3,816 research outputs found

    Visualization and imaging methods for flames in microgravity

    Get PDF
    The visualization and imaging of flames has long been acknowledged as the starting point for learning about and understanding combustion phenomena. It provides an essential overall picture of the time and length scales of processes and guides the application of other diagnostics. It is perhaps even more important in microgravity combustion studies, where it is often the only non-intrusive diagnostic measurement easily implemented. Imaging also aids in the interpretation of single-point measurements, such as temperature, provided by thermocouples, and velocity, by hot-wire anemometers. This paper outlines the efforts of the Microgravity Combustion Diagnostics staff at NASA Lewis Research Center in the area of visualization and imaging of flames, concentrating on methods applicable for reduced-gravity experimentation. Several techniques are under development: intensified array camera imaging, and two-dimensional temperature and species concentrations measurements. A brief summary of results in these areas is presented and future plans mentioned

    Nonlinear three wave interaction in pair plasmas

    Get PDF
    It is shown that nonlinear three-wave interaction, described by vector-product type nonlinearities, in pair plasmas implies much more restrictive conditions for a double energy transfer, as compared to electron-ion plasmas

    Calibration of a shock wave position sensor using artificial neural networks

    Get PDF
    This report discusses the calibration of a shock wave position sensor. The position sensor works by using artificial neural networks to map cropped CCD frames of the shadows of the shock wave into the value of the shock wave position. This project was done as a tutorial demonstration of method and feasibility. It used a laboratory shadowgraph, nozzle, and commercial neural network package. The results were quite good, indicating that artificial neural networks can be used efficiently to automate the semi-quantitative applications of flow visualization

    Nonlinear polarisation and dissipative correspondence between low frequency fluid and gyrofluid equations

    Full text link
    The correspondence between gyrofluid and low frequency fluid equations is examined. The lowest order conservative effects in ExB advection, parallel dynamics, and curvature match trivially. The principal concerns are polarisation fluxes, and dissipative parallel viscosity and parallel heat fluxes. The emergence of the polarisation heat flux in the fluid model and its contribution to the energy theorem is reviewed. It is shown that gyroviscosity and the polarisation fluxes are matched by the finite gyroradius corrections to advection in the long wavelength limit, provided that the differences between gyrocenter and particle representations is taken into account. The dissipative parallel viscosity is matched by the residual thermal anisotropy in the gyrofluid model in the collision dominated limit. The dissipative parallel heat flux is matched by the gyrofluid parallel heat flux variables in the collision dominated limit. Hence, the gyrofluid equations are a complete superset of the low frequency fluid equations.Comment: RevTeX 4, 28 pages, no figures, final revised version for Physics of Plasmas prior to proof stag

    Imprints of massive inverse seesaw model neutrinos in lepton flavor violating Higgs boson decays

    Get PDF
    In this paper we consider a Higgs boson with mass and other properties compatible with those of the recently discovered Higgs particle at the LHC, and explore the possibility of new Higgs leptonic decays, beyond the standard model, with the singular feature of being lepton flavor violating (LFV). We study these LFV Higgs decays, H→lklˉmH \to l_k\bar l_m, within the context of the inverse seesaw model (ISS) and consider the most generic case where three additional pairs of massive right-handed singlet neutrinos are added to the standard model particle content. We require in addition that the input parameters of this ISS model are compatible with the present neutrino data and other constraints, like perturbativity of the neutrino Yukawa couplings. We present a full one-loop computation of the BR(H→lklˉmH \to l_k\bar l_m) rates for the three possible channels, lklˉm=μτˉ, eτˉ, eμˉl_k\bar l_m=\mu \bar \tau,\, e \bar \tau,\, e \bar \mu, and analyze in full detail the predictions as functions of the various relevant ISS parameters. We study in parallel the correlated one-loop predictions for the radiative decays, lm→lkγl_m \to l_k \gamma, within this same ISS context, and require full compatibility of our predictions with the present experimental bounds for the three radiative decays, μ→eγ\mu \to e \gamma, τ→μγ\tau \to \mu \gamma, and τ→eγ\tau \to e \gamma. After exploring the ISS parameter space we conclude on the maximum allowed LFV Higgs decay rates within the ISS.Comment: 29 pages, 13 figures, 1 table, 1 appendix: v4 matches the manuscript published in PR

    Exotic μτjj\mu\tau j j events from heavy ISS neutrinos at the LHC

    Get PDF
    In this letter we study new relevant phenomenological consequences of the right-handed heavy neutrinos with masses at the O(1){\cal O}(1) TeV energy scale, working within the context of the Inverse Seesaw Model that includes three pairs of quasi-degenerate pseudo-Dirac heavy neutrinos. We propose a new exotic signal of these heavy neutrinos at the CERN Large Hadron Collider containing a muon, a tau lepton, and two jets in the final state, which is based on the interesting fact that this model can incorporate large Lepton Flavor Violation for specific choices of the relevant parameters, particularly, the neutrino Yukawa couplings. We will show here that an observable number of μτjj\mu\tau jj exotic events, without missing energy, can be produced at this ongoing run of the LHC.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. This version v3 matches the manuscript published in Physics Letters

    Rapid procedure for the extraction of DNA from fungal spores and mycelia.

    Get PDF
    A method is described for the reliable preparation of DNA from fungal spores and mycelia and from plant tissues. A number of fungal and plant species were used in the study to indicate the generality of the method. The DNA prepared by this protocol was digested by restriction endonucleases and served as template using standard polymerase chain reaction conditions
    • …
    corecore