7,370 research outputs found
Probing the Structure of Jet Driven Core-Collapse Supernova and Long Gamma Ray Burst Progenitors with High Energy Neutrinos
Times of arrival of high energy neutrinos encode information about their
sources. We demonstrate that the energy-dependence of the onset time of
neutrino emission in advancing relativistic jets can be used to extract
important information about the supernova/gamma-ray burst progenitor structure.
We examine this energy and time dependence for different supernova and
gamma-ray burst progenitors, including red and blue supergiants, helium cores,
Wolf-Rayet stars, and chemically homogeneous stars, with a variety of masses
and metallicities. For choked jets, we calculate the cutoff of observable
neutrino energies depending on the radius at which the jet is stalled. Further,
we exhibit how such energy and time dependence may be used to identify and
differentiate between progenitors, with as few as one or two observed events,
under favorable conditions
Evaluation of MARC for the analysis of rotating composite blades
The suitability of the MARC code for the analysis of rotating composite blades was evaluated using a four-task process. A nonlinear displacement analysis and subsequent eigenvalue analysis were performed on a rotating spring mass system to ensure that displacement-dependent centrifugal forces were accounted for in the eigenvalue analysis. Normal modes analyses were conducted on isotropic plates with various degrees of twist to evaluate MARC's ability to handle blade twist. Normal modes analyses were conducted on flat composite plates to validate the newly developed coupled COBSTRAN-MARC methodology. Finally, normal modes analyses were conducted on four composite propfan blades that were designed, analyzed, and fabricated at NASA Lewis Research Center. Results were compared with experimental data. The research documented herein presents MARC as a viable tool for the analysis of rotating composite blades
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