1983 — 1984 |
Stone, James [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Partial Support of Publication of Proceedings of Monopole '83 Conference; Ann Arbor, Michigan; October 6-9, 1983 @ University of Michigan Ann Arbor |
0.928 |
1984 — 1987 |
Stone, James [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
A Search For Magnetic Monopoles Trapped in Stable Matter (Physics) @ University of Michigan Ann Arbor |
0.928 |
1986 — 1988 |
Stone, James [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Neutrino Astronomy At the Gran Sasso Underground Laboratory;U.S.-Italy Program @ Trustees of Boston University |
0.946 |
1991 |
Stone, James [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Second School On Non-Accelerator Particle Astrophysics; Trieste, Italy; June 3-14, 1991 @ Trustees of Boston University
The Second School on Non-Accelerator Particle Astrophysics will be held at the International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP), Trieste, Italy from June 3-14, 1991. The School is directed by J. Stone, Boston University, USA., G. Giacomelli, University of Bologna, Italy, and E. Bellotti, University of Milano and Laboratorio Nazionale del Gran Sasso, Italy. The principle purpose of the school is to provide lectures on a number of theoretical and experimental topics in non-accelerator particle astrophysics as an educational forum for graduate students and young postdoctoral fellows pursuing research careers in this field. The School is partially sponsored by ICTP through UNESCO which supports the participation of students from developing nations and the Istituto Nazionale Fisica Nucleare (INFN) which supports the participation of Italian scientists. Funds from this project will support the participation of American graduate students and postdocs. An independent review panel of three persons with knowledge of the field will be assembled to select School applicants from the United States to be granted project funds to support their travel and subsistence expenses. Selection criteria will be based on the applicant's personal statement, letters of recommendation, and academic record and/or research publications.
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0.946 |
1996 — 1999 |
Stone, James [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Accretion Onto Strongly Magnetized Stars @ University of Maryland College Park
STONE, James 95-28299 Dr. Stone will conduct a theoretical study of magnetohydrodynamic instabilities in accretion disks and the nature of magnetosphere- disk interactions using 2- and 3-dimensional model codes developed by Stone and his collaborators. Angular momentum transport and the evolution of magnetic instabilities in protostars, cataclysmic variable stars and X-ray sources are the focuses of the numerical models to be produced. ***
|
0.937 |
2001 — 2005 |
Stone, James [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Itr/Ap Development of a Next Generation Community Code For Astrophysical Gas Dynamics
AST-0113571 J. Stone
The product of this research will be an improved general purpose solver for astrophysical gas dynamics, including magnetohydrodynamics, self-gravity, and radiative cooling effects. It will be a successor to the PI's widely used ZEUS code and will be a new generation code exploiting new hardware and software capabilities. Solvers optimized for scalar processors able to run on distributed memory parallel machines will greatly enhance the range of astrophysical problems addressable with direct numerical simulation. The project is interfaced to the graduate program of the Center for Scientific Computation and Applied Mathematical Modeling, which will allow hands on graduate training in numerical simulations for astrophysics and in use of numerical algorithms for parallel architectures.
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0.951 |
2001 — 2005 |
Stone, James [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Computational Studies of Mhd Accretion Flows
AST 0098625 Stone A wide variety of objects, ranging from new stars in formation (protostars), to objects which are the cinders of burned out stars (white dwarfs, neutron stars, and black holes), to active galactic nuclei (AGN, such as quasars) are thought to have accretion disks surrounding them. Inflows of gas from these disks onto the central object seem to account for some of the most dramatic components of the Universe. They emit prodigious amounts of power and radiate it over a tremendous swath of the electromagnetic spectrum (from the mid-infrared to hard X-rays and gamma rays). Our theoretical understanding of these accretion flows, however, is still limited by the complexities involved in developing the necessary magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) and radiation hydrodynam-ics computer models. Our understanding of the local physics that control such flows has progressed rapidly in the last few years. It is now important to examine how local processes such as the magnetorotational instability (MRI) determine global disk structure and evolution, especially since only global disk models can be directly compared to high spatial-, spectral-, and time-resolution observations of accretion flows around protostars, white dwarfs, neutron stars, and black holes. Using computational methods, this project will develop the first time-dependent, three-dimensional MHD models of the interaction of an accretion disk with a magnetized and rotating central star. These calculations will allow quantitative measurement of the mixing rate of the stellar field into the disk, the size of the interaction region, the time-averaged torque exerted on the star, and the geometry and kinematics of any polar cap accretion flows that might form. Such quantities are fundamental to the theory of how magnetized stars interact with accretion disks, yet to date they have yet to be calculated from first principles. Direct comparison of the simulations to a large and varied set of observations will be undertaken, including spectroscopic observations of magnetospheric funnel flows and accretion shocks in T Tauri stars, and the observed distribution of the rotation rates in T Tauri stars. Synthetic spectra of the models will be compared to that observed for accreting black holes at the center of early type galaxies and the galactic center, while fluctuations in the mass accretion rate can be compared to X-ray variabil-ity observed by RXTE in X-ray binaries. These global calculations are the first step towards star-disk interaction models which span many decades in radius. The calculations will all be performed with a variety of 2D and 3D MHD computer codes, using large allocations of supercomputer time on massively parallel machines at the national supercomputer centers. Funding for this project was provided by the NSF program for Extragalactic Astronomy & Cosmology (AST/EXC). ***
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0.951 |
2002 — 2006 |
Stone, James (co-PI) [⬀] Ostriker, Eve [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Dynamical Studies of Molecular Cloud Formation in Spiral Galaxies @ University of Maryland College Park
AST-0205972 Ostriker
Several lines of observational and theoretical evidence suggest that giant molecular clouds (GMCs) have short lifetimes, forming and dissociating within a few tens of millions of years. Prevailing theoretical arguments favor instability mechanisms in spiral arms to form GMCs, but existing work has suffered from technical limitations, and has not previously directly demonstrated that condensations with the properties of GMCs indeed form. Dr. Eve Ostriker, at the University of Maryland, will lead an investigation of a series of linear stability analyses, nonlinear numerical simulations, and supporting diagnostics to address outstanding questions concerning GMC formation in spiral galaxies. The modeling will include several important technical innovations. These researchers will, for the first time: o Use direct numerical simulations to study development of the Parker instability in 3D with realistic rotational shear self-consistent with large-scale density gradients through arm and interarm regions of galaxies, also incorporating self-gravity to study linear and nonlinear coupling of Parker and Jeans modes; o Comprehensively survey, using spectral methods, shearing-wavelet integrations, and magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD) simulations, the potential effects of the magnetorotational instability in galactic disks, focusing on coupling to self-gravitating modes in both secular-growth and saturated-state regimes; o Incorporate a realistic multi-phase gaseous medium for the initial conditions in two and three- dimensional simulations of self-gravitating and magnetically-driven galactic disk instabilities; o Directly confront stochastic coagulation vs. collective instability mechanisms for forming GMC-scale condensations by performing controlled experiments of multiphase evolution with and without self-gravity and magnetic effects.
As GMC formation is intimately coupled to star formation, and the cold ISM is the most dynamically-responsive component of a disk galaxy, the results of this project will have broad impacts on both Galactic and extragalactic astronomical research, with implications for understanding the global regulation of star formation and the structure and evolution of spiral galaxies across the Hubble sequence. ***
|
0.937 |
2005 — 2008 |
Zimmerman, Patrick Kenner, Scott Sundareshwar, Pallaoor Stone, James |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Acquisition of Equipment Cluster to Srengthen a Multi-Disciplinary Regional Biogeochemistry Core Facilty For Research and Training @ South Dakota School of Mines and Technology
This award will provide a cluster of equipment to strengthen a newly established Biogeochemistry Core Facility (BCF). The equipment cluster consists of four pieces of core equipment and two supporting instrumentats. Of the four core pieces of equipment, the nutrient analyzer will be used for high throughput nutrient sampling of water samples; the in-situ multiprobe will perform real-time simultaneous analysis of nutrients, dissolved oxygen, chlorophyll and pH in aquatic ecosystems; the multi-channel O2 / CO2 respirometer will be used for mechanistic biogeochemcial studies, and the microbial assay system will be used for investigating microbial community dynamics. In addition, the two climate-controlled incubators will be used with the respirometer; and the two computers are for dedicated and integrated use with the respirometer and the multiprobe instrument. While nutrient analyzer and multiprobe help monitor and document changes in nutrient concentrations in aquatic ecosystems, the respirometer and the microbial assay system will provide insights into the biogeochemical processes that regulate nutrient concentrations in these ecosystems.
These instruments will be used immediately in an interdisciplinary project that seeks to address the impacts of multiple stressors on the ecology of the Cheyenne River. The legacy of historical gold mining activities in the Black Hills, increasing population densities in the Black Hills regions, as well as the developing coal bed methane (CBM) mining activities, have adversely impacted the water quality, resource availability, and ecology of the Cheyenne River. This award will facilitate multidisciplinary studies on water quality and biogeochemistry that integrate ecosystem science and natural resource management. Beyond immediate use in the Cheyenne River project, the equipment cluster will strengthen other research activities of individual investigators and strengthen the possibilities for collaborative work on water quality, ecosystem nutrient dynamics and bioenergetics, climate change research, bioremediation, and natural resource management. A well-equipped BCF is a strategic component in the development of the proposed Center for the Integration of Research in Climate, Land use, Engineering, and Education into Society (CIRCLE2S) at SDSM&T, and it also matches the strategic objectives of the Tribal Science Council. A strong research facility is at the core of collaborations among SDSM&T, regional undergraduate institutions such as the Black Hills State University, Oglala Lakota College and Sinte Gleska University. The requested facilities will significantly enhance education, research-training and new curriculum development. This acquisition will strengthen the role of BCF as a regional resource.
This award will: 1) enhance the technical facilities to allow the faculty in the Institute of Atmospheric Sciences, Departments of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Geology and Geological Engineering, and Chemistry, to perform cutting-edge ecological and environmental research, 2) provide opportunities to train and educate undergraduate and graduate students in terrestrial and aquatic biogeochemistry and ecology, and to 3) further strengthen research and education partnership between SDSM&T and regional undergraduate institutions including two Tribal Colleges, through research that provides opportunities for hands on field and laboratory training for students.
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0.907 |
2006 — 2010 |
Clay, Sharon Stone, James |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Degradation of Antimicrobial Agents Tylosin and Chlorotetracycline During Swine Waste Treatment @ South Dakota School of Mines and Technology
0606986 Stone This project will evaluate the fate (degradation) and effects of two antimicrobials, tylosin and chlorotetracycline (CTC), in swine manure treatment (aerobic and anaerobic lagoons) and anaerobic sequencing batch reactors. These compounds are two of the most commonly administered antimicrobial agents to improve swine growth rates and prevent, control, and treat swine-related health problems in confined feedlots. The pervasive use of these antimicrobials in swine production makes the development of such information timely and important. The project has four research goals: (1) determine removal efficiencies of the antibiotics through laboratory based simulations of aerobic and anaerobic lagoon waste treatment processes; (2) assess the impacts of the antibiotics on psychrophilic (ca. 5-20oC) and mesophilic (ca. 30-38oC) aerobic and anaerobic lagoon treatment performance; (3) quantify changes in microbial community diversity and activity due to the antibiotics during aerobic and anaerobic waste treatment; and (4) determine changes in operational efficiency of anaerobic sequencing batch reactors (SBR) due to the antibiotics during treatment of swine waste. The broader impacts section of the project involves collaboration between two universities in South Dakota and participation by undergraduates and graduate students in the research.
|
0.907 |
2006 — 2011 |
Goodman, Jeremy [⬀] Stone, James (co-PI) [⬀] Ji, Hantao (co-PI) [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Laboratory Study of Magnetorotational Instability and Hydrodynamic Stability At Large Reynolds Numbers in a Short Couette Flow
AST-0607472 Goodman
It has long been assumed that turbulent angular momentum transport is a driving force explaining why accretion disks accrete, simply because such disks have very large Reynolds numbers (Re). Theoretical and numerical studies have shown that magneto-rotational instabilities (MRI) can support vigorous turbulence, so that MRI is now the favored mechanism for accretion in disks ranging from quasars to cataclysmic variables. However, MRI requires sufficient ionization to provide good electrical conductivity, which cool disks may not provide, so hydrodynamic turbulence is sometimes invoked. This project is an experimental laboratory study of high-Re MRI in liquid metal, to demonstrate MRI and study its nonlinear behavior, to investigate the stability of hydrodynamic flows at large Re, and to compare the laboratory results quantitatively with simulated astrophysical disks. These comparisons will help to validate theoretical tools applicable to nonlinear saturation of resistive MRI in astrophysical systems, especially proto-stellar disks.
Success will require the combined efforts of experimental physicists, computational fluid-dynamicists, and theoretical astrophysicists, who have much to learn from one another. Student training will be particularly valuable, since the field of experimental astrophysics is still rather small.
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0.951 |
2007 — 2010 |
Ostriker, Jeremiah (co-PI) [⬀] Draine, Bruce (co-PI) [⬀] Stone, James [⬀] Spergel, David (co-PI) [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Mri: Acquisition of a High-Performance Computing Cluster For Astrophysics
This work is for the acquisition of a high-performance computer cluster for computational astrophysics and for the analysis of data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe, the Atacama Cosmology Telescope, and the Southern Cosmology Survey. The cluster will be available to researchers from several institutions and will be available for the training of students in high-performance computing.
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0.951 |
2008 — 2011 |
Olson, Matthew [⬀] Olson, Matthew [⬀] Stone, James |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Dissertation Research: Pollinator Behavior and the Maintenance of Females in Gynodioecious Populations @ University of Alaska Fairbanks Campus
Pollination is one of the best studied and ecologically most important mutualisms in biology. Pollinators are diverse and vary widely in their behavior and efficiency in pollinating flowers. Many plants have separate sexes, yet it is poorly understood how changes in the pollinator community could differentially affect male, hermaphrodite, and female flowers. Pollinators that eat pollen, for example, may neglect female flowers. Furthermore, the distribution and abundance of pollinators vary over time naturally and as a result of human activity. Using computer simulations and field experiments, this study will directly measure the consequences of pollinator communities on seed production of female and hermaphrodite Silene vulgaris plants exposed to different groups of pollinators, including pollen collecting bees, nectar collecting moths, and seed eating insects, in North America and in Europe. The intellectual merit of this research is that it will develop our understanding of the consequences of changes in pollinator communities on plant fitness, and our understanding of the conditions that favor plants that are hermaphroditic or which have separate sexes. This study will have broader impacts in several areas. There are potential economic implications because many agricultural crops require insect pollination to produce adequate yields. Computer programs created for this project will also be used to develop freely available educational software modeling pollination processes for use in university biology classes. Finally, this project will develop a graduate student as a scientist and further expand an international collaboration between US and Czech Republic researchers.
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0.931 |
2008 — 2009 |
Stetler, Larry Stone, James Sani, Rajesh |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Acquisition of a Kinetic Phosphorescence Analyzer For Uranium-Focused Research and Education @ South Dakota School of Mines and Technology
0742597 Sani
This proposal seeks funding to purchase a kinetic phosphorescence analyzer (KPA) for high precision, high sensitivity uranium (VI) analysis. The unit will be used for a wide range of geoscience and environmental science applications. The requested unit from Chemchek Instruments allows uranium measurement in water, environmental samples, industrial solutions and for bioassay. In addition, the unit can measure lanthanides (Dy, Eu, Sm, Tb, and Tm) in solution. Detection limits of 0.01 µg L-1 uranium is possible with the instrument as is speciation determination between U(IV) and U(IV). Uranium contamination is a serious environmental threat impacting groundwater, soils, and sediments. The KPA unit will be instrumental in the following research efforts, 1) understanding the role of dissimilatory metal reducing bacteria in precipitating toxic metals via enzymatic and non-enzymatic processes, 2) understand the fate and transport of nanometer sized uraninite particles in groundwater and vadoze zone, 3) the fate, transport and migration (including aerial) of U compounds associated with historical mining activities, 4) the role of humic substances as electron acceptors and its impact on dissimilatory U reduction, and 5) U complexes in aerosol particles and their changes during atmospheric transport. Sani will administer the instrument and provide training. Sani will also provide radiation safety training. Lab space is already available. Project funds will support consumables. Students will be exposed to environmental issues related to heavy metal and radionuclide contamination. Research results will be disseminated via publications and through presentations at meetings.
***
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0.907 |
2009 — 2013 |
Stone, James [⬀] Rafikov, Roman (co-PI) [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Magnetohydrodynamics of Protoplanetary Disks
AST-0908269 Stone
This award is funded under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Public Law 111-5).
This project will investigate the gas dynamics of protoplanetary disks, and the interaction of disks with planets. The work includes (1) studies of angular momentum transport by the magnetorotational instability (MRI) in protoplanetary disks, (2) studies of the propagation and damping of, and gap opening by, density waves excited by disk-planet interaction, and (3) fully global models of protoplanetary disks that can investigate the structure and evolution of disks over a wide range of radii. Realistic models of protoplanetary disks are challenging because of the diverse range of physics that must be included, and these calculations will be the most sophisticated yet attempted. These simulations will follow the turbulent mixing and settling of dust grains in the disk self-consistently with the gas dynamics by integrating the motion of millions of particles drawn from a realistic size distribution. Effects to be added are recombination on grains, as part of a twelve-species non-equilibrium ionization and recombination network, all of the relevant non-ideal magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) processes, and radiative diffusion and optically thin cooling to follow the thermodynamics of the gas. All of the necessary code elements have been implemented and tested within Athena, a new and powerful grid-based code for astrophysical MHD. The result should be the most realistic and accurate models of the non-ideal MHD of protoplanetary disks possible, and a deep understanding of the environment of planet formation and the interaction of planets with the disk.
The project includes training of graduate students, and animations and visualizations for dissemination of the results to the wider public. The team is vigorously engaged in involving women and under-represented groups in theoretical and computational astrophysics through a Princeton summer undergraduate research program. The work continues to foster interdepartmental and international collaboration by providing access to the Athena code to the astrophysics community through an open-source software philosophy.
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0.951 |
2012 — 2015 |
Tromp, Jeroen (co-PI) [⬀] Stone, James (co-PI) [⬀] August, David [⬀] Couzin, Iain (co-PI) [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Ii-New: a Platform For Data-Parallel Gpu Computing At Princeton
This is an Institutional Infrastructure proposal to build a GPU cluster to support research in data-parallel code development and optimization, as well as research applications, in three scientific domains, namely, seismology, biology and astrophysics. These goals build on a close collaboration with an expert team in GPU computing from computer science. The proposed cluster will serve not only as an invaluable resource for computation, but will also aid cross-fostering of techniques and concepts between disciplines and will be used to stimulate collaboration and synergistic research activity in a wide range of areas.
Even though domain scientists are increasingly dependent on computation to achieve their research goals, most are not experts in parallel programming or GPU architectures. The difficulty of parallel programming for GPU clusters is an impediment to scientific progress. In order to relieve scientists of the burdens of parallel programming, computer scientists at Princeton have developed systems for automatically parallelizing programs for GPU. Building on this success, the PIs plan to extend these techniques to GPU clusters and work closely with the seismologists, biologists and astrophysicists to accelerate the pace of science.
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0.951 |
2012 — 2016 |
Prager, Stewart (co-PI) [⬀] Stone, James [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Savi: a Max-Planck/Princeton Research Center For Plasma Physics
This project will establish a joint research center in fusion and astro-plasma physics involving two units within Princeton University (the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, PPPL, and the Department of Astrophysical Sciences) and three institutes within the Max Planck Society (MPS) (the Institute of Plasma Physics at Garching and Greifswald, the Institute for Astrophysics at Garching, and the Institute for Solar System Research at Lindau).
The major research goal of the center is to harness the expertise and resources of both the fusion and astrophysical plasma communities to tackle fundamental problems that impede progress in both communities. Such problems include understanding the process of magnetic reconnection, the generation and transport of energetic (superthermal) particles in collisionless shocks, and the generation and dissipation of turbulence in magnetized plasmas. Research conducted at the center will advance our understanding in many areas of theoretical plasma astrophysics, fusion physics, basic plasma experiments, and tokamaks.
More broadly, the joint center will foster interdisciplinary collaboration between the plasma and astrophysics communities, both nationally and internationally. It will forge new collaborations between Universities, the national fusion labs, and international partners. It will leverage the tools and expertise developed independently in both communities (for example, laboratory experiments and sophisticated computer codes) in order to address fundamental research questions. It will provide international research collaboration opportunities for postdocs, graduate, and undergraduate students, and provide opportunities for students and teachers at high-schools, local, and regional institutions to engage in scientific inquiry in ways that enhance their understanding of science concepts and scientific ways of thinking through a well established outreach program at PPPL.
This award has been designated as a Science Across Virtual Institutes (SAVI) award and is being co-funded by NSF's Office of International Science and Engineering.
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0.951 |
2013 — 2017 |
Stone, James [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Collaborative Research: Black Hole Accretion Theory and Computation Network
This project will create a Theoretical and Computational Astrophysics Network with major nodes at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, the University of California at Berkeley, and Princeton University, to advance the theory of black hole accretion and outflows. Accretion of matter onto black holes is central to many astrophysical and gravitational phenomena, but current theory lacks self-consistent models both for high accretion rate flows where radiation forces are important, and for low accretion rate flows where collisionless plasma effects are important. The network team brings together expertise in high performance computing techniques, astrophysics, and plasma physics in order to address this need. The team will develop a general relativistic, radiation magnetohydrodynamics code to study luminous accreting black holes, and a multi-fluid relativistic magnetohydrodynamics code with anisotropic electron and ion pressures, conduction, viscosity, and radiative heating and cooling to study slowly accreting systems. These new codes will be used to address fundamental questions about the structure and observational appearance of the inner accretion disk as well as the origin and maintenance of the large-scale magnetic fields believed to power relativistic jets, and then will be made publicly available to the research community. The network will contribute to scientific workforce development by supporting the work of undergraduate students, graduate students, and postdocs; and a program of visualizations, released on the internet, will help communicate the excitement of black hole astrophysics to the scientific community and to the broader public.
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0.951 |
2013 — 2017 |
Stone, James [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Mhd Models of Accretion Disks in Close Binaries
The goal of this proposal is to apply magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) modeling tools to the study of interacting close binary systems such as cataclysmic variables (CVs), with the complementary goal of improving the understanding of magneto-rotational instability in accretion disks. While observations of CVs have provided a wealth of constraints on physical models of accretion, advanced MHD models have yet to be applied to the study of the disks in these systems.
The project will compare results from the numerical simulations of the disks around close binary star systems to observational data in order to further constrain disk parameters such as physical disk size, angular momentum transport, and global disk features (i.e. spiral shocks, hot spots, etc.). The project will also contribute to scientific workforce development through the involvement of undergraduate and graduate students. The project will communicate results to the public through the development of animations and visualizations of the close binary disk models made available via the web.
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0.951 |
2013 — 2016 |
Kunza, Lisa Kerk, Carter Stone, James Hong, Haiping Sinden, Richard Christopher, Lew |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Mri: Acquisition of a High Resolution Liquid Chromatograph Coupled to a High Resolution and High Mass Accuracy Ion Trap Time of Flight Mass Spectrometer @ South Dakota School of Mines and Technology
1338167 Christopher
This proposal is for acquisition of a Shimadzu Nexera High Resolution Liquid Chromatograph Coupled to a Shimadzu Quadrupole Ion Trap Time-Of-Flight Mass Spectrometer (LCMS-IT-TOF?). This state of the art equipment is a critical asset for advanced research that will maximize the integration of research and education and accelerate progress in the areas of Energy and Environment and Materials and Manufacturing -two of the top priorities for research and development at SDSM&T. The instrument will fill a critical gap in research infrastructure and capabilities at SDSM&T as there is currently no such instrument on campus. Similar LC/MS systems are available at the South Dakota State University in Brookings and University of South Dakota in Vermillion, which are both approximately 400 miles away from Rapid City. The proposed equipment will serve a large number of departments and individual users across campus and will be a critical asset for accurate molecular mass measurements, reaction monitoring, identification and quantitation of impurities and target compounds in complex chemical and biological systems, rapid screening of small and large molecules, proteomics research for amino acid sequencing, structural analysis and quantitation of enzymes, etc. The LC/MS system will be used for research in a number of disciplines on campus such as chemistry, chemical engineering, bio/geo/chemistry, bioprocessing, microbiology, molecular and applied biology, ecosystems, environmental sciences and engineering, and materials engineering.
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0.907 |
2015 — 2018 |
Stone, James [⬀] Prager, Stewart (co-PI) [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
A Max-Planck/Princeton Research Center For Plasma Physics
Over 99% of the visible matter in the Universe is a plasma, that is a dilute gas of ions, electrons, and neutral particles. Despite their ubiquity, many fundamental and important physical processes which control the dynamics of plasmas remain poorly understood. In turn, this limits our ability to intepret diverse phenomena in space such as accretion onto black holes at the centers of galaxies or the interaction of the solar wind with the upper layers of the Earth?s atmosphere, and it also impacts our ability to engineer and operate experiments on Earth such as magnetically confined fusion devices. The Max-Panck/Princeton Center for Plasma Physics (MPPC) was established as a joint venture of the Max Planck Society (MPS) in Germany and Princeton University in order to forge new collaborations between Universities, the national plasma labs, and international partners in order to tackle some of the most pressing problems in plasma dynamics. The center fosters interdisciplinary collaboration between the plasma and astrophysics communities, as well as international collaboration between these communities in the US, Germany, and elsewhere. It serves to train the next generation of plasma scientists in experimental science, computation, and theory, and its international scope provides unique training for early career scientists, particularly valuable as plasma and fusion science become increasingly international. Finally, the center provides opportunities for the public, as well as students and teachers at public schools, local, and regional institutions to engage in scientific inquiry in ways that enhance their understanding of science concepts and scientific ways of thinking through a well established outreach program at the Princeton Plasma Physics Lab.
The MPPC focuses its effort studying four key topics: magnetic reconnection, acceleration and propagation of non-thermal particles, the properties of plasma turbulence, and magnetohydrodynamic processes in astrophysical plasmas such as the magneto-rotational instability. Uniquely, it leverages international expertise and resources such as experimental facilities and computational methods to lead new studies in theoretical, experimental, and computational plasma physics. The US program concentrates strongly on postdoctoral researchers, who work with senior researchers supported by existing funds. While the postdoc program is the engine that drives research in the center, there are a number of ways in which each participating organization has fused together as a center, for example (1) joint mentoring of postdocs, (2) exchange visits of senior members, (3) joint experiments, (4) joint code development and validation, (5) fostering collaborations across the entire US and German plasma and astrophysics communities, and (6) annual meetings of the center as a whole, and more frequent topical workshops for the community. For example, the MPPC will host a summer school in computational plasma physics at Princeton University within the current period of funding.
This project is jointly funded by NSF's Divisions of Physics and Astronomy (Mathematical & Physicsal Sciences Directorate), and the Office of International Science and Engineering.
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0.951 |
2015 — 2017 |
Khan, Eakalak (co-PI) [⬀] Pattabiraman, Mahesh (co-PI) [⬀] Clay, David (co-PI) [⬀] Koodali, Ranjit Stone, James |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Few: a Sustainable Rural Framework Workshop For the Upper Great Plains. @ South Dakota School of Mines and Technology
South Dakota School of Mines and Technology (working in collaboration with South Dakota State University, University of Nebraska-Kearney, North Dakota State University and Sitting Bull College) will host a workshop to explore sustainable rural supply chain problems and Food-energy-water nexus research needs in the semi-arid Upper Great Plains. The workshop will 1) present key recent research synopses by leading experts in food, water, energy, land-use and climate; 2) identify critical FEW research needs in the UGP using strategy-based discussion groups during the conference; 3) summarize research needs into a white paper.
South Dakota School of Mines and Technology (working in collaboration with South Dakota State University, University of Nebraska-Kearney, North Dakota State University and Sitting Bull College) will host a Food-Energy-Water (FEW) Nexus workshop to explore sustainable rural supply chain problems research needs. The semi-arid Upper Great Plains UGP is a net exporter of food and energy, yet it is also the site of competing nexus interests: the Bakken shale-oil boom, corn grain ethanol production, in-situ uranium mining, coal mines, wind farms, and major hydroelectric dams compete with public and private interests in relation to land-use alternatives. Large and volatile changes in agricultural commodity and livestock prices, competing land-use for incoming bioenergy crops, increasing agricultural efficiencies through biotechnology and precision agriculture; and regional effects of climate trends and variabilities have impacted regional agriculture and water resources. Recent energy and commodity end-use developments have led to substantial regional economic growth; however it has strained infrastructure (e.g. lack of housing, power transmission, pipelines, roads/rail lines), contributed to grassland to cropland conversion, resulted in soil salinization and sodification, and reduced ground water supplies. The workshop will 1) present key recent research synopses by leading experts in food, water, energy, land-use and climate; 2) identify critical FEW research needs in the UGP using strategy-based discussion groups during the conference; 3) summarize research needs into a white paper.
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0.907 |
2017 — 2020 |
Stone, James [⬀] Kunz, Matthew (co-PI) [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Collaborative Research: Predicting the Observational Signatures of Accreting Black Holes
Since black holes (BH) are by definition invisible, the only way that astronomers can detect them is by observing material accreting onto (or falling into) the black hole. Given the strong gravity, intense radiation and powerful magnetic fields near black holes, it is not surprising that such accretion is complex and can only be understood by running sophisticated numerical models on supercomputers. A research collaboration between the University of Illinois, Princeton University and the University of California-Berkeley will model the behavior of BH accretion in the realm intermediate between strong and weak accretion, when interesting effects such as jets of outflowing material and unusual oscillations in the accretion are known to take place. This work will help to unravel mysteries related to black holes, such as how the jets form and how the structure of the accretion flow changes over time. The team will communicate the excitement of black-hole astrophysics to the public through lectures and visualizations, and to future generations of students through a black hole summer school.
The theory of black-hole (BH) accretion and outflows is central to many areas of modern astrophysics and gravitational physics. The collaboration team has developed numerical techniques that permit nearly ab initio modeling of black-hole accretion in both the high- and low-accretion-rate limits. The team plans to develop new numerical techniques and codes suitable for studying the difficult, intermediate-accretion-rate regime, which is associated with jets, quasi-periodic oscillations, and state transitions around stellar-mass black holes. Additions to the models include radiation forces, pair production and transport, nonthermal particle production and transport, and collisionless plasma effects, all of which are critical for making progress on long-standing problems in black-hole astrophysics, such as the structure and observational appearance (spectrum, time variability, polarization) of accretion at intermediate accretion rates, as well as questions about the origin and maintenance of large-scale magnetic fields believed to power relativistic jets from such systems. The group will make their new codes available for others to use through public releases.
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0.951 |
2018 — 2021 |
Spitkovsky, Anatoly (co-PI) [⬀] Bhattacharjee, Amitava (co-PI) [⬀] Stone, James [⬀] |
N/AActivity Code Description: No activity code was retrieved: click on the grant title for more information |
Max-Planck-Princeton Center For Plasma Physics: a Collaboration in Plasma Astrophysics
Most of the visible matter in the Universe is a plasma, that is a dilute gas of ions, electrons, and neutral particles. Many fundamental and important physical processes that occur in plasmas remain poorly understood. This, in turn, limits our ability to understand diverse phenomena in space such as how stars form or how the particles flowing from the Sun affect the upper layers of the Earth's atmosphere. It also impacts our ability to engineer and operate experiments on Earth such as magnetically confined fusion devices. The Max-Panck Princeton Center for Plasma Physics (MPPC) was established as a joint venture of the Max Planck Society in Germany, Princeton University, and the Department of Energy's Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) in order to forge new collaborations between Universities, the national plasma labs, and international partners in order to investigate some of the most pressing problems in plasma physics. By supporting students and early career scientists, the MPPC serves to train the next generation of experimental, computational, and theoretical plasma physicists, and its international scope provides unique training for early career scientists. The center provides unique opportunities for the public, as well as students and teachers at public and regional schools, to engage in scientific inquiry in ways that enhance their understanding of science concepts and scientific ways of thinking through a well established outreach program at PPPL.
The MPPC effort at Princeton University is focused on three cross-cutting problems in plasma astrophysics: cosmic ray transport and feedback, the interplay between turbulence and reconnection, and dynamo action in accretion disks, stellar convection, and galaxies. New fluid closure models for cosmic rays will be developed and applied to models of the interstellar medium in galaxies to understand the role of cosmic-ray feedback on galaxy formation. New theoretical and computational studies of magnetic field amplification by dynamo action driven by the magneto-rotational instability in accretion disks, and convection in rotating stars, will be undertaken. Using new computational tools developed by members of the MPPC, new studies of plasma turbulence in the kinetic regime, relevant to conditions in the solar wind, will be developed. The Center fosters interdisciplinary collaboration between the plasma and astrophysics communities, as well as international collaboration between these communities in the US, Germany, and elsewhere. Its international scope provides unique training for graduate students and postdocs. This award provides renewed support for Princeton University's participation in MPPC, with support for PPPL's participation provided by the Department of Energy.
This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.
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0.951 |