2,962 research outputs found
The coupling of a hearing aid loudspeaker membrane to visco-thermal air layers
Hearing aids and their components are becoming smaller. This presents new problems for the acoustical components, such as the loudspeaker. A circular membrane of a hearing aid loudspeaker is modeled in this paper. Neglecting air influences, the membrane and its suspension behave as a mass spring system. However, under operating conditions, thin layers of air on both sides of the membrane influence its behavior. Air can enter and leave these layers at certain locations on the circular edge of the layer. Since these air layers are thin, visco-thermal effects may have to be taken into account. Therefore, the air layers are not modeled by the wave equation, but by the low reduced frequency model that takes these visco-thermal effects into account. The equations of this model are solved in a polar coordinate system, using a wave-based method. The other acoustical parts of the hearing aid loudspeaker, and the membrane itself are modeled by simple lumped models. The emphasis in this paper is on the coupling of the viscothermal air layer model to the mechanical model of the membrane. Coupling of the air layer to other acoustical parts by using an impedance as boundary condition for the layer model, is also described. The resulting model is verified by experiments. The model and the measurements match reasonably well, considering the level of approximation with lumped parts
Anti-shielding Effect and Negative Temperature in Instantaneously Reversed Electric Fields and Left-Handed Media
The connections between the anti-shielding effect, negative absolute
temperature and superluminal light propagation in both the instantaneously
reversed electric field and the left-handed media are considered in the present
paper. The instantaneous inversion of the exterior electric field may cause the
electric dipoles into the state of negative absolute temperature and therefore
give rise to a negative effective mass term of electromagnetic field (i. e.,
the electromagnetic field propagating inside the negative-temperature medium
will acquire an imaginary rest mass), which is said to result in the potential
superluminality effect of light propagation in this anti-shielding dielectric.
In left-handed media, such phenomena may also arise.Comment: 9 pages, Late
First-order thermal correction to the quadratic response tensor and rate for second harmonic plasma emission
Three-wave interactions in plasmas are described, in the framework of kinetic
theory, by the quadratic response tensor (QRT). The cold-plasma QRT is a common
approximation for interactions between three fast waves. Here, the first-order
thermal correction (FOTC) to the cold-plasma QRT is derived for interactions
between three fast waves in a warm unmagnetized collisionless plasma, whose
particles have an arbitrary isotropic distribution function. The FOTC to the
cold-plasma QRT is shown to depend on the second moment of the distribution
function, the phase speeds of the waves, and the interaction geometry. Previous
calculations of the rate for second harmonic plasma emission (via Langmuir-wave
coalescence) assume the cold-plasma QRT. The FOTC to the cold-plasma QRT is
used here to calculate the FOTC to the second harmonic emission rate, and its
importance is assessed in various physical situations. The FOTC significantly
increases the rate when the ratio of the Langmuir phase speed to the electron
thermal speed is less than about 3.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Physics of Plasma
Non-Maxwellian Proton Velocity Distributions in Nonradiative Shocks
The Balmer line profiles of nonradiative supernova remnant shocks provide the
means to measure the post-shock proton velocity distribution. While most
analyses assume a Maxwellian velocity distribution, this is unlikely to be
correct. In particular, neutral atoms that pass through the shock and become
ionized downstream form a nonthermal distribution similar to that of pickup
ions in the solar wind. We predict the H alpha line profiles from the
combination of pickup protons and the ordinary shocked protons, and we consider
the extent to which this distribution could affect the shock parameters derived
from H alpha profiles. The Maxwellian assumption could lead to an underestimate
of shock speed by up to about 15%. The isotropization of the pickup ion
population generates wave energy, and we find that for the most favorable
parameters this energy could significantly heat the thermal particles.
Sufficiently accurate profiles could constrain the strength and direction of
the magnetic field in the shocked plasma, and we discuss the distortions from a
Gaussian profile to be expected in Tycho's supernova remnant.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
Low-Temperature Properties of Quasi-One-Dimensional Molecule-Based Ferromagnets
Quantum and thermal behaviors of low-dimensional mixed-spin systems are
investigated with particular emphasis on the design of molecule-based
ferromagnets. One can obtain a molecular ferromagnet by assembling molecular
bricks so as to construct a low-dimensional system with a magnetic ground state
and then coupling the chains or the layers again in a ferromagnetic fashion.
Two of thus-constructed quasi-one-dimensional bimetallic compounds are
qualitatively viewed within the spin-wave treatment, one of which successfully
grows into a bulk magnet, while the other of which ends in a singlet ground
state. Then, concentrating on the ferrimagnetic arrangement on a two-leg ladder
which is well indicative of general coupled-chain ferrimagnets, we develop the
spin-wave theory and fully reveal its low-energy structure. We inquire further
into the ferromagnetic aspect of the ferrimagnetic ladder numerically
calculating the sublattice magnetization and the magnetic susceptibility. There
exists a moderate coupling strength between the chains in order to obtain the
most ferromagnetic ferrimagnet.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures embedded, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn.
Vol.70, No.5 (2001
Vlasov-Maxwell, self-consistent electromagnetic wave emission simulations in the solar corona
1.5D Vlasov-Maxwell simulations are employed to model electromagnetic
emission generation in a fully self-consistent plasma kinetic model for the
first time in the solar physics context. The simulations mimic the plasma
emission mechanism and Larmor drift instability in a plasma thread that
connects the Sun to Earth with the spatial scales compressed appropriately. The
effects of spatial density gradients on the generation of electromagnetic
radiation are investigated. It is shown that 1.5D inhomogeneous plasma with a
uniform background magnetic field directed transverse to the density gradient
is aperiodically unstable to Larmor-drift instability. The latter results in a
novel effect of generation of electromagnetic emission at plasma frequency.
When density gradient is removed (i.e. when plasma becomes stable to
Larmor-drift instability) and a density, super-thermal, hot beam is
injected along the domain, in the direction perpendicular to the magnetic
field, plasma emission mechanism generates non-escaping Langmuir type
oscillations which in turn generate escaping electromagnetic radiation. It is
found that in the spatial location where the beam is injected, the standing
waves, oscillating at the plasma frequency, are excited. These can be used to
interpret the horizontal strips observed in some dynamical spectra. Quasilinear
theory predictions: (i) the electron free streaming and (ii) the beam long
relaxation time, in accord with the analytic expressions, are corroborated via
direct, fully-kinetic simulation. Finally, the interplay of Larmor-drift
instability and plasma emission mechanism is studied by considering
electron beam in the Larmor-drift unstable (inhomogeneous) plasma.
http://www.maths.qmul.ac.uk/~tsiklauri/movie1.mpg *
http://www.maths.qmul.ac.uk/~tsiklauri/movie2.mpg *
http://www.maths.qmul.ac.uk/~tsiklauri/movie3.mpgComment: Solar Physics (in press, the final, accepted version
Time preferences and risk aversion: tests on domain differences
The design and evaluation of environmental policy requires the incorporation of time and risk elements as many environmental outcomes extend over long time periods and involve a large degree of uncertainty. Understanding how individuals discount and evaluate risks with respect to environmental outcomes is a prime component in designing effective environmental policy to address issues of environmental sustainability, such as climate change. Our objective in this study is to investigate whether subjects' time preferences and risk aversion across the monetary domain and the environmental domain differ. Crucially, our experimental design is incentivized: in the monetary domain, time preferences and risk aversion are elicited with real monetary payoffs, whereas in the environmental domain, we elicit time preferences and risk aversion using real (bee-friendly) plants. We find that subjects' time preferences are not significantly different across the monetary and environmental domains. In contrast, subjects' risk aversion is significantly different across the two domains. More specifically, subjects (men and women) exhibit a higher degree of risk aversion in the environmental domain relative to the monetary domain. Finally, we corroborate earlier results, which document that women are more risk averse than men in the monetary domain. We show this finding to, also, hold in the environmental domain
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