Active Control of Large Amplitude Combustion Oscillations using Nanosecond Repetitively Pulsed Plasmas

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Santosh Shanbogue ◽  
Drew Weibel ◽  
Felipe Gomez del Campo ◽  
Carmen Guerra-Garcia ◽  
Ahmed Ghoniem
Author(s):  
Xiang Liu ◽  
Guoping Cai ◽  
Fujun Peng ◽  
Hua Zhang

In this paper, the active control of nonlinear vibration of a membrane antenna structure is investigated. Considering the geometric nonlinearity of large amplitude vibration of the membrane, the von Karman type geometrical nonlinear strain–displacement relationship is employed in this paper. Then, a nonlinear dynamic model of the membrane antenna structure is established by using the finite element method. It is assumed that the amplitude of vibration of the structure is relatively small when the controller in on, and then a [Formula: see text] robust controller is developed to control the undesired nonlinear vibration of the membrane antenna structure based on the linearized model of the structure. Active control of both the free vibration and forced vibration of the structure are investigated. Numerical simulations are presented to study the nonlinearity of the large amplitude vibration of the structure and the effectiveness of the presented controller.


2018 ◽  
Vol 93 (2) ◽  
pp. 629-642 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiang Liu ◽  
Guoping Cai ◽  
Fujun Peng ◽  
Hua Zhang

1966 ◽  
Vol 25 ◽  
pp. 197-222 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. J. Message

An analytical discussion of that case of motion in the restricted problem, in which the mean motions of the infinitesimal, and smaller-massed, bodies about the larger one are nearly in the ratio of two small integers displays the existence of a series of periodic solutions which, for commensurabilities of the typep+ 1:p, includes solutions of Poincaré'sdeuxième sortewhen the commensurability is very close, and of thepremière sortewhen it is less close. A linear treatment of the long-period variations of the elements, valid for motions in which the elements remain close to a particular periodic solution of this type, shows the continuity of near-commensurable motion with other motion, and some of the properties of long-period librations of small amplitude.To extend the investigation to other types of motion near commensurability, numerical integrations of the equations for the long-period variations of the elements were carried out for the 2:1 interior case (of which the planet 108 “Hecuba” is an example) to survey those motions in which the eccentricity takes values less than 0·1. An investigation of the effect of the large amplitude perturbations near commensurability on a distribution of minor planets, which is originally uniform over mean motion, shows a “draining off” effect from the vicinity of exact commensurability of a magnitude large enough to account for the observed gap in the distribution at the 2:1 commensurability.


Author(s):  
B. Roy Frieden

Despite the skill and determination of electro-optical system designers, the images acquired using their best designs often suffer from blur and noise. The aim of an “image enhancer” such as myself is to improve these poor images, usually by digital means, such that they better resemble the true, “optical object,” input to the system. This problem is notoriously “ill-posed,” i.e. any direct approach at inversion of the image data suffers strongly from the presence of even a small amount of noise in the data. In fact, the fluctuations engendered in neighboring output values tend to be strongly negative-correlated, so that the output spatially oscillates up and down, with large amplitude, about the true object. What can be done about this situation? As we shall see, various concepts taken from statistical communication theory have proven to be of real use in attacking this problem. We offer below a brief summary of these concepts.


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