Posts Tagged ‘Physics’
Friday, November 11th, 2011
Ralph Izzo, the chief executive of the New Jersey’s PSEG, isn’t your average utility executive. At Columbia University, he studied mechanical engineering as an undergraduate and later earned a doctorate in applied physics. At the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, he did numerical simulations of fusion experiments and published or presented 35 papers on something called “magnetohydrodynamic modeling.” Read full article > >
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Growing field of ‘smart grid’ technology faces opposition over pricing, privacy
Tags: 2011?, average, Business, chief, columbia-university, cut, grid, Physics, physics-laboratory, princeton, published-or-presented, Technology, the-chief, your-average
Posted in 2011, art, border, business, cut, economy, engineer, GE, GI, GM, grid, Labor, Media, NEE, new, New Jersey, News, opposition, privacy, technology, UN, US, Washington, Xe | Comments Off
Tuesday, October 4th, 2011
A truck bomb kills dozens in Somalia’s capital; American astronomers win the Nobel Prize in physics; and Apple announces its latest iPhone.
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TIMESCAST: TimesCast | October 4, 2011
Tags: announces-its, apple incorporated, bomb, border, capital, iphone, kill, nobel, nobel prizes, nobel-prize, Physics, somalia
Posted in America, American, bomb, border, CAP, capital, kill, News, somalia, UC, UN | Comments Off
Tuesday, October 4th, 2011
Three U.S.-born scientists won the prize for their studies of exploding stars that revealed that the expansion of the universe is accelerating.
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Nobel Prize in Physics Goes to Perlmutter, Schmidt and Riess for Work on Expanding Universe
Tags: border, expansion, exploding-stars, nobel prizes, perlmutter, saul, Physics, prize, riess, adam g., schmidt, brian p., scientists-won, studies, the-prize, the-universe, universe
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Saturday, September 24th, 2011
As Dario Autiero, of the Institut de Physique Nucléaire de Lyon in France, explained a recent experiment in which neutrinos were clocked going faster than the speed of light, some physicists remained skeptical.
Link:
News Analysis: After Report on Speed, a Rush of Scrutiny
Tags: border, dario, going-faster, institut, neutrinos, Physics, recent-experiment, some-physicists, speed
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Friday, September 23rd, 2011
Suggestions of possible a breach of the cosmic speed limit, set by Einstein’s theory of relativity, are being met with skepticism.
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Evidence of Faster-Than-Light Neutrinos Puzzles Scientists
Tags: border, cern, cosmic, einstein, einstein, albert, europe, neutrinos, Physics, space, speed-limit, the-cosmic, theory
Posted in border, Europe, GE, News, theory | Comments Off
Friday, February 4th, 2011
Understanding the origins of our universe, Brian Greene argues, means accepting that there could be a multitude of others.
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Expanding Horizons
Tags: border, brian, brian-greene, cep, erstanding-the-origins, green, greene, brian, means-accepting, origins, our-universe, Physics, science and technology, the-origins, universe
Posted in Books, border, CEP, GI, green, UN | Comments Off
Thursday, February 3rd, 2011
by Bruce J. Holmes Since the early 1980s, I have had questions about an iconic picture depicting a dramatic, crimson wake vortex. This picture, with which my former NASA colleagues and I have a deep connection, provokes a telling of “the rest of the story.” This picture was taken during a NASA research program titled “Aerial Applications Research.” The red smoke screen through which the airplane flew was produced by igniting smoke bombs inside a length of hardware store gutter pipes (cleverly conceived by one of the researchers on the project). It took weeks of trial and error involving different colors of smoke and waiting for the perfect sky and wind to get the photographic conditions just right. I was standing to the right of the flight path of the Ayers Thrush Commander aircraft when the automated camera system snapped many images per second and the airplane roared by. The heritage of the picture starts under Jimmy Carter’s Administration — not a fact that would leap off the page for most of us. Carter, a peanut farmer from Georgia, brought to Washington D.C. a person who spent some time at NASA Headquarters, advocating for research that could help farmers with a vexing problem involving aerial applications (or crop dusting in the vernacular). The problem was that the flow behind the aircraft wing disrupts the desired even spread of seeds or chemicals and can carry spray to places that cause trouble (streams, for example). The physics of producing lift with a wing creates an aircraft wake which has a large vortex (tornado) generated at each wingtip. The strength of this vortex increases as aircraft weight increases. The flow from a wingtip of a crop duster picks up the seeds or chemicals and sends them far from the area directly below the aircraft. The strong spinning flow in the vortex can also cause a problem for other aircraft under some conditions. NASA and the FAA had done extensive research beginning in the 1970s and continuing today to understand and predict flow behind transport aircraft to determine safe separation distances (spacing of aircraft). We believed that this research could help the “Aerial Applications Research” program, perhaps, if the physics of the flow behind crop dusters could be understood, predicted, and tamed. Because we see computer images on TV of airplanes the size of counties flying over a map of the U.S., we come to think of the airspace as crowded. In reality, the airspace is not crowded. Instead, the runways and the arrival queue of airplanes lined up to land are crowded. The airplanes are spaced in the queue that keeps each safely following an airplane away from the spinning wake vortex of the previous airplane. Before this picture was taken, the NASA researchers involved pulled together all of the known theory and experimental information about the vortex, with the idea of developing a computer program to predict this flow pattern. (This was in the very early days of computing — think magnetic tape.) Along the way we met with a collection of interesting folks including the holder of a patent for “Distributor Wing Aerial Applications Aircraft.” Here is the original patent. The idea in this patent was to blow air and seed or fertilizer through channels inside the wing and use the vortex to spread the materials on a wider swath. This intriguing concept reached a limited level of fruition in Russia in the form of the Polish-built PZL (Milek) M-15, turbofan-powered agricultural aircraft. Our research led to the work with a startup computational methods company in Princeton, NJ, Continuum Dynamics, Inc., to develop a comprehensive CFD code for predicting where spray and seeds would fly behind the wing of a crop duster. That computer work led to the tests at NASA’s Wallops Flight Research Center, where we took this picture, to prove to ourselves that the computer method worked. It did. In the photo, underneath the flight path, plastic pipes are visible on which we rolled out sticky tape to collect glass beads of varying sizes that were released from movable canisters located under the wing. The results of the testing proved that the computer was an excellent tool for the task of designing spray systems on aircraft. That task resulted in the most famous vortex flow picture of all time (perhaps a little over-stated), shown here . This photo shows up virtually anywhere the subject of wake turbulence, wake vortex, and aircraft wakes is discussed. We never imagined the value of the photo back then. And now, as my fellow Minnesotan, Paul Harvey, used to say, you know “the rest of the story.” Bruce J. Holmes, retired from his NASA career in public sector entrepreneurialism, is now practicing the art in the private sector as CEO, NextGen AeroSciences. Image: NASA Langley Research Center.

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The Rest of the Story
Tags: aircraft, Article, ceo, dea, fact, irs, nasa, Physics, project, release, Science, Technology, the-right
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Saturday, December 18th, 2010
What makes a city grow and thrive? What causes it to stagnate and fall? Geoffrey West thinks the tools of physics can give us the answers.
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A Physicist Solves the City
Tags: answers, border, city-grow, geoffrey-west, Physics, thinks-the-tools, tools, urban-areas, west, geoffrey
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Monday, November 1st, 2010
Physicists are tracking the subatomic chaos of protons colliding 300 feet underground in the bowels of a giant particle detector at the Large Hadron Collider.
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Trillions of Reasons to Be Excited
Tags: 300-feet, bowels, cern, dark matter (astronomy), large-hadron, particle accelerators, Physics, protons-colliding, science and technology, subatomic, the-subatomic
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Tuesday, October 12th, 2010
The scope and details of Sir Isaac Newton’s interest in alchemy are only now becoming clear.

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Moonlighting as a Conjurer of Chemicals
Tags: Chemistry, gold, isaac, isaac-newton, Media, newton, isaac, only-now, Physics
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Tuesday, October 5th, 2010
Two Russian-born scientists shared the 2010 Nobel Prize for physics for experiements with graphene, a super-thin carbon material.

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Two Win Nobel for Work on Ultra-Thin Material
Tags: Media, nobel, nobel prizes, nobel-prize, Physics, russian-born, scientists-shared, shared-the-2010, super-thin-carbon, the-2010
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Tuesday, October 5th, 2010
Two scientists have shared this year’s Nobel Prize for Physics for their “groundbreaking” work on a material with amazing properties.

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Materials breakthrough wins Nobel
Tags: nobel, nobel-prize, Physics, year
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