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  • 1
    Publication Date: 1981-06-01
    Description: An optical method for the direct measurement of vorticity in liquid flows is described. At the present state of development it is capable of responding to vorticity fluctuations with a response time of about 1 msec and a spatial resolution of better than 50 μm Small spherical particles suspended in the flow rotate with angular velocity accurately equal to half the local vorticity; thus measurements of the rotation rates of such particles indicate the vorticity. Transparent spherical particles of less than 50 μm diameter, each containing embedded planar crystal mirrors, have been developed for this purpose and are suspended in a refractive-index-matched liquid. Measurements of the times required for laser reflections from the mirrors to rotate through the small angle defined by a pair of slits yields the rotation rate, and thus the vorticity. Production and physical properties of the probe particles are reported. Theoretical capabilities and limitations of the method, including accuracy, spatial and temporal resolution, data rate, and background noise are calculated and found to be coupled to the optical geometry and flow field. Analysis yields procedures for selective optimization of each parameter as dictated by the particular application. Measurements of steady-state, laminar, two-dimensional Poiseuille flows demonstrate the effectiveness of the technique and confirm theoretical predictions. © 1981, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
    Print ISSN: 0022-1120
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-7645
    Topics: Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics , Physics
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  • 2
  • 3
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: A multicolor imaging pyrometer was designed for accurately and precisely measuring the temperature distribution histories of small moving samples. The device projects six different color images of the sample onto a single charge coupled device array that provides an RS-170 video signal to a computerized frame grabber. The computer automatically selects which one of the six images provides useful data, and converts that information to a temperature map. By measuring the temperature of molten aluminum heated in a kiln, a breadboard version of the device was shown to provide high accuracy in difficult measurement situations. It is expected that this pyrometer will ultimately find application in measuring the temperature of materials undergoing radiant heating in a microgravity acoustic levitation furnace.
    Keywords: INSTRUMENTATION AND PHOTOGRAPHY
    Type: JPL, Proceedings of the Second Noncontact Temperature Measurement Workshop; p 90-97
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: The design, construction and calibration of a computer-linked multicolor pyrometer is described. The device was constructed for ready adaptation to a spacecraft and for use in the control of thermal processes for manufacturing materials in space. The pyrometer actually uses only one color at a time, and is relatively insensitive to uncertainties in the heated object's emissivity because the product of the color and the temperature has been selected to be within a regime where the radiant energy emitted from the body increases very rapidly with temperature. The instrument was calibrated and shown to exceed its design goal of temperature measurements between 300 and 2000 C, and its accuracy in the face of imprecise knowledge of the hot object's emissivity was demonstrated.
    Keywords: MATERIALS PROCESSING
    Type: NASA, Washington, D.C. Noncontact Temperature Measurement; p 145-172
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The feasibility of developing a method for making monodisperse, unagglomerated spherical particles greater than 50 nm in diameter was demonstrated. Carbonaceous particles were made by pyrolyzing ethylene with a pulsed CO2 laser, thereby creating a non-equilibrium mixture of carbon, hydrogen, hydrocarbon vapors, and unpyrolyzed ethylene. Via a complex series of reactions, the carbon and hydrocarbon vapors quickly condensed into the spherical particles. By cooling and dispersing them in a supersonic expansion immediately after their creation, the hot newly-formed spheres were prevented from colliding and coalescing, thus preventing the problem of agglomeration which as plagued other investigators studying laser-simulated particle formation. The cold particles could be left suspended in the residual gases indefinitely without agglomerating. Their uniform sizes and unagglomerated nature were visualized by collecting the particles on filters that were subsequently examined using electron microscopy. It was found the mean particle size can be coarsely controlled by varying the initial ethylene pressure, and can be finely controlled by varying the fluence (energy/unit area) with which the laser irradiates the gas. The motivating application for this research was to manufacture particles that could be used as laser Doppler velocimetry (LDV) seeds in high-temperature high-speed flows. Though the particles made in this program will not evaporate until heated to about 3000 K, and thus could serve as LDV seeds in some applications, they are not ideal when the hot atmosphere is also oxidizing. In that situation, ceramic materials would be preferable. Research performed elsewhere has demonstrated that selected ceramic materials can be manufactured by laser pyrolysis of appropriate supply gases. It is anticipated that, when the same gases are used in conjunction with the rapid cooling technique, unagglomerated spherical ceramic particles can be made with little difficulty. Such particles would also be valuable to manufacturers of ceramic or abrasive products, and this technique may find its greatest commercial potential in those areas.
    Keywords: INSTRUMENTATION AND PHOTOGRAPHY
    Type: NASA-CR-182265 , NAS 1.26:182265 , PSI-2062/TR-890
    Format: application/pdf
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