outflow velocity
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2021 ◽  
Vol 162 (6) ◽  
pp. 246
Author(s):  
Graham M. Harper ◽  
Edward Chambers ◽  
William D. Vacca ◽  
Helmut Wiesemeyer ◽  
Dario Fadda ◽  
...  

Abstract We report NASA-DLR SOFIA upGREAT circumstellar [O i] 63.2 μm and [C ii] 157.7 μm emission profiles and FIFI-LS [O i] 63.2 μm, [O i] 145.5 μm, and [C ii] 157.7 μm fluxes obtained shortly after Betelgeuse’s 2019/2020 Great Dimming event. Haas et al. noted a potential correlation between the [O i] 63.2 μm flux and V magnitude based on three Kuiper Airborne Observatory observations made with the CGS and FIFI instruments. The FIFI observation was obtained when V ≃ 0.88 and revealed a 3σ non-detection at a quarter of the previous CGS flux measurement made when V ≃ 0.35. A potential explanation could be a change in dust-gas drag heating by circumstellar silicates caused by variations in the photospheric radiation field. SOFIA observations provide a unique test of this correlation because the V-band brightness went to its lowest value on record, V ≃ 1.61, with the SOFIA observations being made when V FIFI−LS ≃ 1.51 and V upGREAT ≃ 1.36. The upGREAT spectra show a [O i] 63.2 μm flux larger than previous space observatory measurements obtained when V ≃ 0.58. The profile is consistent with formation in the slower, more turbulent inner S1 outflow, while the [C ii] 157.7 μm profile is consistent with formation farther out in the faster S2 outflow. Modeling of dust-gas drag heating, combined with 25 yr of Wing three-filter and V photometry, reveals that it is unlikely that the S1 circumstellar envelope and [O i] 63.2 μm fluxes are dominated by the dust-gas drag heating and that another heating source is also active. The [O i] 63.2 μm profile is hard to reconcile with existing outflow velocity models.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2071 (1) ◽  
pp. 012011
Author(s):  
F Muzamil Mustafa ◽  
N S Shafii ◽  
M R Abdul Kadir ◽  
M N Che Aziz ◽  
K Osman ◽  
...  

Abstract Spiral flow-inducing cannula has been shown in previous research to exhibit a considerable effect on flow hemodynamic. However, there is still room for improvement. In this study, several design variations were tested to determine which variants were the best in terms of flow reduction. Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) software was used to simulate flow within a spiral flow-inducing cannula with several variations from chamber width and angle differences. The variants were compared against each other by using several flow parameters and a selection method was employed to determine which model was the best. It was found that a variant that has the widest chamber (14 mm) and biggest angle opening (70°) from the chamber to the cannula tube was the best in several parameters, and as such was chosen as the best variant. When compared with the standard straight cannula, the reduction in flow output was recorded to be 30% which is deemed significantly. In conclusion, spiral flow cannula recorded better hemodynamic effects with lower outflow velocity and wall shear stress value.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoqiang Guo ◽  
Yuxin Nie ◽  
Jun Liu ◽  
Yufa He ◽  
Liangjie Mao ◽  
...  

Abstract In deep-water test conditions, the riser-test pipe system (RTS) is subject to the vortex induced effect on riser, flow induced effect on test pipe and longitudinal/transverse coupling effect, which is prone to buckling deformation, fatigue fracture and friction perforation. To resolve this, the three-dimensional (3D) nonlinear vibration model of deep-water RTS is established using the micro-finite method, energy method and Hamilton variational principle. Based on the elastic-plastic contact collision theory, the nonlinear contact load calculation method between riser and test pipe is proposed. Compared with experimental measurement results, calculation results of the proposed vibration model in this study and the single tubing vibration model in our recent work, the correctness and effectiveness of the proposed vibration model of the deep-water RTS are verified. Meanwhile, the cumulative damage theory is used to establish the fatigue life prediction method of test pipe. Based on that, the influences of outflow velocity, internal flow velocity, significant wave height, as well as top tension coefficient on the fatigue life of test pipe are systematically analyzed. The results demonstrate that, first, with the increase of outflow velocity, the maximum alternating stress, the annual fatigue damage rate increased and the service life decreased significantly. The locations where fatigue failure of the test tube is easy to occur are mainly distributed at the upper “one third” and the bottom of test pipe. Second, with the increase of internal flow velocity, the “one third effect” of the test pipe will decrease, and is shown “the bottom damage effect”, which needs the attention of field operators. Third, during field operation, it is necessary to properly configure the top tension coefficient so that there can be a certain relaxation between the riser and the test pipe, so as to cause transverse vibration and consume some axial energy and load. The study led to the formulation of a theoretical method for safety evaluation and a practical approach for effectively improving the fatigue life of deep-water test pipe.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuel Lampón ◽  
Manuel López-Puertas ◽  
Alejandro Sánchez-López ◽  
Stefan Czesla ◽  
Jorge Sanz-Forcada ◽  
...  

<p>Hydrodynamic escape is the most efficient atmospheric mechanism of planetary mass loss and has a large impact on planetary evolution. However, the lack of observations remained this mechanism poorly understood. Therefore, new observations of the He I triplet at 10830 Å provide key information to advance hydrodynamic escape knowledge. In this work, we analyse the hydrodynamic escape of three exoplanets, HD209458 b, HD189733 b, and GJ 3470 b via an analysis of He triplet absorptions recently observed by the CARMENES high-resolution spectrograph, and their available Ly-alpha measurements, involving a 1D hydrodynamic model. We characterise the main upper atmospheric parameters, e.g.,  the temperature, the composition (H/He ratio), and the radial outflow velocity. We also study their hydrodynamic regime and show that HD209458 b is in the energy-limited regime, HD189733 b is in the recombination-limited regime, and GJ 3470 b is in the photon-limited regime. Details of this work can be found in [1], [2], [3].</p><p>References</p><p>[1] Lampón, M., López-Puertas, M., Lara, L.M., et al. 2020, A&A, 636, A13<br>[2] Lampón, M., López-Puertas, M., Sanz-Forcada, J., et al. 2021, A&A, 647, A129<br>[3] Lampón, M., López-Puertas, M., Czesla, S., et al. 2021, A&A, 648, L7</p>


Author(s):  
Andreas Malcherek

Abstract One of the oldest problems in the history of hydraulics is the outflow from a vessel through an orifice. In 1644 it was described by the Torricelli principle stating that the outflow velocity is the fall velocity from the filling level. From a theoretical point of view the Torricelli principle is valid because it follows from Bernoulli's energy conservation principle. In this paper the outflowproblem will be described by Newton's momentum balance principle. Here the Torricelli formula is obtained when the rounded orifice is treated as a contraction. For the sharp edged orifice the bulk outflow velocity is the fall velocity from half the filling height. In this momentum balance theory no artificial outflow coefficients are needed to distinguish between the cases of sharp edged and rounded orifices.


2021 ◽  
Vol 87 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean C. Perez ◽  
Benjamin D. G. Chandran ◽  
Kristopher G. Klein ◽  
Mihailo M. Martinović

A growing body of evidence suggests that the solar wind is powered to a large extent by an Alfvén-wave (AW) energy flux. AWs energize the solar wind via two mechanisms: heating and work. We use high-resolution direct numerical simulations of reflection-driven AW turbulence (RDAWT) in a fast-solar-wind stream emanating from a coronal hole to investigate both mechanisms. In particular, we compute the fraction of the AW power at the coronal base ( $P_\textrm {AWb}$ ) that is transferred to solar-wind particles via heating between the coronal base and heliocentric distance $r$ , which we denote by $\chi _{H}(r)$ , and the fraction that is transferred via work, which we denote by $\chi _{W}(r)$ . We find that $\chi _{W}(r_{A})$ ranges from 0.15 to 0.3, where $r_{A}$ is the Alfvén critical point. This value is small compared with one because the Alfvén speed $v_{A}$ exceeds the outflow velocity $U$ at $r < r_{A}$ , so the AWs race through the plasma without doing much work. At $r>r_{A}$ , where $v_{A} < U$ , the AWs are in an approximate sense ‘stuck to the plasma’, which helps them do pressure work as the plasma expands. However, much of the AW power has dissipated by the time the AWs reach $r=r_{A}$ , so the total rate at which AWs do work on the plasma at $r>r_{A}$ is a modest fraction of $P_\textrm {AWb}$ . We find that heating is more effective than work at $r < r_{A}$ , with $\chi _{H}(r_{A})$ ranging from 0.5 to 0.7. The reason that $\chi _{H} \geq 0.5$ in our simulations is that an appreciable fraction of the local AW power dissipates within each Alfvén-speed scale height in RDAWT, and there are a few Alfvén-speed scale heights between the coronal base and $r_{A}$ . A given amount of heating produces more magnetic moment in regions of weaker magnetic field. Thus, paradoxically, the average proton magnetic moment increases robustly with increasing $r$ at $r>r_{A}$ , even though the total rate at which AW energy is transferred to particles at $r>r_{A}$ is a small fraction of $P_\textrm {AWb}$ .


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan Zaitsev ◽  
Andrey Divin ◽  
Vladimir Semenov ◽  
Daniil Korovinskiy ◽  
Jan Deca ◽  
...  

&lt;p&gt;Various simulations of collisionless magnetic reconnection reveal that the process is typically fast, with the reconnection rate being of the order of 0.1. Systematic numerical and observational studies of upstream parameters dependence (density, magnetic field) concord the basic Sweet-Parker-like predictions that the dynamical properties scale globally with the Alfven speed, with particle heating scaling as the Alfven speed squared. In this study, we perform a set of symmetric 2D PIC simulations starting from Harris current sheet but differ in upstream background plasma ion temperature. The exhaust velocity in such a setup is known to have explicit temperature dependence, leading to a reduction of the jet velocity at high temperatures. We suggest that the global reconnection rate is controlled by this outflow velocity since the reconnection electric field in the quasi-steady stage is the motional (convective) electric field of the ion bulk flow within the exhaust. Consequently, if the upstream thermal speed is above the Alfven velocity, then the reconnection rate drops. On top of that, the electron-ion temperature partition in the exhaust depends strongly on the upstream ion temperature, which we attribute to the scaling in plasma compression and development of the parallel electrostatic potential in the exhaust.&amp;#160;&lt;/p&gt;


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