26,798 research outputs found
Odd-even staggering in neutron drip line nuclei
We have done systematic Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov calculations in coordinate
space on the one-quasi-particle energies and binding energy odd-even staggering
(OES) in semi-magic nuclei with the zero-range volume, mixed and surface
pairing forces in order to explore the influence of their density dependence.
The odd- isotopes are calculated within the blocking scheme. The strengths
for the pairing forces are determined in two schemes by fitting locally to
reproduce pairing gap in Sn and globally to all available data on the
OES of semi-magic nuclei with . In the former calculations, there is a
noticeable difference between the neutron mean gaps in neutron-rich O, Ca, Ni
and Sn isotopes calculated with the surface pairing and those with the mixed
and volume pairing.
The difference gets much smaller if the globally optimized pairing strengths
are employed. The heavier Pb isotopes show the opposite trend. Moreover, large
differences between the mean gap and the OES may be expected in both
calculations when one goes towards the neutron drip line
Density dependence of the pairing interaction and pairing correlation in unstable nuclei
This work aims at a global assessment of the effect of the density dependence
of the zero-range pairing interaction. Systematic
Skyrme-Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov calculations with the volume, surface and mixed
pairing forces are carried out to study the pairing gaps in even-even nuclei
over the whole nuclear chart. Calculations are also done in coordinate
representation for unstable semi-magic even-even nuclei. The calculated pairing
gaps are compared with empirical values from four different odd-even staggering
formulae. Calculations with the three pairing interactions are comparable for
most nuclei close to -stability line. However, the surface interaction
calculations predict neutron pairing gaps in neutron-rich nuclei that are
significantly stronger than those given by the mixed and volume pairing. On the
other hand, calculations with volume and mixed pairing forces show noticeable
reduction of neutron pairing gaps in nuclei far from the stability.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures, 3 tables, printer-friendl
Poro-Serrated trailing edge devices for airfoil self-noise reduction
This paper represents the continuation of the works previously published in Chong et al. (“Self-Noise Produced by an Airfoil with Nonflat Plate Trailing-Edge Serrations,” AIAA Journal, Vol. 51, No. 11, 2013, pp. 2665–2677), who used several nonflat plate serrated trailing edges for the reduction of airfoil self-noise. The poro-serrated concept developed in the current work improves substantially the overall noise performance of the nonflat plate trailing-edge serration type. The use of porous metal, synthetic foams, or thin brush bundles to fill the gaps between adjacent members of the sawtooth can completely suppress the bluntness-induced vortex shedding tonal noise. Most important, up to 7 dB turbulent boundary layer–trailing-edge broadband noise reduction can simultaneously be achieved without compromising the aerodynamic performances in lift and drag. The poro-serrated trailing edges do not cause any noise increase throughout the frequency range investigated here. The reduction of the turbulent broadband noise is primarily caused by the serration effect, but under a condition that the sawtooth surface must be solid and nonporous. The primary role of the porous metal foams in a poro-serrated trailing edge is to suppress the vortex shedding tonal noise. However, an optimum selection of the porous material is also found to be able to further reduce the broadband noise level. The new serrated trailing-edge concept developed here has the potential to improve the industrial worthiness of the serration technology in achieving low noise radiation in fan and turbine blades.The EPSRC Doctoral Training Grants in the United Kingdo
Hidden Black: Coherent Enhancement of Absorption in Strongly-scattering Media
We show that a weakly absorbing, strongly scattering (white) medium can be
made very strongly absorbing at any frequency within its strong-scattering
bandwidth by optimizing the input electromagnetic field. For uniform
absorption, results from random matrix theory imply that the reflectivity of
the medium can be suppressed by a factor ~(l_a/lN^2), where N is the number of
incident channels and l,l_a are the elastic and absorption mean free paths
respectively. It is thus possible to increase absorption from a few percent to
> 99%. For a localized weak absorber buried in a non-absorbing scattering
medium, we find a large but bounded enhancement.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Bipolar current driver for memory circuits
Circuit which logically determines the state of a flip-flop and amplifies the current from a clock pulse provides a bipolar driving current to a memory circuit, the polarity of which is determined by the state of a flip-flop. This principle may be applied to various memory driving circuits where power dissipation must be minimized
Flipflop interrogator and bi-polar current driver Patent
Interrogator and current driver circuit for combination with transistor flip-flop circui
Correlation properties of interfering electrons in a mesoscopic ring under nonclassical microwave radiation
Original paper can be found at: http://eproceedings.worldscinet.com/ Copyright World Scientific Publishing Co. DOI: 10.1142/9789812704474_0009Interfering electrons in a mesoscopic ring are irradiated with both classical and nonclassical microwaves. The average intensity of the charges is calculated as a function of time and it is found that it depends on the nature of the irradiating electromagnetic field. For various quantum states of the microwaves, the electron autocorrelation function is calculated and it shows that the quantum noise of the external field affects the interference of the charges. Two-mode entangled microwaves are also considered and the results for electron average intensity and autocorrelation are compared with those of the corresponding separable state. In both cases, the results depend on whether the ratio of the two frequencies is rational or irrational.Peer reviewe
Conservation relations and anisotropic transmission resonances in one-dimensional PT-symmetric photonic heterostructures
We analyze the optical properties of one-dimensional (1D) PT-symmetric
structures of arbitrary complexity. These structures violate normal unitarity
(photon flux conservation) but are shown to satisfy generalized unitarity
relations, which relate the elements of the scattering matrix and lead to a
conservation relation in terms of the transmittance and (left and right)
reflectances. One implication of this relation is that there exist anisotropic
transmission resonances in PT-symmetric systems, frequencies at which there is
unit transmission and zero reflection, but only for waves incident from a
single side. The spatial profile of these transmission resonances is symmetric,
and they can occur even at PT-symmetry breaking points. The general
conservation relations can be utilized as an experimental signature of the
presence of PT-symmetry and of PT-symmetry breaking transitions. The uniqueness
of PT-symmetry breaking transitions of the scattering matrix is briefly
discussed by comparing to the corresponding non-Hermitian Hamiltonians.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figure
Self-noise produced by an airfoil with nonflat plate trailing-edge serrations
This paper represents the results of an experimental study aimed at reducing the airfoil self-noise by the trailing edge serration of four different sawtooth geometries (defined in the serration angle and length). These serrations have a common feature: all of the sawtooth patterns are cut directly into the trailing edge of a realistic airfoil. This configuration offers better structural strength and integrity. For the sawtooth trailing edges investigated here, the radiation of the extraneous vortex shedding noise in a narrowband frequency due to the partial bluntness at the serration roots is unavoidable. However, this narrowband component tends to be less significant provided that the serration angle is large and the serration length is moderate. Sound power was measured, and some of the sawtooth geometries have been shown to afford significant boundary-layer instability tonal noise and moderate turbulent broadband noise reductions across a fairly large velocity range. This paper demonstrates that a nonflat plate serrated trailing edge can also be effective in the self-noise reduction. Some experimental results are also presented in order to explain the self-noise mechanisms.This work is partly supported by the Brunel Research Initiative and Enterprise fun
Empirical residual neutron-proton interaction in odd-odd nuclei
Two types of average neutron-proton interaction formulas are compared: In the
first type, neutron-proton interactions for even-even and odd- nuclei
extracted from experimental binding energies show a smooth behavior as a
function of mass number and are dominated by the contribution from the
symmetry energy. Whereas in the second type large systematic staggering is seen
between even- and odd- nuclei. This deviation is understood in term of
the additional neutron-proton interaction in odd-odd nuclei relative to the
neighboring even-even and odd- systems. We explore three possible ways to
extract this additional interaction from the binding energy difference of
neighboring nuclei. The extracted interactions are positive in nearly all cases
and show weak dependence on the mass number. The empirical interactions are
also compared with theoretical values extracted from recent nuclear mass models
where large unexpected fluctuations are seen in certain nuclei. The
reproduction of the residual neutron-proton interaction and the correction of
those irregular fluctuations can be a good criterion for the refinement of
those mass models.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, to appear in PR
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