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  • Plasma Physics  (13)
  • NONMETALLIC MATERIALS  (4)
  • Lunar and Planetary Science and Exploration  (3)
  • 1
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: In a brief study of the feasibility of welding sintered alpha-SiC, solid-state welding and brazing were investigated. Joint quality was determined solely by microstructural examination. Hot-pressure welding was shown to be feasible at 1950 C. Diffusion welding and brazing were also successful under hot isostatic pressure at 1950 C when boride, carbide, and silicide interlayers were used. Furnace brazing was accomplished at 1750 C when a TiSi2 interlayer was introduced.
    Keywords: NONMETALLIC MATERIALS
    Type: American Ceramic Society, Communications (ISSN 0002-7820); 68; C-151 to
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Plasma Physics
    Type: Solar Encounter: the 1st Solar Orbiter Workshop; Santa Cruz, Tenerife; Spain
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Two lots of alpha silicon carbide were isostatically hot-pressed under 138 MPa for 2 h in Ar at temperatures up to 2200 C. Nearly theoretically dense specimens resulted. Hot isostatic pressing increased both room-temperature strength and 1200 C strength, and resulted in improved reliability. One lot of material which was pressed at 2200 C showed increases of about 20 percent in room-temperature strength and about 50 percent in 1200 C flexural strength; the Weibull modulus improved about 100 percent.
    Keywords: NONMETALLIC MATERIALS
    Type: American Ceramic Society Bulletin (ISSN 0002-7812); 64; 1253-125
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Specimens of nearly theoretical density have been obtained through the isostatic hot pressing of reaction-bonded silicon nitride under 138 MPa of pressure for two hours at 1850, 1950, and 2050 C. An amorphous phase that is introduced by the hot isostatic pressing partly accounts for the fact that while room temperature flexural strength more than doubles, the 1200 C flexural strength increases significantly only after pressing at 2050 C.
    Keywords: NONMETALLIC MATERIALS
    Type: American Ceramic Society, Communications (ISSN 0002-7820); 67; C-208 to
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Measurements of the plasma and magnetic field with high temporal resolution on the Interball Tail probe reveal many flow anomalies in the magnetosheath. They are usually seen as flow direction and number density variations, accompanied by magnetic field discontinuities. Large flow anomalies with number density variations of factor of 2 or more and velocity variations of 100 km/s or more are seen with periodicity of about I per hour. The cases of flow anomalies following in succession are also observed, and suggest their decay while propagating through the magnetosheath. Some magnetospheric disturbances observed in the outer magnetosphere after the satellite has crossed the magnetopause on the inbound orbit suggest their association with magnetosheath flow anomalies observed in the magnetosheath prior to magnetopause crossing.
    Keywords: Plasma Physics
    Type: Dec 17, 2000; San Francisco, CA; United States
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: Ionospheric oxygen ions have been observed throughout the magnetosphere, from the plasma sheet to the ring current region. I t has been found that the O+ /H+ density ratio in the magnetosphere increases with geomagnetic activity and varies with storm phases. During the magnetic storm in late September to earIy October 2002, Cluster was orbiting in the plasma sheet and ring current regions. At prestorm time, Cluster observed high H+ density and low O+ density in the plasma sheet and lobes. During the storm main phase, 0+ density has increased by 10 times over the pre-storm level. Strong field-aligned beams of O+ were observed in the lobes. O+ fluxes were significantly reduced in the central plasma sheet during the storm recovery. However, 0+ was still evident on the boundaries of the plasma sheet and in the lobes. In order to interpret the Cluster observations and to understand how O+ ions populate the magnetosphere during a magnetic storm, we model the storm in early October 2002 using our global ion kinetic simulation (GIK). We use the LFN global simulation model to produce electric and magnetic fields in the outer magnetosphere, the Strangeway outflow scaling with Delcourt ion trajectories to include ionospheric outflows, and the Fok inner magnetospheric model for the plasmaspheric and ring current response to all particle populations. We find that the observed composition features are qualitatively reproduced by the simulations, with some quantitative differences that point to future improvements in the models.
    Keywords: Lunar and Planetary Science and Exploration
    Type: American Geophysical Union Meeting; Dec 15, 2008 - Dec 19, 2008; San Francisco, CA; United States
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: In a paper of more than a decade ago, the estimated the strength of the ionospheric source and its ability to supply the different plasma regions of the Earth's magnetosphere was reported. The launch of the POLAR spacecraft with the Thermal Ion Dynamics Experiment (TIDE) and the active control of spacecraft potential made possible for the first time the direct measurement of low energy ions moving from the ionosphere into the lobes of the magnetotail. This paper presents data taken during the period of operation of the Plasma Source Instrument (PSI) which maintains the spacecraft potential at about 1.8V positive with respect to the ambient plasma. These data give an in-situ observation of the strength and flow direction of the ionospheric plasmas as it moves outward into the lobes of the tail. A particle trajectory model has been used to trace particles back to the location of the ionospheric source and forward to the entry point of the ions to the plasma sheet. A comparison of measured data with the predictions of the earlier modeling effort will be discussed.
    Keywords: Plasma Physics
    Type: Dec 08, 1997 - Dec 12, 1997; San Francisco, CA; United States
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: We review recent experience from the Cluster, Double Star, and THEMIS missions for lessons that apply to the upcoming Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission (MMS) being developed for launch in 2014. On global scales, simulation and statistical studies lead to mean congurations of dayside reconnection, implying specific relative alignments of the inflow magnetic fields and X-line, with implications for MMS operations designed to maximize the number of close encounters with the diffusion region. At intermediate MHD-to-ion scales, reconstruction of features created by one or two X-lines have developed to the point where data from a cluster of spacecraft can determine their temporal trends and the approximate three-dimensional X-line structure. Recent petascale particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations of reconnection encompass three spatial dimensions with excellent resolution, and make striking predictions of electron scale physics that creates complex interacting flux ropes under component reconnection. High time resolution measurements from MMS will determine the detailed electron scale kinetics embedded within the global and MHDion scale contexts. These developments will lead to the refinement of our three-dimensional multiscale picture of reconnection, yielding improved understanding of the global, MHD, and local physics controlling the onset or quenching, variability, and mean rate of reconnection. This in turn will enable improved predictability of the structural features created by transient reconnection, and their space weather consequences.
    Keywords: Plasma Physics
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN26128 , Journal of Atmospheric & Solar-Terrestrial Physics; 99; 32-40
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: Venus has almost no intrinsic magnetic field to shield itself from its surrounding environment. The solar wind thus directly interacts with the planetary ionosphere and atmosphere. One of the by-products of this close encounter is the production of energetic neutral atom (ENA) emissions. Theoretical studies have shown that significant amount of ENAs are emanated from the planet. The launch of the Venus Express (VEX) in 2005 provided the first light ever of the Venus ENA emissions. The observed ENA flux level and structure are in pretty good agreement with the theoretical studies. In this paper, we present VEX ENA data and the comparison with numerical simulations. We seek to understand the solar wind interaction with the planet and the impacts on its atmospheres.
    Keywords: Lunar and Planetary Science and Exploration
    Type: 2007 American Geophysical Union (AGU) Fall Meeting; Dec 10, 2007 - Dec 14, 2007; San Francisco, CA; United States
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: We report direct observations of the three-dimensional velocity distribution of selected topside ionospheric ion species in an auroral context between 500 and 550 km altitude. We find heating transverse to the local magnetic field in the core plasma, with significant heating of 0(+), He(+), and H(+), as well as tail heating events that occur independently of the core heating. The 0(+) velocity distribution departs from bi-Maxwellian, at one point exhibiting an apparent ring-like shape. However, these observations are shown to be aliased within the auroral arc by temporal variations that arc not well-resolved by the core plasma instrument. The dc electric field measurements reveal superthermal plasma drifts that are consistent with passage of the payload through a series of vortex structures or a larger scale circularly polarized hydromagnetic wave structure within the auroral arc. The dc electric field also shows that impulsive solitary structures, with a frequency spectrum in the ion cyclotron frequency range, occur in close correlation with the tail heating events. The drift and core heating observations lend support to the idea that core ion heating is driven at low altitudes by rapid convective motions imposed by the magnetosphere. Plasma wave emissions at ion frequencies and parallel heating of the low-energy electron plasma are observed in conjunction with this auroral form; however, the conditions are much more complex than those typically invoked in previous theoretical treatments of superthermal frictional heating. The observed ion heating within the arc clearly exceeds that expected from frictional heating for the light ion species H(+) and He(+), and the core distributions also contain hot transverse tails, indicating an anomalous transverse heat source.
    Keywords: Plasma Physics
    Type: NASA-CR-204915 , NAS 1.26:204915 , Paper-95JA03154 , Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-027); 101; A3; 5279-5297
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