493 research outputs found

    Program to determine space vehicle response to wind turbulence

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    Computer program was developed as prelaunch wind monitoring tool for Saturn 5 vehicle. Program accounts for characteristic wind changes including turbulence power spectral density, wind shear, peak wind velocity, altitude, and wind direction using stored variational statistics

    A model for estimating time-variant rainfall infiltration as a function of antecedent surface moisture and hydrologic soil type

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    Recent research indicates that the use of remote sensing techniques for the measurement of near surface soil moisture could be practical in the not too distant future. Other research shows that infiltration rates, especially for average or frequent rainfall events, are extremely sensitive to the proper definition and consideration of the role of the soil moisture at the beginning of the rainfall. Thus, it is important that an easy to use, but theoretically sound, rainfall infiltration model be available if the anticipated remotely sensed soil moisture data is to be optimally utilized for hydrologic simulation. A series of numerical experiments with the Richards' equation for an array of conditions anticipated in watershed hydrology were used to develop functional relationships that describe temporal infiltration rates as a function of soil type and initial moisture conditions

    Optimizing intermittent water supply in urban pipe distribution networks

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    In many urban areas of the developing world, piped water is supplied only intermittently, as valves direct water to different parts of the water distribution system at different times. The flow is transient, and may transition between free-surface and pressurized, resulting in complex dynamical features with important consequences for water suppliers and users. Here, we develop a computational model of transition, transient pipe flow in a network, accounting for a wide variety of realistic boundary conditions. We validate the model against several published data sets, and demonstrate its use on a real pipe network. The model is extended to consider several optimization problems motivated by realistic scenarios. We demonstrate how to infer water flow in a small pipe network from a single pressure sensor, and show how to control water inflow to minimize damaging pressure gradients

    Breakdown of self-similarity at the crests of large amplitude standing water waves

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    We study the limiting behavior of large-amplitude standing waves on deep water using high-resolution numerical simulations in double and quadruple precision. While periodic traveling waves approach Stokes's sharply crested extreme wave in an asymptotically self-similar manner, we find that standing waves behave differently. Instead of sharpening to a corner or cusp as previously conjectured, the crest tip develops a variety of oscillatory structures. This causes the bifurcation curve that parametrizes these waves to fragment into disjoint branches corresponding to the different oscillation patterns that occur. In many cases, a vertical jet of fluid pushes these structures upward, leading to wave profiles commonly seen in wave tank experiments. Thus, we observe a rich array of dynamic behavior at small length scales in a regime previously thought to be self-similar.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. Final version accepted for publicatio

    Energetically preferred Li+ ion jump processes in crystalline solids: Site-specific hopping in β-Li3VF6 as revealed by high-resolution 6Li 2D EXSY NMR

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    The visualization of atomic or ionic jump processes on the Ångström length scale is important to identify the preferred diffusion pathways in solid electrolytes for energy storage devices. Two-dimensional high-resolution 6Li nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is highly suited to yield unprecedented site-specific insights into local Li+ exchange processes within a single measurement. Here, the beta-modification of Li3VF6 is used as a model system for such an investigation as it provides a range of important Li+ geometric environments in one and the same crystal structure useful to elucidate qualitatively a ranking of energetic preferences of the Li+ exchange processes. In Li3VF6 the Li+ ions are subject to diffusive exchange processes among five crystallographically and magnetically inequivalent Li sites: LiFn (n = 6, 4). By using a sample with a natural concentration of the 6Li isotope, we suppressed unwanted spin-diffusion processes and visualized the various exchange processes on the ms time scale. We were able to verify the following ranking experimentally: Li+ ion jumps between face-shared polyhedra are preferred, followed by Li+ exchange between edge-shared configurations for which interstitial sites are needed to jump from site to site. Surprisingly, Li+ exchange between corner-shared polyhedra and Li+ hopping involving almost isolated LiF4 polyhedra do contribute to overall Li+ self-diffusion as well. In this sense, the current study experimentally verifies current predictions by theory but also extends our understanding of ion dynamics between corner-shared Li-bearing polyhedra

    Direct Assessment of Ultralow Li+ Jump Rates in Single Crystalline Li3N by Evolution-Time-Resolved 7Li Spin-Alignment Echo NMR

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    Diffusion processes of small cations and anions play important roles in many applications such as batteries and sensors. Despite the enormous progress we have witnessed over the past years in characterizing the irregular movement of ions such as Li+, new methods able to sharpen our view and understanding of fast and slow diffusion phenomena are steadily developed. Still, very few techniques are, however, available to directly sense extremely slow Li+ diffusion processes. Here, we took advantage of 1D evolution-time resolved 7Li spin-alignment echo NMR that is able to probe the extremely slow interlayer Li+ hopping process in layer-structured Li3N, which served as a model substance for our purposes. The use of single crystals enabled us to study this translational process without being interfered by the fast intralayer Li+ motions. At 318 K the corresponding jump rate of interlayer dynamics turned out to be in the order of 2500(200) s−1 resulting in a diffusion coefficient as low as 1×10−17 m2 s−1, which is in excellent agreement with results from literature. The method, comparable to 1D and 2D NMR exchange spectroscopy, relies on temporal fluctuations of electric interactions the jumping ions are subjected to. 7Li single crystal 1D SAE NMR offers new opportunities to precisely quantify slow Li+ diffusion processes needed to validate theoretical models and to develop design principles for new solid electrolytes

    Broadband impedance spectroscopy of Li4Ti5O12: from nearly constant loss effects to long-range ion dynamics

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    Li4Ti5O12 (LTO) is known as one of the most robust and long-lasting anode materials in lithium-ion batteries. As yet, the Li-ion transport properties of LTO are, however, not completely understood. Here, we used broadband impedance spectroscopy spanning a wide temperature range to investigate the full electrical response of LTO over a wide frequency range. It turned out that the isotherms recorded entail information about two relaxation processes. While at high temperatures the isotherms show a frequency independent plateau that corresponds to poor long-range ion transport (<10−11 S cm−1 (298 K), 0.79 eV), they reveal a second region, seen at lower temperatures and higher frequencies, which we attribute to short-range ion dynamics (10−8 S cm−1) with a significantly reduced activation energy of ca. 0.51 eV. At even lower temperatures, the isotherms are fully governed by nearly constant loss behavior, which has frequently been explained by cage-like dynamics. The present results agree with those earlier presented by 7Li NMR spin-lattice relaxation measurements being sensitive to dynamic processes taking place on quite different length scales. Our findings unveil complex Li+ ion dynamics in LTO and help understand its superior electrochemical properties

    United States and Western Europe cooperation in planetary exploration

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    A framework was sought for U.S.-European cooperation in planetary exploration. Specific issues addressed include: types and levels of possible cooperative activities in the planetary sciences; specific or general scientific areas that seem most promising as the main focus of cooperative efforts; potential mission candidates for cooperative ventures; identification of special issues or problems for resolution by negotiation between the agencies, and possible suggestions for their resolutions; and identification of coordinated technological and instrumental developments for planetary missions
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