415 research outputs found
IMECE2002-32160 SURFACE ROUGHNESS EFFECTS ON CIRCULAR CYLINDERS AT HIGH REYNOLDS NUMBERS
ABSTRACT The problem of flow-induced vibration has been studied extensively. However, much of this research has focused on the smooth cylinder to gain an understanding of the mechanisms that cause vortex-induced vibration. In this paper results of an investigation of the effect of surface roughness on the crosswind forces are presented. Measurements of the sectional RMS fluctuating lift forces and the axial correlation of the pressures for Reynolds numbers from 1 x 10 5 to 1.4 x 10 6 are given. It was found that surface roughness significantly increased the axial correlation of the pressures to similar values found at high subcritical Reynolds numbers. There was little effect of the surface roughness on the sectional lift forces. The improved correlation of the vortex shedding means rough cylinders will be subject to larger cross-wind forces and an increased possibility of vortex-induced vibration compared to smooth cylinders. INTRODUCTION The problem of vortex-induced vibration confronts us in many everyday situations; from the vibration of a domestic television aerial to flow over heat exchanger tube banks to large towers, and in some situations left untreated can lead to structure failures. The importance of finding causes and solutions to vortex induced vibration is reflected in the quantity of research. Many of the circular cylinder applications mentioned in the previous paragraph are not highly polished, instead they have a degree of surface roughness caused by manufacturing tolerances or environmental conditions. Research on smooth cylinders in low turbulence flow has shown the fluid-structure mechanisms that result in vibration over a wide range of Reynolds numbers. However, the quantity of research data available showing the effect of surface roughness an
The Interpretation of Photoelectric Colors for Stars of Types B-F
The accumulation of photoelectric data on the Johnson-Morgan system of B - V and U - B colors makes a preliminary theoretical reconnaissance desirable The colors were predicted for atmospheres of a wide range of effective temperatures and electron pressures. The effects of the Balmer jump on the response in the U band and of the Balmer lines in the B band were included, using averages taken over spectral type and luminosity classes. Table 2 gives the predicted fluxes as compared to a black body, the corrected B - V and U - B colors, and the color temperatures The zero point is based on Code's spectral scans of two stars. The results are most useful for differential effects over small ranges of 0 and P_e; the general temperature and pressure scale derived colorimetrically seems reasonable. The large effect of lines in certain white dwarfs explains some features of the observed colors
Classification and stability of simple homoclinic cycles in R^5
The paper presents a complete study of simple homoclinic cycles in R^5. We
find all symmetry groups Gamma such that a Gamma-equivariant dynamical system
in R^5 can possess a simple homoclinic cycle. We introduce a classification of
simple homoclinic cycles in R^n based on the action of the system symmetry
group. For systems in R^5, we list all classes of simple homoclinic cycles. For
each class, we derive necessary and sufficient conditions for asymptotic
stability and fragmentary asymptotic stability in terms of eigenvalues of
linearisation near the steady state involved in the cycle. For any action of
the groups Gamma which can give rise to a simple homoclinic cycle, we list
classes to which the respective homoclinic cycles belong, thus determining
conditions for asymptotic stability of these cycles.Comment: 34 pp., 4 tables, 30 references. Submitted to Nonlinearit
The Buried Starburst in the Interacting Galaxy II Zw 096 as Revealed by the Spitzer Space Telescope
An analysis of data from the Spitzer Space Telescope, Hubble Space Telescope, Chandra X-ray Observatory, and AKARI Infrared Astronomy Satellite is presented for the z = 0.036 merging galaxy system II Zw 096 (CGCG 448-020). Because II Zw 096 has an infrared luminosity of log(L_(IR)/L_☉) = 11.94, it is classified as a Luminous Infrared Galaxy (LIRG), and was observed as part of the Great Observatories All-sky LIRG Survey (GOALS). The Spitzer data suggest that 80% of the total infrared luminosity comes from an extremely compact, red source not associated with the nuclei of the merging galaxies. The Spitzer mid-infrared spectra indicate no high-ionization lines from a buried active galactic nucleus in this source. The strong detection of the 3.3 μm and 6.2 μm polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon emission features in the AKARI and Spitzer spectra also implies that the energy source of II Zw 096 is a starburst. Based on Spitzer infrared imaging and AKARI near-infrared spectroscopy, the star formation rate is estimated to be 120 M_☉ yr^(-1) and >45 M_☉ yr^(-1), respectively. Finally, the high-resolution B-, I-, and H-band images show many star clusters in the interacting system. The colors of these clusters suggest at least two populations—one with an age of 1-5 Myr and one with an age of 20-500 Myr, reddened by 0-2 mag of visual extinction. The masses of these clusters span a range between 10^6 and 10^8 M_☉. This starburst source is reminiscent of the extranuclear starburst seen in NGC 4038/9 (the Antennae Galaxies) and Arp 299 but approximately an order of magnitude more luminous than the Antennae. The source is remarkable in that the off-nuclear infrared luminosity dominates the entire system
Plate Boundary Observatory and related networks: GPS data analysis methods and geodetic products
The Geodesy Advancing Geosciences and EarthScope (GAGE) Facility Global Positioning System (GPS) Data Analysis Centers produce position time series, velocities, and other parameters for approximately 2000 continuously operating GPS receivers spanning a quadrant of Earth’s surface encompassing the high Arctic, North America, and Caribbean. The purpose of this review is to document the methodology for generating station positions and their evolution over time and to describe the requisite trade-offs involved with combination of results. GAGE GPS analysis involves formal merging within a Kalman filter of two independent, loosely constrained solutions: one is based on precise point positioning produced with the GIPSY/OASIS software at Central Washington University and the other is a network solution based on phase and range double-differencing produced with the GAMIT software at New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology. The primary products generated are the position time series that show motions relative to a North America reference frame and secular motions of the stations represented in the velocity field. The position time series themselves contain a multitude of signals in addition to the secular motions. Coseismic and postseismic signals, seasonal signals from hydrology, and transient events, some understood and others not yet fully explained, are all evident in the time series and ready for further analysis and interpretation. We explore the impact of analysis assumptions on the reference frame realization and on the final solutions, and we compare within the GAGE solutions and with others
Operator renewal theory and mixing rates for dynamical systems with infinite measure
We develop a theory of operator renewal sequences in the context of infinite
ergodic theory. For large classes of dynamical systems preserving an infinite
measure, we determine the asymptotic behaviour of iterates of the
transfer operator. This was previously an intractable problem.
Examples of systems covered by our results include (i) parabolic rational
maps of the complex plane and (ii) (not necessarily Markovian) nonuniformly
expanding interval maps with indifferent fixed points.
In addition, we give a particularly simple proof of pointwise dual ergodicity
(asymptotic behaviour of ) for the class of systems under
consideration.
In certain situations, including Pomeau-Manneville intermittency maps, we
obtain higher order expansions for and rates of mixing. Also, we obtain
error estimates in the associated Dynkin-Lamperti arcsine laws.Comment: Preprint, August 2010. Revised August 2011. After publication, a
minor error was pointed out by Kautzsch et al, arXiv:1404.5857. The updated
version includes minor corrections in Sections 10 and 11, and corresponding
modifications of certain statements in Section 1. All main results are
unaffected. In particular, Sections 2-9 are unchanged from the published
versio
Mid-Infrared Properties of Nearby Luminous Infrared Galaxies I: Spitzer IRS Spectra for the GOALS Sample
The Great Observatories All-Sky LIRG Survey (GOALS) is a multiwavelength
study of luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs) in the local universe. Here we
present low resolution Spitzer spectra covering 5-38um and provide a basic
analysis of the mid-IR spectral properties for nearby LIRGs. In a companion
paper, we discuss detailed fits to the spectra. The GOALS sample of 244 nuclei
in 180 luminous and 22 ultraluminous IR galaxies represents a complete subset
of the IRAS RBGS and covers a range of merger stages, morphologies and spectral
types. The majority (>60%) of GOALS LIRGs have high 6.2um PAH equivalent widths
(EQW > 0.4um) and low levels of silicate absorption (s_9.7um >-1.0). There is a
general trend among the U/LIRGs for silicate depth and MIR slope to increase
with LIR. U/LIRGs in the late stages of a merger also have on average steeper
MIR slopes and higher levels of dust obscuration. Together these trends suggest
that as gas & dust is funneled towards the center of a coalescing merger, the
nuclei become more compact and obscured. The sources that depart from these
correlations have very low PAH EQW (EQW < 0.1um) consistent with their MIR
emission being dominated by an AGN. The most heavily dust obscured sources are
the most compact in their MIR emission, suggesting that the obscuring (cool)
dust is associated with the outer regions of the starburst. As the merger
progresses a marked decline is seen for the fraction of high EQW (star
formation dominated) sources while the fraction of composite sources increases
but the fraction of AGN-dominated sources remains low. When compared to the MIR
spectra of submillimeter galaxies (SMGs) at z~2, the average GOALS LIRG is more
absorbed at 9.7um and has more PAH emission. However, when the AGN
contributions to both the local LIRGs and the high-z SMGs are removed, the
average local starbursting LIRG closely resembles the starbursting SMGs.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
The Panchromatic Hubble Andromeda Treasury
The Panchromatic Hubble Andromeda Treasury (PHAT) is an on-going HST
Multicycle Treasury program to image ~1/3 of M31's star forming disk in 6
filters, from the UV to the NIR. The full survey will resolve the galaxy into
more than 100 million stars with projected radii from 0-20 kpc over a
contiguous 0.5 square degree area in 828 orbits, producing imaging in the F275W
and F336W filters with WFC3/UVIS, F475W and F814W with ACS/WFC, and F110W and
F160W with WFC3/IR. The resulting wavelength coverage gives excellent
constraints on stellar temperature, bolometric luminosity, and extinction for
most spectral types. The photometry reaches SNR=4 at F275W=25.1, F336W=24.9,
F475W=27.9, F814W=27.1, F110W=25.5, and F160W=24.6 for single pointings in the
uncrowded outer disk; however, the optical and NIR data are crowding limited,
and the deepest reliable magnitudes are up to 5 magnitudes brighter in the
inner bulge. All pointings are dithered and produce Nyquist-sampled images in
F475W, F814W, and F160W. We describe the observing strategy, photometry,
astrometry, and data products, along with extensive tests of photometric
stability, crowding errors, spatially-dependent photometric biases, and
telescope pointing control. We report on initial fits to the structure of M31's
disk, derived from the density of RGB stars, in a way that is independent of
the assumed M/L and is robust to variations in dust extinction. These fits also
show that the 10 kpc ring is not just a region of enhanced recent star
formation, but is instead a dynamical structure containing a significant
overdensity of stars with ages >1 Gyr. (Abridged)Comment: 48 pages including 22 pages of figures. Accepted to the Astrophysical
Journal Supplements. Some figures slightly degraded to reduce submission siz
Field Blue Stragglers and Related Mass Transfer Issues
This chapter contains my impressions and perspectives about the current state
of knowledge about field blue stragglers (FBS) stars, drawn from an extensive
literature that I searched. I conclude my review of issues that attend FBS and
mass transfer, by a brief enumeration of a few mildly disquieting observational
facts.Comment: Chapter 4, in Ecology of Blue Straggler Stars, H.M.J. Boffin, G.
Carraro & G. Beccari (Eds), Astrophysics and Space Science Library, Springe
Characteristics and large bulk density of the C-type main-belt triple asteroid (93) Minerva
From a set of adaptive optics (AO) observations collected with the W.M. Keck telescope between August and September 2009, we derived the orbital parameters of the most recently discovered satellites of the large C-type asteroid (93) Minerva. The satellites of Minerva, which are approximately 3 and 4 km in diameter, orbit very close to the primary (∼5 and ∼8 × R_p and ∼1% and ∼2% × R_(Hill)) in a circular manner, sharing common characteristics with most of the triple asteroid systems in the main-belt. Combining these AO observations with lightcurve data collected since 1980 and two stellar occultations in 2010 and 2011, we removed the ambiguity of the pole solution of Minerva’s primary and showed that it has an almost regular shape with an equivalent diameter D_(eq) = 154 ± 6 km in agreement with IRAS observations. The surprisingly high bulk density of 1.75 ± 0.30 g/cm3 for this C-type asteroid, suggests that this taxonomic class is composed of asteroids with different compositions, For instance, Minerva could be made of the same material as dry CR, CO, and CV meteorites. We discuss possible scenarios on the origin of the system and conclude that future observations may shine light on the nature and composition of this fifth known triple main-belt asteroid
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