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Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 15, 2025
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Abstract Neutron-induced nuclear reactions play an important role in the Big Bang Nucleosynthesis. Their excitation functions are, from an experimental point of view, usually difficult to measure. Nevertheless, in the last decades, big efforts have led to a better understanding of their role in the primordial nucleosynthesis network. In this work, we apply the Trojan Horse Method to extract the cross section at astrophysical energies for the3He(n,p)3H reaction after a detailed study of the2H(3He,pt)H three-body process. Data extracted from the present measurement are compared with other published sets. The reaction rate is also calculated, and the impact on the Big Bang nucleosynthesis is examined in detail.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available November 1, 2025
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The unstretched laminar flame speed (LFS) plays a key role in engine models and predictions of flame propagation. It is also an essential parameter in the study of turbulent combustion and can be directly used in many turbulent combustion models. Therefore, it is important to predict the laminar flame speed accurately and efficiently. Two improved correlations for the unstretched laminar flame speed, namely improved power law and improved Arrhenius form correlations, are proposed for iso-octane/air mixtures in this study, using simulated results for typical operating conditions for spark-ignition engines: unburned temperatures of 300-950 K, pressures of 1-120 bar, and equivalence ratios of 0.6-1.5. The original data points used to develop the new correlations were obtained using the detailed combustion kinetics for iso-octane from Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL). The three coefficients in the improved power law correlation were determined using a methodology different from previous approaches. The improved Arrhenius form correlation employs a function of unburned gas temperature to replace the flame temperature, making the expression briefer and making the coefficients easier to calculate. The improved Arrhenius method is able to predict the trends and the values of laminar flame speed with improved accuracy over a larger range of operating conditions. The improved power law method also works well but for a relatively narrow range of predictions. The improved Arrhenius method is recommended, considering its overall fitting error was only half of that using the improved power law correlation and it was closer to the experimental measurements. Even though ϕm, the equivalence ratio at which the laminar flame speed reaches its maximum, is not monotonic with pressure, this dependence is still included, since it produces least-rich best torque (LBT). The comparisons between the improved correlations in this study and the experimental measurements and the other correlations from various researchers are shown as well.more » « less
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IEEE Computer Science (Ed.)This poster presents our first steps to define a roadmap to robust science for high-throughput applications used in scientific discovery. These applications combine multiple components into increasingly complex multi-modal workflows that are often executed in concert on heterogeneous systems. The increasing complexity hinders the ability of scientists to generate robust science (i.e., ensuring performance scalability in space and time; trust in technology, people, and infrastructures; and reproducible or confirmable research). Scientists must withstand and overcome adverse conditions such as heterogeneous and unreliable architectures at all scales (including extreme scale), rigorous testing under uncertainties, unexplainable algorithms in machine learning, and black-box methods. This poster presents findings and recommendations to build a roadmap to overcome these challenges and enable robust science. The data was collected from an international community of scientists during a virtual world cafe in February 2021more » « less
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IEEE Computer Society (Ed.)Scientists using the high-throughput computing (HTC) paradigm for scientific discovery rely on complex software systems and heterogeneous architectures that must deliver robust science (i.e., ensuring performance scalability in space and time; trust in technology, people, and infrastructures; and reproducible or confirmable research). Developers must overcome a variety of obstacles to pursue workflow interoperability, identify tools and libraries for robust science, port codes across different architectures, and establish trust in non-deterministic results. This poster presents recommendations to build a roadmap to overcome these challenges and enable robust science for HTC applications and workflows. The findings were collected from an international community of software developers during a Virtual World Cafe in May 2021.more » « less