1,402 research outputs found
Two-Time Correlation Functions: Stochastic and Conventional Quantum Mechanics
An investigation of two-time correlation functions is reported within the
framework of (i) Stochastic Quantum Mechanics and (ii) conventional
Heisenberg-Schr\"odinger Quantum Mechanics. The spectral functions associated
with the two-time electric dipole correlation functions are worked out in
detail for the case of the hydrogen atom. While the single time averages are
identical for stochastic and conventional quantum mechanics, differences arise
in the two approaches for multiple time correlation functions.Comment: Version published by the Eur. Phys. J. B. Few references added. Minor
typos correcte
Impact of internal bremsstrahlung on the detection of gamma-rays from neutralinos
We present a detailed study of the effect of internal bremsstrahlung photons
in the context of the minimal supersymmetric standard models and their impact
on gamma-ray dark matter annihilation searches. We find that although this
effect has to be included for the correct evaluation of fluxes of high energy
photons from neutralino annihilation, its contribution is relevant only in
models and at energies where the lines contribution is dominant over the
secondary photons. Therefore, we find that the most optimistic supersymmetric
scenarios for dark matter detection do not change significantly when including
the internal bremsstrahlung. As an example, we review the gamma-ray dark matter
detection prospects of the Draco dwarf spheroidal galaxy for the MAGIC
stereoscopic system and the CTA project. Though the flux of high energy photons
is enhanced by an order of magnitude in some regions of the parameter space,
the expected fluxes are still much below the sensitivity of the instruments.Comment: 5 pages, twocolumn format, 3 figures:3 references added, accepted as
Brief Report in PR
Application of Pulsed Thermography and Post-processing Techniques for CFRP Industrial Components
AbstractSeveral studies demonstrate the effectiveness of pulsed thermography for detection and visualization of sub-superficial flaws in composites. Continuous improvement of thermal data manipulation makes active thermography an attractive and powerful inspection method for industrial process control and maintenance aims. Therefore, temperature image-processing is the major ongoing challenge in the thermographic research field. However, the particular interest for thermographic inspections is to be more addressed to its simple and relatively fast industrial application; an appropriate image processing tool should be implemented and verified on industrial components, containing manufacturing and in-service defects. In the proposed research, well-established and previously proposed methods were analysed and compared for different defect typology inside three CFRP components. The main goal is not solely focused on establishing the suitable data processing approach, providing detection limits of processed data in terms of damage type, size and distribution. The aim of proposed work is to present detailed examples of thermal imaging methods applied on similar critical defects, evaluating different results among methods in terms of defects mapping capabilities and Tanimoto evaluation criterion, coupled also with the signal-to-noise ratio as assessment of defect detectability
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