Exact pitch and heave flutter for the complex Theodorsen function

2019 ◽  
Vol 123 (1265) ◽  
pp. 1053-1074
Author(s):  
S.P. Farthing

ABSTRACTConcepts of new fluttering wind and water mills led to general solution of flutter by a foil section free to pitch about an axis ahead of ${1}/{4}$ chord. The pitch damping of the vorticity being shed by lift change is negative singular via the imaginary part of the Theodorsen function. So a 2D airfoil can slowly flutter in pure pitch at a very high inertia with radian frequency and growth rate, reduced by windspeed/chord, resp. less than .087 and .01. At the frequency of nil net pitch damping, the binary inertia/damping cross determinant vanishes on a line in the imbalance vs inertia plane. The perturbed frequency contours just a bit above and below this ‘beab’ line spectacularly split to asymptote to the pure pitch inertia vertical of implied infinite heave stiffness. Higher frequency contours turn back towards the positive imbalance axis and then the origin, changing from hyperbolic to elliptical at exactly the same .087 and asymptoting to a line between the nexus and four times the nexus and a mode of effective pitch about ${3}/{4}$ chord. At .6 the pure pitch frequency the imaginary part dominates in the quadratic inertia and imbalance coefficients to bend the neutral contours down and across the quasi-steady line to even turn back to very large negative imbalance at small inertia, where kinematics then imply high mass. Diagonally mirror hyperbolae exist for greater than the pure pitch inertia with a different dynamic implication of very high foil mass.

2021 ◽  
Vol 503 (2) ◽  
pp. 3081-3088
Author(s):  
V K Dubrovich ◽  
Yu N Eroshenko ◽  
S I Grachev

ABSTRACT We consider a primordial black hole of very high mass, $10^9\!-\!10^{10}\, \mathrm{M}_\odot$, surrounded by the dark matter and bayonic halo at redshifts z ∼ 20 without any local sources of energy release. Such heavy and concentrated objects in the early Universe were previously called ‘cosmological dinosaurs’. Spectral distribution and spatial variation of the brightness in the 21-cm line of atomic hydrogen are calculated with the theory of radiation transfer. It is shown that a narrow and deep absorption arises in the form of the spherical shell around the primordial black hole at the certain radius. The parameters of this shell depend almost exclusively on the mass of the black hole. The angular diameter 18 arcsec of the absorption ring at z ∼ 20 is well within the current technical possibilities of the Square Kilometre Array type telescopes. But the observation of the ring width itself requires an order of magnitude better resolution.


2008 ◽  
Vol 600-603 ◽  
pp. 115-118 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henrik Pedersen ◽  
Stefano Leone ◽  
Anne Henry ◽  
Franziska Christine Beyer ◽  
Vanya Darakchieva ◽  
...  

The chlorinated precursor methyltrichlorosilane (MTS), CH3SiCl3, has been used to grow epitaxial layers of 4H-SiC in a hot wall CVD reactor, with growth rates as high as 170 µm/h at 1600°C. Since MTS contains both silicon and carbon, with the C/Si ratio 1, MTS was used both as single precursor and mixed with silane or ethylene to study the effect of the C/Si and Cl/Si ratios on growth rate and doping of the epitaxial layers. When using only MTS as precursor, the growth rate showed a linear dependence on the MTS molar fraction in the reactor up to about 100 µm/h. The growth rate dropped for C/Si < 1 but was constant for C/Si > 1. Further, the growth rate decreased with lower Cl/Si ratio.


1972 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. F. O’GRADY ◽  
J. P. BOWLAND

One hundred and sixty pigs weaned at 2 weeks were allotted at an average initial weight of 3.8 kg to two experiments to examine the effects of diets based on barley or wheat as the cereal component and having digestible energy (DE) concentrations ranging from 2.8 to 3.6 Mcal/kg. Protein was in constant ratio to DE (15.2 kcal DE/g protein). Very high mortality was experienced on the lower energy levels, although the inclusion of 5% molasses in the formulation reduced mortality. Among surviving pigs, growth rate was significantly reduced at lower energy concentrations. The optimum DE level for maximum gain was 3.2 Mcal in the first experiment and 3.4 Mcal/kg in the second. The efficiency of utilization of DE for growth was best at a DE concentration of 3.2 Mcal/kg in the first experiment but did not vary in the second. Digestibility of dietary protein increased with increasing dietary DE but nitrogen (N) retention as percentage of N intake or of digestible N was not significantly influenced by DE in the diet.


Author(s):  
M. A. Braun

Abstract In the effective action approach the imaginary part of the triple pomeron amplitude is calculated. The found dependence on the longitudinal momentum transfer $$e_{-}$$e- is found to separate as a simple factor $$1/|e_{-}|$$1/|e-|. This result is used to calculate the high-mass diffraction on a hadron and double scattering cross-section off a composite target.


2000 ◽  
Vol 197 ◽  
pp. 125-133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Schilke ◽  
Karl M. Menten ◽  
Friedrich Wyrowski ◽  
C. M. Walmsley

Single dish spectral line surveys of high mass star-forming regions provide spectra with a very high line density, and reveal the presence of many complex molecules. Besides the prototypical Orion BN/KL region, more and more regions get surveyed and we start to get a better idea of the chemical similarities and differences. Yet, single dish studies miss an important aspect of hot cores, which is revealed by higher resolution studies with interferometers: the cores are not chemically homogeneous, but a pronounced chemical substructure exists. As an example of such an interferometric study, we will present one particular set of objects, the UC HII W3(OH) and its neighboring hot core W3(H2O) (otherwise known as the Turner-Welch object), and discuss their chemical properties.


1964 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 85
Author(s):  
BD Millar

The effects of local advection on the evaporation rate (E) and the relative turgidity (RT) of Ladino clover grown in lysimeters were measured at four distances down wind from the leading edge of a small irrigated field adjoining a drier area. Both E and RT decreased with increasing distance down wind from the leading edge, and were directly proportional to powers of the down-wind dimension (x). Presumably plant growth rate may also depend on the distance down wind.Plants near the leading edge showed early afternoon wilt during a mild day in autumn, although soil moisture content was very high. This is in keeping with the concept of a "ceiling absorption rate". Some agronomic implications of these advective effects are discussed.


2018 ◽  
Vol 115 (17) ◽  
pp. 4369-4374 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pascal Buri ◽  
Francesca Pellicciotti

Supraglacial ice cliffs exist on debris-covered glaciers worldwide, but despite their importance as melt hot spots, their life cycle is little understood. Early field observations had advanced a hypothesis of survival of north-facing and disappearance of south-facing cliffs, which is central for predicting the contribution of cliffs to total glacier mass losses. Their role as windows of energy transfer suggests they may explain the anomalously high mass losses of debris-covered glaciers in High Mountain Asia (HMA) despite the insulating debris, currently at the center of a debated controversy. We use a 3D model of cliff evolution coupled to very high-resolution topographic data to demonstrate that ice cliffs facing south (in the Northern Hemisphere) disappear within a few months due to enhanced solar radiation receipts and that aspect is the key control on cliffs evolution. We reproduce continuous flattening of south-facing cliffs, a result of their vertical gradient of incoming solar radiation and sky view factor. Our results establish that only north-facing cliffs are recurrent features and thus stable contributors to the melting of debris-covered glaciers. Satellite observations and mass balance modeling confirms that few south-facing cliffs of small size exist on the glaciers of Langtang, and their contribution to the glacier volume losses is very small (∼1%). This has major implications for the mass balance of HMA debris-covered glaciers as it provides the basis for new parameterizations of cliff evolution and distribution to constrain volume losses in a region where glaciers are highly relevant as water sources for millions of people.


1979 ◽  
Vol 25 (5) ◽  
pp. 665-668 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Riad-Fahmy ◽  
G F Read ◽  
S J Gaskell ◽  
J Dyas ◽  
R Hindawi

Abstract A simple, direct radioimmunoassay for cortisol in human serum and plasma is described. An antiserum, raised in sheep to a cortisol-3-(O-carboxymethyl)oxime/bovine serum albumin conjugate, is coupled to microcellulose. No extraction is required because plasma samples and standards are incubated with the antiserum and an 125I radioligand in a low-pH buffer, which denatures cortisol-binding globulins. The assay satisfies accepted validation criteria. In addition, results from the radioimmunoassay compare well with those obtained by a gas chromatographic-mass spectrometric technique (r = 0.968; FRIA = 0.97 FGCMS + 2.0 nmol/L). The latter procedure features the very high intrinsic specificity obtained by selected ion monitoring at high mass-spectrometric resolution (M/deltaM = 8500) with a Varian MAT-731 instrument. The simplicity of the radioimmunoassay procedure, with use of reagents prepared "in house," makes this a very practical and economical assay for use in the medium or large endocrine laboratory.


2019 ◽  
Vol 157 ◽  
pp. 508-517
Author(s):  
Lily Das ◽  
B. Swain ◽  
B. Munshi ◽  
S.S. Mohapatra ◽  
A. Behera

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