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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Excess enthalpies and excess volumes of some binary mixtures in the near critical region

du Gay, A. P. January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
2

A toolkit for characterizing uncertainties in hypersonic flow-induced ablation

Anzalone, Reed Anthony 16 February 2011 (has links)
A one-dimensional, quasi-steady ablation model with finite rate surface chemistry and frozen equilibrium pyrolysis gases is developed and discussed. This material response model is then coupled to a film-transfer boundary layer model to enable the computation of heat and mass transfer to and from the ablating surface. A shock model is outlined, as well, and all three components are then coupled together to form a stand-alone ablation code. The coupled models in the code are validated with respect to arcjet experiments, and comparisons are drawn between the ablation code and the unsteady ablation code Chaleur, as well as other computations for a graphite ablator in an arcjet. The coupled code is found to compare very well to both the experimental results and the other calculations. It is also found to have unique computational capabilities due to the use of finite-rate surface chemistry. Finally, uncertainty propagation using the quadrature method of moments (QMOM) is discussed. The method is applied to a number of simplified sample problems, for both univariate and multivariate scenarios. QMOM is then used to compute the uncertainty in an application of the coupled ablation code using a graphite ablator. The results of this study are discussed, and conclusions about the utility of the method as well as the properties of the ablation code are drawn. / text
3

Thermophysical Modelling and Mechanical Stability of Cometary Nuclei

Davidsson, Björn January 2003 (has links)
<p>Comets are the most primordial and least evolved bodies in the Solar System. As such, they are unique sources of information regarding the early history of the Solar System. However, little is known about cometary nuclei since they are very difficult to observe due to the obscuring coma. Indirect methods are therefore often used to extract knowledge about nucleus parameters such as size, shape, density, material strength, and rotational properties. For example, tidal and non-tidal splitting of cometary nuclei can provide important information about nuclear densities and material strengths, but only if the criteria for mechanical stability are well known. Masses and densities of cometary nuclei can also be obtained by studying orbital modifications due to non-gravitational forces, but only if the thermophysics of comets can be modelled accurately. </p><p>A detailed investigation is made regarding the mechanical stability of small Solar System bodies. New expressions for the Roche distance are derived, as functions of the size, shape, density, material strength, rotational period, and spin axis orientation of a body. The critical rotational period for centrifugal breakup in free space is also considered, and the resulting formulae are applied to comets for which the size, shape and rotational period have been estimated observationally, in order to place constraints on their densities and material strengths. </p><p>A new thermophysical model of cometary nuclei is developed, focusing on two rarely studied features - layer absorption of solar energy, and parallel modelling of the nucleus and innermost coma. Sophisticated modelling of radiative transfer processes and the kinetics of gas in thermodynamic non-equilibrium form the basis for this work. The new model is applied to Comet 19P/Borrelly, and its density is estimated by reproducing the non-gravitational changes of its orbit.</p>
4

Thermophysical Modelling and Mechanical Stability of Cometary Nuclei

Davidsson, Björn January 2003 (has links)
Comets are the most primordial and least evolved bodies in the Solar System. As such, they are unique sources of information regarding the early history of the Solar System. However, little is known about cometary nuclei since they are very difficult to observe due to the obscuring coma. Indirect methods are therefore often used to extract knowledge about nucleus parameters such as size, shape, density, material strength, and rotational properties. For example, tidal and non-tidal splitting of cometary nuclei can provide important information about nuclear densities and material strengths, but only if the criteria for mechanical stability are well known. Masses and densities of cometary nuclei can also be obtained by studying orbital modifications due to non-gravitational forces, but only if the thermophysics of comets can be modelled accurately. A detailed investigation is made regarding the mechanical stability of small Solar System bodies. New expressions for the Roche distance are derived, as functions of the size, shape, density, material strength, rotational period, and spin axis orientation of a body. The critical rotational period for centrifugal breakup in free space is also considered, and the resulting formulae are applied to comets for which the size, shape and rotational period have been estimated observationally, in order to place constraints on their densities and material strengths. A new thermophysical model of cometary nuclei is developed, focusing on two rarely studied features - layer absorption of solar energy, and parallel modelling of the nucleus and innermost coma. Sophisticated modelling of radiative transfer processes and the kinetics of gas in thermodynamic non-equilibrium form the basis for this work. The new model is applied to Comet 19P/Borrelly, and its density is estimated by reproducing the non-gravitational changes of its orbit.

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