hole boundary
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Author(s):  
Xinping Zhou ◽  
Yuandeng Shen ◽  
Zehao Tang ◽  
Chengrui zhou ◽  
Yadan Duan ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Jarolim ◽  
Astrid Veronig ◽  
Stefan Hofmeister ◽  
Stephan Heinemann ◽  
Manuela Temmer ◽  
...  

<p>Being the source region of fast solar wind streams, coronal holes are one of the key components which impact space weather. The precise detection of the coronal hole boundary is an important criterion for forecasting and solar wind modeling, but also challenges our current understanding of the magnetic structure of the Sun. We use deep-learning to provide new methods for the detection of coronal holes, based on the multi-band EUV filtergrams and LOS magnetogram from the AIA and HMI instruments onboard the Solar Dynamics Observatory. The proposed neural network is capable to simultaneously identify full-disk correlations as well as small-scale structures and efficiently combines the multi-channel information into a single detection. From the comparison with an independent manually curated test set, the model provides a more stable extraction of coronal holes than the samples considered for training. Our method operates in real-time and provides reliable coronal hole extractions throughout the solar cycle, without any additional adjustments. We further investigate the importance of the individual channels and show that our neural network can identify coronal holes solely from magnetic field data.</p>


Author(s):  
M. Farzannasab ◽  
M. M. Khatibi ◽  
S. Sadeghzadeh

As the strongest and toughest material known, graphene has found numerous applications in various types of sensors. Due to the great influences of the graphene sheet’s geometry on resonance frequency, circular defects could effect on expected results of sensors. Circular holes in circular graphene sheets (CGSs) have been modeled with molecular dynamics (MD) simulation in the present work. Then the vibration behavior of intact circular plate and circular sheet with the circular defect has been investigated using frequency-domain analysis (FDD). Furthermore, for validating the used method, the obtained natural frequencies for different graphene sheets have been compared with acquired data in former research. The result of validation showed the accuracy of the used method in this study. The results indicated that by increasing the hole size, the natural frequency of a defected sheet with free edges will be diminished, and with simply-supported interior boundary conditions typically went up. Also, by increasing the hole’s eccentricity, the natural frequency of the defected graphene sheet will be diminished when the hole boundary was subjected to simply-support or free condition.


2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 362-373 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xu Wang ◽  
Peter Schiavone

Analytic continuation and conformal mapping techniques are applied to establish that the state of stress inside a non-elliptical elastic inhomogeneity can remain uniform despite the presence of a nearby irregularly shaped hole when the surrounding matrix is subjected to uniform remote antiplane shear stresses. The hole boundary is assumed to be either traction-free or subjected to antiplane line forces. Detailed numerical results are presented to demonstrate the resulting analytical solutions. Our results indicate that in maintaining a uniform stress distribution inside the inhomogeneity, it is permissible for the stresses in the matrix to exhibit either a square root singularity at sharp corners of a hole boundary or a high level of stress concentration at rounded corners of a hole.


2019 ◽  
Vol 36 (8) ◽  
pp. 2887-2910
Author(s):  
Lisha He ◽  
Jianjing Zheng ◽  
Yao Zheng ◽  
Jianjun Chen ◽  
Xuan Zhou ◽  
...  

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to develop parallel algorithms for moving boundary simulations by local remeshing and compose them to a fully parallel simulation cycle for the solution of problems with engineering interests. Design/methodology/approach The moving boundary problems are solved by unsteady flow computations coupled with six-degrees-of-freedom equations of rigid body motion. Parallel algorithms are developed for both computational fluid dynamics (CFD) solution and grid deformation steps. Meanwhile, a novel approach is developed for the parallelization of the local remeshing step. It inputs a distributed mesh after deformation, then marks low-quality elements to be deleted on the respective processors. After that, a parallel domain decomposition approach is used to repartition the hole mesh and then to redistribute the resulting sub-meshes onto all available processors. Then remesh individual sub-holes in parallel. Finally, the element redistribution is rebalanced. Findings If the CFD solver is parallelized while the remaining steps are executed in sequential, the performance bottleneck of such a simulation cycle is observed when the simulation of large-scale problem is executed. The developed parallel simulation cycle, in which all of time-consuming steps have been efficiently parallelized, could overcome these bottlenecks, in terms of both memory consumption and computing efficiency. Originality/value A fully parallel approach for moving boundary simulations by local remeshing is developed to solve large-scale problems. In the algorithm level, a novel parallel local remeshing algorithm is present. It repartitions distributed hole elements evenly onto all available processors and ensures the generation of a well-shaped inter-hole boundary always. Therefore, the subsequent remeshing step can fix the inter-hole boundary involves no communications.


Solar Physics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 294 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephan G. Heinemann ◽  
Manuela Temmer ◽  
Niko Heinemann ◽  
Karin Dissauer ◽  
Evangelia Samara ◽  
...  

Abstract Coronal holes are usually defined as dark structures seen in the extreme ultraviolet and X-ray spectrum which are generally associated with open magnetic fields. Deriving reliably the coronal hole boundary is of high interest, as its area, underlying magnetic field, and other properties give important hints as regards high speed solar wind acceleration processes and compression regions arriving at Earth. In this study we present a new threshold-based extraction method, which incorporates the intensity gradient along the coronal hole boundary, which is implemented as a user-friendly SSW-IDL GUI. The Collection of Analysis Tools for Coronal Holes (CATCH) enables the user to download data, perform guided coronal hole extraction and analyze the underlying photospheric magnetic field. We use CATCH to analyze non-polar coronal holes during the SDO-era, based on 193 Å filtergrams taken by the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) and magnetograms taken by the Heliospheric and Magnetic Imager (HMI), both on board the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). Between 2010 and 2019 we investigate 707 coronal holes that are located close to the central meridian. We find coronal holes distributed across latitudes of about ${\pm}\, 60^{\circ}$±60∘, for which we derive sizes between $1.6 \times 10^{9}$1.6×109 and $1.8 \times 10^{11}\mbox{ km}^{2}$1.8×1011 km2. The absolute value of the mean signed magnetic field strength tends towards an average of $2.9\pm 1.9$2.9±1.9 G. As far as the abundance and size of coronal holes is concerned, we find no distinct trend towards the northern or southern hemisphere. We find that variations in local and global conditions may significantly change the threshold needed for reliable coronal hole extraction and thus, we can highlight the importance of individually assessing and extracting coronal holes.


2019 ◽  
Vol 129 ◽  
pp. 01023
Author(s):  
Arkady Leontiev ◽  
Ekaterina Rubtsova ◽  
Alexander Skulkin

The paper presents the experimental results of stress assessment in salt rock mass around underground excavations in Solikamsk Mines 1, 2 and 3, Uralkali, at the Upper Kama potash deposit. The experiments were a part of the geomechanical research aimed at justification of project designs and engineering solutions made in selection of safe and efficient mining methods, including safety of watertight strata. The experimental works were accomplished using the measurement and computation system Gidrorazryv designed at the Institute of Mining, SB RAS. In the salt rock testing, the system was equipped with new-design downhole survey tool and wireless communication between pressure sensors and portable computer. The sites for measurement stations were selected with regard to current mining situation, distance between the sites and stoping front, absence of undermining or overmining and installability of drilling equipment. A particular attention was paid to a drilling tool capable of geometrically accurate drilling in salt rock mass, in compliance with standards of the hydraulic fracturing stress measurement technique. In the tests, the method of directional hydrofracturing with softening of measurement hole boundary by cutting initiation slots was implemented. All in all, 75 hydraulic fracturing tests were carried in adjacent rock mass in the mines. It is found that stress state in roof rocks of underground excavations is nonuniform: the vertical stress is similar to the calculated value due to weight of overlying rocks while the horizontal stresses exceed the gravitational stress by 2–3 times.


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