1,778 research outputs found
Polytropic Behavior of Solar Wind Protons Observed by Parker Solar Probe
A polytropic process describes the transition of a fluid from one state to
another through a specific relationship between the fluid density and
temperature. The value of the polytropic index that governs this relationship
determines the heat transfer and the effective degrees of freedom during the
process. In this study, we analyze solar wind proton plasma measurements,
obtained by the Faraday cup instrument on-board Parker Solar Probe. We examine
the large-scale variations of the proton plasma density and temperature within
the inner heliosphere explored by the spacecraft. We also address a polytropic
behavior in the density and temperature fluctuations in short-time intervals,
which we analyze in order to derive the effective polytropic index of small
time-scale processes. The large-scale variations of the solar wind proton
density and temperature which are associated with the plasma expansion through
the heliosphere, follow a polytropic model with a polytropic index ~5/3. On the
other hand, the short time-scale fluctuations which may be associated with
turbulence, follow a model with a larger polytropic index. We investigate
possible correlations between the polytropic index of short time-scale
fluctuations and the plasma speed, plasma beta, and the magnetic field
direction. We discuss the scenario of mechanisms including energy transfer or
mechanisms that restrict the particle effective degrees of freedom.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figure
Fundamental investigations of the finite element solutions for acoustic propagation in ducts
The question of convergence of three finite element algorithms for the modelling of acoustic transmission in ducts carrying a nonuniform mean flow is addressed. The details of each algorithm are stated and example calculations in uniform and nonuniform ducts are made and assessed for accuracy and convergence. The algorithm based on the assumption of irrotationality is found to be highly convergent. This algorithm is the one used in current turbo-fan inlet acoustic radiation codes. A theoretical analysis indicating convergence is supported by example calculations. Two additional algorithms which do not require irrotationality are found to be less convergent, and perhaps not convergent at all for certain severely sheared velocity profiles. No theoretical convergence criteria can presently be established for these algorithms and convergence difficulties are shown here by example. Included in this class of algorithms is the duct analysis program ADAM which is known to display apparently nonconvergent solutions in certain cases
Parallel-propagating Fluctuations at Proton-kinetic Scales in the Solar Wind are Dominated by Kinetic Instabilities
We use magnetic helicity to characterise solar wind fluctuations at
proton-kinetic scales from Wind observations. For the first time, we separate
the contributions to helicity from fluctuations propagating at angles
quasi-parallel and oblique to the local mean magnetic field, . We
find that the helicity of quasi-parallel fluctuations is consistent with
Alfv\'en-ion cyclotron and fast magnetosonic-whistler modes driven by proton
temperature anisotropy instabilities and the presence of a relative drift
between -particles and protons. We also find that the helicity of
oblique fluctuations has little dependence on proton temperature anisotropy and
is consistent with fluctuations from the anisotropic turbulent cascade. Our
results show that parallel-propagating fluctuations at proton-kinetic scales in
the solar wind are dominated by proton temperature anisotropy instabilities and
not the turbulent cascade. We also provide evidence that the behaviour of
fluctuations at these scales is independent of the origin and macroscopic
properties of the solar wind.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL. 6 Pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
Scaling anisotropy of the power in parallel and perpendicular components of the solar wind magnetic field
Power spectra of the components of the magnetic field parallel (Pzz) and perpendicular (Pzz+Pyy) to the local mean magnetic field direction were determined by wavelet methods from Ulysses’ MAG instrument data during eighteen 10-day segments of its first North Polar pass at high latitude at solar minimum in 1995. The power depends on frequency f and the angle θ between the solar wind direction and the local mean field, and with distance from the Sun. This data includes the solar wind whose total power (Pxx + Pyy + Pzz) in magnetic fluctuations we previously reported depends on f and the angle θ nearly as predicted by the GS95 critical balance model of strong incompressible MHD turbulence. Results at much wider range of frequencies during six evenly-spaced 10-day periods are presented here to illustrate the variability and evolution with distance from the Sun. Here we investigate the aniso tropic scaling of Pzz(f,θ) in particular because it is a reduced form of the Poloidal (pseudo-Alfvenic) component of the (incompressible) fluctuations. We also report the much larger Pxx(f,θ)+Pyy(f,θ) which is (mostly) reduced from the Toroidal (Alfvenic, i.e., perpendicular to both B and k) fluctuations, and comprises most of the total power. These different components of the total power evolve and scale differently in the inertial range. We compare these elements of the magnetic power spectral tensor with “critical balance” model predictions
Diagnosing Energy Loss: PHENIX Results on High-pT Hadron Spectra
Measurements of inclusive spectra of hadrons at large transverse momentum
over a broad range of energy in different collision systems have been performed
with the PHENIX experiment at RHIC. The data allow to study the energy and
system size dependence of the suppression observed in RAA of high-pT hadrons at
sqrt(s_NN)= 200 GeV. Due to the large energy range from sqrt(s_NN)= 22 GeV to
200 GeV, the results can be compared to results from CERN SPS at a similar
energy. The large Au+Au dataset from the 2004 run of RHIC also allows to
constrain theoretical models that describe the hot and dense matter produced in
such collisions. Investigation of particle ratios such as eta/pi0 helps
understanding the mechanisms of energy loss.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures. To appear in the proceedings of the 19th
International Conference on Ultra-Relativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions
(Quark Matter 2006), Shanghai, China, November 14-20, 200
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Compressed Statistical Testing and Application to Radar
We present compressed statistical testing (CST) with an illustrative application to radar target detection. We characterize an optimality condition for a compressed domain test to yield the same result as the corresponding test in the uncompressed domain. We demonstrate by simulation that under high SNR, a likelihood ratio test with compressed samples at 3.3x or even higher compression ratio can achieve detection performance comparable to that with uncompressed data. For example, our compressed domain Sample Matrix Inversion test for radar target detection can achieve constant false alarm rate (CFAR) performance similar to the corresponding test in the raw data domain. By exploiting signal sparsity in the target and interference returns, compressive sensing based CST can incur a much lower processing cost in statistical training and decision making, and can therefore enable a variety of distributed applications such as target detection on resource limited mobile devices.Engineering and Applied Science
Cascading Effects and Escalations in Wide Area Power Failures: A Summary for Emergency Planners
This special report is the result of a
collaboration between academics and
practitioners. It aims to provide a synthetic
overview of the cascading effects caused by
wide-area power failures, and to define the
recurrent impacts and sources of escalation. It
provides a reference for the training and the
situational awareness of decision makers and
emergency operators. The format uses bullet
points and examples to facilitate reading in
conditions of limited availability of time. The
following topics have been developed:-
⚫ A definition of cascading effects.
⚫ An introduction for of wide area power
failures (PF) policies and practices.
⚫ Illustrative examples.
⚫ A table listing cascading effects and
escalations caused by wide area PF.
⚫ Resources for training and essential
references for further reading
The evolution of inverted magnetic fields through the inner heliosphere
Local inversions are often observed in the heliospheric magnetic field (HMF), but their origins and evolution are not yet fully understood.Parker Solar Probe has recently observed rapid, Alfvénic, HMF inversions in the inner heliosphere, known as ‘switchbacks’, which have been interpreted as the possible remnants of coronal jets. It has also been suggested that inverted HMF may be produced by near-Sun interchange reconnection; a key process in mechanisms proposed for slow solar wind release. These cases suggest that the source of inverted HMF is near the Sun, and it follows that these inversions would gradually decay and straighten as they propagate out through the heliosphere. Alternatively, HMF inversions could form during solar wind transit, through phenomena such velocity shears, draping over ejecta, or waves and turbulence. Such processes are expected to lead to a qualitatively radial evolution of inverted HMF structures. Using Helios measurements spanning 0.3–1 AU, we examine the occurrence rate of inverted HMF, as well as other magnetic field morphologies, as a function of radial distance r, and find that it continually increases. This trend may be explained by inverted HMF observed between 0.3–1 AU being primarily driven by one or more of the above in-transit processes, rather than created at the Sun. We make suggestions as to the relative importance of these different processes based on the evolution of the magnetic field properties associated with inverted HMF. We also explore alternative explanations outside of our suggested driving processes which may lead to the observed trend
Molecular basis for the hormonal regulation of the tyrosine aminotransferase and tryptophane oxygenase genes
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