2,124 research outputs found
The mass content of the Sculptor dwarf spheroidal galaxy
We present a new determination of the mass content of the Sculptor dwarf
spheroidal galaxy, based on a novel approach which takes into account the two
distinct stellar populations present in this galaxy. This method helps to
partially break the well-known mass-anisotropy degeneracy present in the
modelling of pressure-supported stellar systems.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. To appear in the proceedings of IAU Symposium 254
"The Galaxy disk in a cosmological context", Copenhagen, June 200
Conceptual design study of advanced acoustic-composite nacelles
Conceptual studies were conducted to assess the impact of incorporating advanced technologies in the nacelles of a current wide-bodied transport and an advanced technology transport. The improvement possible in the areas of fuel consumption, flyover noise levels, airplane weight, manufacturing costs, and airplane operating cost were evaluated for short and long-duct nacelles. Use of composite structures for acoustic duct linings in the fan inlet and exhaust ducts was considered as well as for other nacelle components. For the wide-bodied transport, the use of a long-duct nacelle with an internal mixer nozzle in the primary exhaust showed significant improvement in installed specific fuel consumption and airplane direct operating costs compared to the current short-duct nacelle. The long-duct mixed-flow nacelle is expected to achieve significant reductions in jet noise during takeoff and in turbo-machinery noise during landing approach. Recommendations were made of the technology development needed to achieve the potential fuel conservation and noise reduction benefits
Building a business case for corporate fleets to adopt vehicle-to-grid technology (V2G) and participate in the regulation service market
Thesis (M. Eng. in Logistics)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Engineering Systems Division, 2011.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 95-98).Electric (EV) and Plug-in Hybrid Electric vehicles (PHEV) continue to gain attention and market share, not only as options for consumers but also for corporate fleets. EVs and PHEVs can contribute to lower operating costs through reduced maintenance requirements and enhanced fuel economy. In addition, a fleet of EVs or PHEVs, when parked and aggregated in a sizeable number, can provide regulation services to the grid through the electricity stored in the vehicle's batteries. This opportunity is known as Vehicle-to-grid technology (V2G). This thesis evaluates the economics for V2G-enabled fleets to participate in the regulation services market. In order to build a business case for fleet managers, we constructed a 10-year cash flow model that compares the operating, infrastructure, and capital costs, as well as the revenue opportunities for EVs, PHEVs, and ICEs. To quantify potential revenues, we adapted a tool that the ISO New England has used to simulate the revenues of participants in the regulation market for an alternative energy pilot. We show that ICEs, while having the lowest retail value, actually have the greatest NPV due to their high operating costs and inability to participate in the regulation services market. EVs have the highest retail value, but due to their large battery size are able to provide the most regulation services. The opportunity for V2G is critical for the attractiveness of the EV. PHEVs offer lower V2G revenue opportunity than the EVs but have greater operational flexibility. We determined that V2G revenue potential is driven by the charger capacity and battery size and there are tradeoffs associated with these components. A larger battery and charger will generate more money from regulation services, but their high investment cost may outweigh these benefits. The correct combination of charger capacity, battery size, and state of charge (SOC) is important. If the charger capacity is too large and SOC too high or low, a small battery can be charged or depleted too quickly, hindering its ability to provide regulation services.by Andrés De los Ríos Vergara and Kristen E. Nordstrom.M.Eng.in Logistic
Microbial oxidation of arsenite in a subarctic environment: diversity of arsenite oxidase genes and identification of a psychrotolerant arsenite oxidiser
Background: Arsenic is toxic to most living cells. The two soluble inorganic forms of arsenic are arsenite (+3) and arsenate (+5), with arsenite the more toxic. Prokaryotic metabolism of arsenic has been reported in both thermal and moderate environments and has been shown to be involved in the redox cycling of arsenic. No arsenic metabolism (either dissimilatory arsenate reduction or arsenite oxidation) has ever been reported in cold environments (i.e. < 10°C).
Results: Our study site is located 512 kilometres south of the Arctic Circle in the Northwest Territories, Canada in an inactive gold mine which contains mine waste water in excess of 50 mM arsenic. Several thousand tonnes of arsenic trioxide dust are stored in underground chambers and microbial biofilms grow on the chamber walls below seepage points rich in arsenite-containing solutions. We compared the arsenite oxidisers in two subsamples (which differed in arsenite concentration) collected from one biofilm. 'Species' (sequence) richness did not differ between subsamples, but the relative importance of the three identifiable clades did. An arsenite-oxidising bacterium (designated GM1) was isolated, and was shown to oxidise arsenite in the early exponential growth phase and to grow at a broad range of temperatures (4-25°C). Its arsenite oxidase was constitutively expressed and functioned over a broad temperature range.
Conclusions: The diversity of arsenite oxidisers does not significantly differ from two subsamples of a microbial biofilm that vary in arsenite concentrations. GM1 is the first psychrotolerant arsenite oxidiser to be isolated with the ability to grow below 10°C. This ability to grow at low temperatures could be harnessed for arsenic bioremediation in moderate to cold climates
Microfluidic rheology of soft colloids above and below jamming
The rheology near jamming of a suspension of soft colloidal spheres is
studied using a custom microfluidic rheometer that provides stress versus
strain rate over many decades. We find non-Newtonian behavior below the jamming
concentration and yield stress behavior above it. The data may be collapsed
onto two branches with critical scaling exponents that agree with expectations
based on Hertzian contacts and viscous drag. These results support the
conclusion that jamming is similar to a critical phase transition, but with
interaction-dependent exponents.Comment: 4 pages, experimen
Interacting Dark Matter and Dark Energy
We discuss models for the cosmological dark sector in which the energy
density of a scalar field approximates Einstein's cosmological constant and the
scalar field value determines the dark matter particle mass by a Yukawa
coupling. A model with one dark matter family can be adjusted so the
observational constraints on the cosmological parameters are close to but
different from what is predicted by the Lambda CDM model. This may be a useful
aid to judging how tightly the cosmological parameters are constrained by the
new generation of cosmological tests that depend on the theory of structure
formation. In a model with two families of dark matter particles the scalar
field may be locked to near zero mass for one family. This can suppress the
long-range scalar force in the dark sector and eliminate evolution of the
effective cosmological constant and the mass of the nonrelativistic dark matter
particles, making the model close to Lambda CDM, until the particle number
density becomes low enough to allow the scalar field to evolve. This is a
useful example of the possibility for complexity in the dark sector.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures; added a reference and a minor correctio
Stiff Stability of the Hydrogen atom in dissipative Fokker electrodynamics
We introduce an ad-hoc electrodynamics with advanced and retarded
Lienard-Wiechert interactions plus the dissipative Lorentz-Dirac
self-interaction force. We study the covariant dynamical system of the
electromagnetic two-body problem, i.e., the hydrogen atom. We perform the
linear stability analysis of circular orbits for oscillations perpendicular to
the orbital plane. In particular we study the normal modes of the linearized
dynamics that have an arbitrarily large imaginary eigenvalue. These large
eigenvalues are fast frequencies that introduce a fast (stiff) timescale into
the dynamics. As an application, we study the phenomenon of resonant
dissipation, i.e., a motion where both particles recoil together in a drifting
circular orbit (a bound state), while the atom dissipates center-of-mass energy
only. This balancing of the stiff dynamics is established by the existence of a
quartic resonant constant that locks the dynamics to the neighborhood of the
recoiling circular orbit. The resonance condition quantizes the angular momenta
in reasonable agreement with the Bohr atom. The principal result is that the
emission lines of quantum electrodynamics (QED) agree with the prediction of
our resonance condition within one percent average deviation.Comment: 1 figure, Notice that Eq. (34) of the Phys. Rev. E paper has a typo;
it is missing the square Brackets of eq. (33), find here the correct e
Effect of Al mole fraction on carrier diffusion lengths and lifetimes in AlxGa1−xAs
The ambipolar diffusion length and carrier lifetime are measured in AlxGa1−xAs for several mole fractions in the interval 0<x<0.38. These parameters are found to have significantly higher values in the higher mole fraction samples. These increases are attributed to occupation of states in the indirect valleys, and supporting calculations are presented
A double-lined spectroscopic orbit for the young star HD 34700
We report high-resolution spectroscopic observations of the young star HD
34700, which confirm it to be a double-lined spectroscopic binary. We derive an
accurate orbital solution with a period of 23.4877 +/- 0.0013 days and an
eccentricity of e = 0.2501 +/- 0.0068. The stars are found to be of similar
mass (M2/M1 = 0.987 +/- 0.014) and luminosity. We derive also the effective
temperatures (5900 K and 5800 K) and projected rotational velocities (28 km/s
and 22 km/s) of the components. These values of v sin i are much higher than
expected for main-sequence stars of similar spectral type (G0), and are not due
to tidal synchronization. We discuss also the indicators of youth available for
the object. Although there is considerable evidence that the system is young
--strong infrared excess, X-ray emission, Li I 6708 absorption (0.17 Angstroms
equivalent width), H alpha emission (0.6 Angstroms), rapid rotation-- the
precise age cannot yet be established because the distance is unknown.Comment: 17 pages, including 2 figures and 2 tables. Accepted for publication
in AJ, to appear in February 200
Global Feedstock Scenarios for Bioenergy - Land-Use Change and Trade-Offs
This paper presents scenarios of global feedstock supply for the production of bioenergy under specified social and environmental safeguard provisions. In particular, concerns for the preservation of biodiversity and the reduction of deforestation are considered in different combinations of scenarios. The objectives of this study were 3-fold: (a) to achieve a global perspective using an integrated modeling approach; (b) to frame the boundaries for lower scale assessments; and (c) to identify potential trade-offs to be considered in future research. The aggregate results, achieved through the application of an integrated global modeling cluster, are in line with other studies predicting a doubling of global biomass supplies by mid-century. These supplies will to the largest extent be sourced from the conversion of unmanaged forest into managed forest, from new fast growing short rotation plantations and from intensification as well as optimization of land-use. Depending on the underlying scenario, it can be shown that zero net deforestation by 2020 can be reached and uphold while implying only a minor expansion into managed forests. Results further indicate that especially regions of the southern hemisphere i.e. the tropical belt will face controlled forest conversion from unmanaged to sustainably managed as well as increased protection of area for ecosystems services such as biodiversity. The study concludes with the recommendation of increased focus on targeted regional policy design and implementation following integrated global assessments
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