87,677 research outputs found
Heated element fluid flow sensor Patent
Heated element sensor for fluid flow detection in thermal conductive conduit with adaptive means to determine flow rate and directio
Exact General Solutions to Extraordinary N-body Problems
We solve the N-body problems in which the total potential energy is any
function of the mass-weighted root-mean-square radius of the system of N point
masses. The fundamental breathing mode of such systems vibrates non-linearly
for ever. If the potential is supplemented by any function that scales as the
inverse square of the radius there is still no damping of the fundamental
breathing mode. For such systems a remarkable new statistical equilibrium is
found for the other coordinates and momenta, which persists even as the radius
changes continually.Comment: 15 pages, LaTeX. Accepted for publication in Proc. Roy. Soc.
From Quasars to Extraordinary N-body Problems
We outline reasoning that led to the current theory of quasars and look at
George Contopoulos's place in the long history of the N-body problem. Following
Newton we find new exactly soluble N-body problems with multibody forces and
give a strange eternally pulsating system that in its other degrees of freedom
reaches statistical equilibrium.Comment: 13 pages, LaTeX with 1 postscript figure included. To appear in
Proceedings of New York Academy of Sciences, 13th Florida Workshop in
Nonlinear Astronomy and Physic
The Relativistically Spinning Charged Sphere
When the equatorial spin velocity, , of a charged conducting sphere
approaches , the Lorentz force causes a remarkable rearrangement of the
total charge .
Charge of that sign is confined to a narrow equatorial belt at latitudes while charge of the opposite sign
occupies most of the sphere's surface. The change in field structure is shown
to be a growing contribution of the `magic' electromagnetic field of the
charged Kerr-Newman black hole with Newton's G set to zero. The total charge
within the narrow equatorial belt grows as and tends to
infinity as approaches . The electromagnetic field, Poynting vector,
field angular momentum and field energy are calculated for these
configurations.
Gyromagnetic ratio, g-factor and electromagnetic mass are illustrated in
terms of a 19th Century electron model. Classical models with no spin had the
small classical electron radius a hundredth of the Compton
wavelength, but models with spin take that larger size but are so
relativistically concentrated to the equator that most of their mass is
electromagnetic.
The method of images at inverse points of the sphere is shown to extend to
charges at points with imaginary co-ordinates.Comment: 15 pages, 1figur
Are Complex A and the Orphan Stream related?
We consider the possibility that the Galactic neutral hydrogen stream Complex
A and the stellar Orphan stream are related, and use this hypothesis to
determine possible distances to Complex A and the Orphan stream, and
line-of-sight velocities for the latter. The method presented uses our current
knowledge of the projected positions of the streams, as well as line-of-sight
velocities for Complex A, and we show that a solution exists in which the two
streams share the same orbit. If Complex A and the Orphan stream are on this
orbit, our calculations suggest the Orphan stream to be at an average distance
of 20 kpc, with heliocentric radial velocities of approximately -110 km/s.
Complex A would be ahead of the Orphan stream in the same wrap of the orbit,
with an average distance of 10 kpc, which is consistent with the distance
constraints determined through interstellar absorption line techniques.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures; typos corrected, fig 2 and numerical predictions
updated; accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
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