8,367 research outputs found

    Design and Testing of a Smoke Rake System for the New ERAU Wind Tunnel

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    The smoke visualization technique is an extremely insightful technique to qualitatively understand complex flow fields, particularly in a wind tunnel environment. This work focuses on the design, development and testing of a smoke visualization system for the newly commissioned MicaPlex low-speed wind tunnel facility. The proposed design uses a smoke rake system in conjunction with existing smoke/fog generators. Smoke generated in a pressurized plenum was fed through a PVC strut housing the smoke rake. Prototypes of this design were fabricated using a fast-prototyping 3D printer. This allowed for rapid iterations in the initial design phase. Both a single-tube and multi-tube system were utilized to deliver atomized oil fog into the test section in a very controlled manner. As a demonstration of the system the flow over an airfoil section was visualized. The project is in the final phases of testing. This work incorporates aspects of engineering design, construction, as well as testing and its various iterations so providing exposure to an entire engineering product life cycle

    Spoon-Feeding Giant Stars to Supermassive Black Holes: Episodic Mass Transfer from Evolving Stars and Their Contribution to the Quiescent Activity of Galactic Nuclei

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    Stars may be tidally disrupted if, in a single orbit, they are scattered too close to a supermassive black hole (SMBH). Tidal disruption events are thought to power luminous but short-lived accretion episodes that can light up otherwise quiescent SMBHs in transient flares. Here we explore a more gradual process of tidal stripping where stars approach the tidal disruption radius by stellar evolution while in an eccentric orbit. After the onset of mass transfer, these stars episodically transfer mass to the SMBH every pericenter passage giving rise to low-level flares that repeat on the orbital timescale. Giant stars, in particular, will exhibit a runaway response to mass loss and "spoon-feed" material to the black hole for tens to hundreds of orbital periods. In contrast to full tidal disruption events, the duty cycle of this feeding mode is of order unity for black holes with mass greater than approximately 10 million solar masses. This mode of quasi-steady SMBH feeding is competitive with indirect SMBH feeding through stellar winds, and spoon-fed giant stars may play a significant role in determining the quiescent luminosity of local SMBHs.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
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