New Equations To Establish The Effective Moment Of Inertia Of Composite Slabs With Profiled Steel Sheeting For Deflection Calculation

2020 ◽  
pp. 102135
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Sernizon Costa ◽  
Armando Cesar Campos Lavall ◽  
Renata Gomes Lanna da Silva ◽  
Harley Francisco Viana ◽  
Francisco Carlos Rodrigues ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-9
Author(s):  
I. O. Eya ◽  
J. O. Urama ◽  
A. E. Chukwude

The superfluid in the inner crust of a neutron star is assumed to be the reservoir of momentum released in a pulsar glitch. Recently, due to crustal entrainment, it appears debatable whether the magnitude of the inner crust is sufficient to contain the superfluid responsible for large glitches. This paper calculates the fractional moment of inertia (FMI)(i.e. the ratio of the inner crust superfluid moment of inertia to that of the coupled components) associated with individual glitches. It is shown that the effective moment of inertia associated with the transferred momentum is that of the entrained neutrons. The FMI for glitches in three pulsars, which exhibit the signature of exhausting their momentum reservoir, were calculated and scaled with the entrainment factor. Some of the glitches require an inner crust superfluid with moment of inertia larger than the current suggested values of 7-10% of the stellar moment of inertia.


2002 ◽  
Vol 05 (04) ◽  
pp. 409-431 ◽  
Author(s):  
YANEER BAR-YAM

We derive a sum rule that constrains the scale based decomposition of the trajectories of finite systems of particles. The sum rule reflects a tradeoff between the finer and larger scale collective degrees of freedom. For short duration trajectories, where acceleration is irrelevant, the sum rule can be related to the moment of inertia and the kinetic energy (times a characteristic time squared). Thus, two nonequilibrium systems that have the same kinetic energy and moment of inertia can, when compared to each other, have different scales of behavior, but if one of them has larger scales of behavior than the other, it must compensate by also having smaller scales of behavior. In the context of coherence or correlation, the larger scale of behavior corresponds to the collective motion, while the smaller scales of behavior correspond to the relative motion of correlated particles. For longer duration trajectories, the sum rule includes the full effective moment of inertia of the system in space-time with respect to an external frame of reference, providing the possibility of relating the class of systems that can exist in the same space-time domain.


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