open sets have dense union, and so
on. While some cases of these problems are solved by simple geometrical
dissections, others involve complicated iterative constructions and/or results
from the theory of free groups. Many interesting questions remain open.Comment: 44 page
Improvement of a large-amplitude sinusoidal pressure generator for dynamic calibration of pressure transducers
Results of research on the improvement of a sinusoidal pressure generator are presented. The generator is an inlet-area-modulated, gas-flow-through device (siren type) which was developed to dynamically calibrate pressure transducers and pressure probes. Tests were performed over a frequency range of 100 Hz to 20 kHz at average chamber pressures (bias pressure) between 30 and 50 psia (21 and 35 N/sq cm abs) and between 150 and 300 psia (104 and 207 N/sq cm abs). Significant improvements in oscillation pressure waveform were obtained but with reduction in available generator oscillation pressure amplitude range. Oscillation pressure amplitude, waveform, and waveform spectral content are given as functions of frequency for the two bias pressure conditions. The generator and instrumentation for frequency, amplitude, and spectrum measurements are described
Tiny sensor-transmitter can withstand extreme acceleration, gives digital output
A self-pulsing oscillator transmits a pulsed signal. The time between pulses and the frequency are controlled by two networks. Variations in the component values in each of the two networks, due to environmental changes, appear as changes in frequency and time between pulses in the transmitted signal. Such a sensor is used to measure physical magnitudes
Simulation and assimilation of satellite altimeter data at the oceanic mesoscale
An improved "objective analysis' technique is used along with an altimeter signal statistical model, an altimeter noise statistical model, an orbital model, and synoptic surface current maps in the POLYMODE-SDE area, to evaluate the performance of various observational strategies in catching the mesoscale variability at mid-latitudes. In particular, simulated repetitive nominal orbits of ERS-1, TOPEX, and SPOT/POSEIDON are examined. Results show the critical importance of existence of a subcycle, scanning in either direction. Moreover, long repeat cycles ( 20 days) and short cross-track distances ( 300 km) seem preferable, since they match mesoscale statistics. Another goal of the study is to prepare and discuss sea-surface height (SSH) assimilation in quasigeostrophic models. Restored SSH maps are shown to meet that purpose, if an efficient extrapolation method or deep in-situ data (floats) are used on the vertical to start and update the model
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