Reliable prediction of rocket injector flows introduces significant challenges associated with the complex physics involving recirculation, turbulence, scalar mixing, chemical reactions and wall heat transfer. This work is aimed at assessing the importance of turbulence-chemistry interaction and non-equilibrium effects in experimentally characterized single and multi-element injector flows. By examining the different chemistry models (laminar finite rate, assumed PDF with either flamelet or equilibrium assumption), it was found that for both cases investigated, chemical nonequilibrium is insignificant while substantial turbulence-chemistry interaction is observed. A zonal wall treatment was developed based on a blend of SST low-Re turbulence wall treatment and lawof-the-wall, showing improved predictive capability. A heat flux extraction method was also proposed to estimate heat flux results from adiabatic flamelet model under the consideration that wall heat loss is small compared to the overall energy generated by chemical reactions. Nomenclature
We present the long-term analysis of GS 1826-238, a neutron star X-ray binary known as the Clocked Burster, using data from NuSTAR StrayCats. StrayCats, a catalog of NuSTAR stray light data, contains data from bright, off-axis X-ray sources that have not been focused by the NuSTAR optics. We obtained stray light observations of the source from 2014–2021, reduced and analyzed the data using nustar-gen-utils Python tools, demonstrating the transition of the source from the island atoll state to a banana branch. We also present the light-curve analysis of Type I X-ray bursts from the Clocked Burster and show that the bursts from the banana/soft state are systematically shorter in duration than those from the island/hard state and have a higher burst fluence. From our analysis, we note an increase in the mass accretion rate of the source, and a decrease in burst frequency with the transition.
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