Neutron angular distributions from the core break-up reactions of the

Author(s):  
S. Grévy ◽  
L. Axelsson ◽  
J. C. Angélique ◽  
R. Anne ◽  
D. Guillemaud-Mueller ◽  
...  
1968 ◽  
Vol 46 (10) ◽  
pp. S283-S286 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Enge

Five electromagnetic cascades of energies 835, 820, 300, 160, and 85 GeV were measured in the emulsions of an emulsion–tungsten stack. For small angles the integral angular distributions of the electrons are shown to be functions of the product E0 × θ (GeV × rad), where E0 is the primary energy of the cascades and θ is the angle up to which electrons were accepted. This is analogous to the well-known fact that the integral radial distributions depend on E0 × R (GeV × r.l.) in the core of the cascade, where R is the radius of a circle inside which were electrons.


Author(s):  
Ashlie B. Flegel

Abstract A Honeywell Uncertified Research Engine was exposed to various ice crystal conditions in the NASA Glenn Propulsion Systems Laboratory. Simulations using NASA’s 1D Icing Risk Analysis tool were used to determine potential inlet conditions that could lead to ice crystal accretion along the inlet of the core flowpath and into the high pressure compressor. These conditions were simulated in the facility to develop baseline conditions. Parameters were then varied to move or change accretion characteristics. Data were acquired at altitudes varying from 5 kft to 45 kft, at nominal ice particle Median Volumetric Diameters from 20 μm to 100 μm, and total water contents of 1 g/m3 to 12 g/m3. Engine and flight parameters such as fan speed, Mach number, and inlet temperature were also varied. The engine was instrumented with total temperature and pressure probes. Static pressure taps were installed at the leading edge of the fan stator, front frame hub, the shroud of the inlet guide vane, and first two rotors. Metal temperatures were acquired for the inlet guide vane and vane stators 1–2. In-situ measurements of the particle size distribution were acquired three meters upstream of the engine forward fan flange and one meter downstream of the fan in the bypass in order to study particle break-up behavior. Cameras were installed in the engine to capture ice accretions at the leading edge of the fan stator, splitter lip, and inlet guide vane. Additional measurements acquired but not discussed in this paper include: high speed pressure transducers installed at the trailing edge of the first stage rotor and light extinction probes used to acquire particle concentrations at the fan exit stator plane and at the inlet to the core and bypass. The goal of this study was to understand the key parameters of accretion, acquire particle break-up data aft of the fan, and generate a unique icing dataset for model and tool development. The work described in this paper focuses on the effect of particle break-up. It was found that there was significant particle break-up downstream of the fan in the bypass, especially with larger initial particle sizes. The metal temperatures on the inlet guide vanes and stators show a temperature increase with increasing particle size. Accretion behavior observed was very similar at the fan stator and splitter lip across all test cases. However at the inlet guide vanes, the accretion decreased with increasing particle size.


Author(s):  
Giovanni Stefani ◽  
Roberto Gotter ◽  
Alessandro Ruocco ◽  
Francesco Offi ◽  
Fabiana Da Pieve ◽  
...  

Art Journal ◽  
1966 ◽  
Vol 25 (4) ◽  
pp. 424-426
Author(s):  
Ralph A. Smith
Keyword(s):  
The Core ◽  

2019 ◽  
Vol 100 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pankaj K. Giri ◽  
Amritraj Mahato ◽  
D. Singh ◽  
Sneha B. Linda ◽  
Harish Kumar ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arne D. Ekstrom ◽  
Charan Ranganath

AbstractIn recent years, the field has reached an impasse between models suggesting that the hippocampus is fundamentally involved in spatial processing and models suggesting that the hippocampus automatically encodes all dimensions of experience in the service of memory. Here, we consider key conceptual issues that have impeded progress in our understanding of hippocampal function, and we review findings that establish the scope and limits of hippocampal involvement in navigation and memory. We argue that space and time serve as a primary scaffold to break up experiences into specific contexts, and to organize multimodal input that is to be associated within a context. However, the hippocampus is clearly capable of incorporating additional dimensions into the scaffold if they are determined to be relevant in the event-defined context. Conceiving of the hippocampal representation as constrained by immediate task demands—yet preferring axes that involve space and time—helps to reconcile an otherwise disparate set of findings on the core function of the hippocampus.


2017 ◽  
Vol 100 (5) ◽  
pp. 1814-1819 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Vermillac ◽  
J.-F. Lupi ◽  
F. Peters ◽  
M. Cabié ◽  
P. Vennéguès ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
The Core ◽  

Art Journal ◽  
1966 ◽  
Vol 25 (4) ◽  
pp. 424
Author(s):  
Ralph A. Smith ◽  
Katharine Kuh
Keyword(s):  
The Core ◽  

1981 ◽  
Vol 109 ◽  
pp. 189-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. R. Dhanak ◽  
B. DE Bernardinis

The evolution of a vortex ring in an ideal fluid under self-induction from a flat and elliptic configuration is followed numerically using the cut-off approximation (Crow 1970) for the velocity at the vortex. Calculations are presented for four different axes ratios of the initial ellipse. A particular choice is made for the core size and vorticity distribution in the core of the vortex ring. When the initial axes ratio is close to 1, the vortex ring oscillates periodically. The periodicity is lost as more eccentric cases are considered. For initial axes ratio 0·2, the calculations suggest a break-up of the ring through the core at one portion of the ring touching that at another, initially distant, portion of the ring.Results from quantitative experiments, conducted at moderate Reynolds number with the vortex rings produced by puffing air through elliptic orifices, are compared with the calculations. The agreement is fairly good and it is found that a vortex ring produced from an orifice of axes ratio 0·2 breaks up into two smaller rings. The relevance of the results to the vortex trail of an aircraft is discussed.


1966 ◽  
Vol 21 (7) ◽  
pp. 969 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Duelli ◽  
G. Mairle ◽  
U. Schmidt-Rohr ◽  
P. Turek ◽  
G. Wagner

The nuclear reactions of 52 MeV deuterons have been studied at some medium weight and heavy nuclei. The angular distributions of elastically scattered deuterons show sharp structures which are smoothed out — similar to the results at lower deuteron energies — for target nuclei near A = 100. The optical model analysis gives good fits with parameters extrapolated from the best values at lower energies. The „Smoothed Cut-off“ models do not describe the results properly. The influence of the nuclear interior on the elastic scattering is important.The proton spectra from the (d, p) and (d, pn) reactions are dominated by a broad „break up“ maximum. From the width of the maximum and the A-dependence of the cross section it is concluded that nuclear break up is more frequent at 52 MeV than COULOMB break up. The spectra of deuterons and tritons from the (d, d′) and (d, t) reactions show maxima up to Q-values of — 15 MeV. With these reactions it should be possible to study collective excitation up to high excitation energies and to get information about inner shells. The intensity of low energy inelastic deuterons is surprisingly large.


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