1,166 research outputs found
Shock testing of a nitrogen tank (Cryo diffusion type 220 VLR) on the middle weight shock stand
Results of vertical and horizontal shock tests on type 200 VLR nitrogen tank are given
An interferometric study of the post-AGB binary 89 Herculis. II Radiative transfer models of the circumbinary disk
The presence of disks and outflows is widespread among post-AGB binaries. In
the first paper of this series, a surprisingly large fraction of optical light
was found to be resolved in the 89 Her post-AGB system. The data showed this
flux to arise from close to the central binary. Scattering off the inner rim of
the circumbinary disk, or in a dusty outflow were suggested as two possible
origins. With detailed dust radiative transfer models of the disk we aim to
discriminate between these two configurations. By including Herschel/SPIRE
photometry, we extend the SED such that it now fully covers UV to sub-mm
wavelengths. The MCMax radiative transfer code is used to create a large grid
of disk models. Our models include a self-consistent treatment of dust settling
as well as of scattering. A Si-rich composition with two additional opacity
sources, metallic Fe or amorphous C, are tested. The SED is fit together with
mid-IR (MIDI) visibilities as well as the optical and near-IR visibilities of
Paper I, to constrain the structure of the disk and in particular of its inner
rim. The near-IR visibility data require a smooth inner rim, here obtained with
a two-power-law parameterization of the radial surface density distribution. A
model can be found that fits all the IR photometric and interferometric data
well, with either of the two continuum opacity sources. Our best-fit passive
models are characterized by a significant amount of mm-sized grains, which are
settled to the midplane of the disk. Not a single disk model fits our data at
optical wavelengths though, the reason being the opposing constraints imposed
by the optical and near-IR interferometric data. A geometry in which a passive,
dusty, and puffed-up circumbinary disk is present, can reproduce all the IR but
not the optical observations of 89 Her. Another dusty, outflow or halo,
component therefore needs to be added to the system.Comment: 15 pages, in pres
Traitor: associating concepts using the world wide web
We use Common Crawl's 25TB data set of web pages to construct a database of associated concepts using Hadoop. The database can be queried through a web application with two query interfaces. A textual interface allows searching for similarities and differences between multiple concepts using a query language similar to set notation, and a graphical interface allows users to visualize similarity relationships of concepts in a force directed graph
The Compression of Dark Matter Halos by Baryonic Infall
The initial radial density profiles of dark matter halos are laid down by
gravitational collapse in hierarchical structure formation scenarios and are
subject to further compression as baryons cool and settle to the halo centers.
We here describe an explicit implementation of the algorithm, originally
developed by Young, to calculate changes to the density profile as the result
of adiabatic infall in a spherical halo model. Halos with random motion are
more resistant to compression than are those in which random motions are
neglected, which is a key weakness of the simple method widely employed.
Young's algorithm results in density profiles in excellent agreement with those
from N-body simulations. We show how the algorithm may be applied to determine
the original uncompressed halos of real galaxies, a step which must be computed
with care in order to enable a confrontation with theoretical predictions from
theories such as LCDM.Comment: Revised version for ApJ. 8 pages, 8 figures, latex uses emulateap
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Design Enhancement of Biomedical Scaffolds Made By Selective Laser Melting
Selective laser melting (SLM) is increasingly used to fabricate biomedical scaffolds.
However, the intrinsic specifications of the process such as laser spot size, layer thickness,
and particle size limit the production accuracy, altering the geometrical characteristics and
mechanical properties of the scaffolds. This work attempts to assess and improve the
mechanical properties of TiAl6V4 biomedical scaffolds by eliminating/modifying the sharp
and thin nodes (as the main source of stress concentrations and lowering the mechanical
properties). This is carried out through a gradual increase of the beam (strut) thickness around
the nodes where corresponding struts meet. The compression performance of these scaffolds
was assessed and compared to common examples (unaltered struts) and to scaffolds designed
with thicker struts in the centre of the beams (demonstrating the largest contrast). The findings
prove that the thickening of the nodal points improves the strain distribution while maintains
the mechanical properties at an identical solid volume fraction. This can be used to improve
the scaffold design by a gradual strut thickness (in a comparable volume fraction) for an
improved bio-mechanical performance.Mechanical Engineerin
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