7,127 research outputs found
Scheduling of material through a steel plant
This paper addresses the optimal scheduling of material in a steel plant. The genetic algorithm is adapted to handle various constraints in the processing mills
Diversity of knot solitons in liquid crystals manifested by linking of preimages in torons and hopfions
Topological solitons are knots in continuous physical fields classified by
non-zero Hopf index values. Despite arising in theories that span many branches
of physics, from elementary particles to condensed matter and cosmology, they
remain experimentally elusive and poorly understood. We introduce a method of
experimental and numerical analysis of such localized structures in liquid
crystals that, similar to the mathematical Hopf maps, relates all points of the
medium's order parameter space to their closed-loop preimages within the
three-dimensional solitons. We uncover a surprisingly large diversity of
naturally occurring and laser-generated topologically nontrivial solitons with
differently knotted nematic fields, which previously have not been realized in
theories and experiments alike. We discuss the implications of the liquid
crystal's non-polar nature on the knot soliton topology and how the medium's
chirality, confinement and elastic anisotropy help to overcome the constrains
of the Hobart-Derrick theorem, yielding static three-dimensional solitons
without or with additional defects. Our findings will establish chiral nematics
as a model system for experimental exploration of topological solitons and may
impinge on understanding of such nonsingular field configurations in other
branches of physics, as well as may lead to technological application
Low cloud investigations for project FIRE: Island studies of cloud properties, surface radiation, and boundary layer dynamics. A simulation of the reflectivity over a stratocumulus cloud deck by the Monte Carlo method
The radiation field over a broken stratocumulus cloud deck is simulated by the Monte Carlo method. We conducted four experiments to investigate the main factor for the observed shortwave reflectively over the FIRE flight 2 leg 5, in which reflectivity decreases almost linearly from the cloud center to cloud edge while the cloud top height and the brightness temperature remain almost constant through out the clouds. From our results, the geometry effect, however, did not contribute significantly to what has been observed. We found that the variation of the volume extinction coefficient as a function of its relative position in the cloud affects the reflectivity efficiently. Additional check of the brightness temperature of each experiment also confirms this conclusion. The cloud microphysical data showed some interesting features. We found that the cloud droplet spectrum is nearly log-normal distributed when the clouds were solid. However, whether the shift of cloud droplet spectrum toward the larger end is not certain. The decrease of number density from cloud center to cloud edges seems to have more significant effects on the optical properties
02-01 "Economic Analysis in Environmental Reviews of Trade Agreements: Assessing the North American Experience"
Beginning in the late 1990s, Canada and the United States began requiring "Environmental Reviews (ERs)" of all trade agreements to be negotiated by each government. This paper, commissioned by the North American Commission for Environmental Cooperation, outlines how ERs have evolved in North America, and evaluates the different methodological approaches that have been employed in ERs thus far. We show that the ERs conducted to date have an encouraging number of strengths that can be built upon. However, we also establish that the art of conducting ERs is still in its infancy. We identify four limitations with the methodological approaches that have been employed in the most recent ERs. Based on an analysis of these limitations, we propose four ways to improve how ERs are conducted in the future:
Status and Outlook for Energy Conversion via Fuel Cells
Fuel cells have the potential of providing good solutions to a variety of energy-related problems. As our supplies of conventional fossil fuels are depleted, their cost will rise, and there will be increasing difficulty in obtaining certain premium fuels at any price. It behooves us, then, to use our remaining reserves of fuels as efficiently as possible. Energy conversion via fuel cells represents one of the best ways to achieve this goal, because it is possible, simultaneously, to obtain more work and less pollution from a dollar\u27s worth of fuel with a fuel cell than with any other device
Time dependent correlations in marine stratocumulus cloud base height records
The scaling ranges of time correlations in the cloud base height records of
marine boundary layer stratocumulus are studied applying the Detrended
Fluctuation Analysis statistical method. We have found that time dependent
variations in the evolution of the exponent reflect the diurnal
dynamics of cloud base height fluctuations in the marine boundary layer. In
general, a more stable structure of the boundary layer corresponds to a lower
value of the - indicator, i.e. larger anti-persistence, thus a set of
fluctuations tending to induce a greater stability of the stratocumulus. In
contrast, during periods of higher instability in the marine boundary, less
anti-persistent (more persistent like) behavior of the system drags it out of
equilibrium, corresponding to larger values. From an analysis of the
frequency spectrum, the stratocumulus base height evolution is found to be a
non-stationary process with stationary increments. The occurrence of these
statistics in cloud base height fluctuations suggests the usefulness of similar
studies for the radiation transfer dynamics modeling.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures; to appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys. C, Vol. 13, No.
2 (2002
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