5,361 research outputs found
Advanced acoustic and aerodynamic 20-inch fan program
The aerodynamic analyses, mechanical analyses, and stress tests of a 20-inch diameter advanced fan design intended for acoustic investigation by NASA-LeRC are discussed. A high tip speed transonic fan rotor was scaled directly to 20.0 inches (0.508 m) from a 28.74-inch (0.73-m) diameter rotor. A new stator was designed and fabricated for the fan and incorporated with a test rig housing and adapter hardware for installation in the NASA-LeRC Jet Noise Facility for acoustic evaluation. The stator was designed to allow mounting at three axial locations, and the fan, housing, and adapters are reversible so that either the inlet or the exhaust ends of the assembly face the open room of the test facility. Excellent aerodynamic performance is predicted, and a low noise signature is expected since the unique aerodynamic design features of this fan are directly conductive to producing minimum sound power
The Dynamical Fingerprint of Core Scouring in Massive Elliptical Galaxies
The most massive elliptical galaxies have low-density centers or cores that
differ dramatically from the high-density centers of less massive ellipticals
and bulges of disk galaxies. These cores have been interpreted as the result of
mergers of supermassive black hole binaries, which depopulate galaxy centers by
gravitationally slingshotting central stars toward large radii. Such binaries
naturally form in mergers of luminous galaxies. Here, we analyze the population
of central stellar orbits in 11 massive elliptical galaxies that we observed
with the integral field spectrograph SINFONI at the European Southern
Observatory Very Large Telescope. Our dynamical analysis is orbit-based and
includes the effects of a central black hole, the mass distribution of the
stars, and a dark matter halo. We show that the use of integral field
kinematics and the inclusion of dark matter is important to conclude upon the
distribution of stellar orbits in galaxy centers. Six of our galaxies are core
galaxies. In these six galaxies, but not in the galaxies without cores, we
detect a coherent lack of stars on radial orbits in the core region and a
uniform excess of radial orbits outside of it: when scaled by the core radius,
the radial profiles of the classical anisotropy parameter beta are nearly
identical in core galaxies. Moreover, they match quantitatively the predictions
of black hole binary simulations, providing the first convincing dynamical
evidence for core scouring in the most massive elliptical galaxies.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, accepted by Ap
Important role of alkali atoms in A4C60
We show that hopping via the alkali atoms plays an important role for the t1u
band of A4C60 (A=K, Rb), in strong contrast to A3C60. Thus the t1u band is
broadened by more than 40 % by the presence of the alkali atoms. The difference
between A4C60 and A3C60 is in particular due to the less symmetric location of
the alkali atoms in A4C60.Comment: 5 pages, revtex, 2 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. B more
information at http://www.mpi-stuttgart.mpg.de/dokumente/andersen/fullerene
Structure and energetics of Si(111)-(5x2)-Au
We propose a new structural model for the Si(111)-(5x2)-Au reconstruction.
The model incorporates a new experimental value of 0.6 monolayer for the
coverage of gold atoms, equivalent to six gold atoms per 5x2 cell. Five main
theoretical results, obtained from first-principles total-energy calculations,
support the model. (1) In the presence of silicon adatoms the periodicity of
the gold rows spontaneously doubles, in agreement with experiment. (2) The
dependence of the surface energy on the adatom coverage indicates that a
uniformly covered phase is unstable and will phase-separate into empty and
covered regions, as observed experimentally. (3) Theoretical scanning tunneling
microscopy images are in excellent agreement with experiment. (4) The
calculated band structure is consistent with angle-resolved photoemission
spectra; analysis of their correspondence allows the straightforward assignment
of observed surface states to specific atoms. (5) The calculated activation
barrier for diffusion of silicon adatoms along the row direction is in
excellent agreement with the experimentally measured barrier.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, also available with higher-resolution figures
from http://cst-www.nrl.navy.mil/users/erwin/ausi111.v5.pd
Three-dimensional electronic instabilities in polymerized solid A1C60
The low-temperature structure of A1C60 (A=K, Rb) is an ordered array of
polymerized C60 chains, with magnetic properties that suggest a non-metallic
ground state. We study the paramagnetic state of this phase using
first-principles electronic-structure methods, and examine the magnetic
fluctuations around this state using a model Hamiltonian. The electronic and
magnetic properties of even this polymerized phase remain strongly three
dimensional, and the magnetic fluctuations favor an unusual three-dimensional
antiferromagnetically ordered structure with a semi-metallic electronic
spectrum.Comment: REVTeX 3.0, 10 pages, 4 figures available on request from
[email protected]
Commensurate and modulated magnetic phases in orthorhombic A1C60
Competing magnetically ordered structures in polymerized orthorhombic A1C60
are studied. A mean-field theory for the equilibrium phases is developed using
an Ising model and a classical Heisenberg model to describe the competition
between inter- and intra-chain magnetic order in the solid. In the Ising model,
the limiting commensurate one-dimensional and three-dimensional phases are
separated by a commensurate three-sublattice state and by two sectors
containing higher-order commensurate phases. For the Heisenberg model the
quasi-1D phase is never the equilibrium state; instead the 3D commensurate
phases exhibits a transition to a continuum of coplanar spiral magnetic phases.Comment: 11 pages REVTeX 3.0 plus 4 figures appende
Depleted Galaxy Cores and Dynamical Black Hole Masses
Shallow cores in bright, massive galaxies are commonly thought to be the
result of scouring of stars by mergers of binary supermassive black holes. Past
investigations have suggested correlations between the central black hole mass
and the stellar light or mass deficit in the core, using proxy measurements of
or stellar mass-to-light ratios (). Drawing on a wealth
of dynamical models which provide both and , we identify
cores in 23 galaxies, of which 20 have direct, reliable measurements of and dynamical stellar mass-to-light ratios ().
These cores are identified and measured using Core-S\'ersic model fits to
surface brightness profiles which extend out to large radii (typically more
than the effective radius of the galaxy); for approximately one fourth of the
galaxies, the best fit includes an outer (\sersic) envelope component. We find
that the core radius is most strongly correlated with the black hole mass and
that it correlates better with total galaxy luminosity than it does with
velocity dispersion. The strong core-size-- correlation enables
estimation of black hole masses (in core galaxies) with an accuracy comparable
to the -- relation (rms scatter of 0.30 dex in ), without the need for spectroscopy. The light and mass deficits correlate
more strongly with galaxy velocity dispersion than they do with black hole
mass. Stellar mass deficits span a range of 0.2--39 \mbh, with almost all (87%)
being ; the median value is 2.2 .Comment: Proof-corrected version, AJ, 146, 160,
http://stacks.iop.org/1538-3881/146/16
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