787 research outputs found
The 15-meter diameter hoop/column antenna surface control actuator system
The design, development, and implementation status of the Surface Control Actuator System (SCAS) for the Hoop/Column Antenna are described with the primary focus on the design of the mechanical element. The SCAS is an electromechanical system that will automatically adjust the antenna shape by changing the length of control cords. Achieving and maintaining the proper surface shape and smoothness are critical to optimizing the electromagnetic characteristics of the antenna
Surface control system for the 15 meter hoop-column antenna
The 15-meter hoop-column antenna fabricated by the Harris Corporation under contract to the NASA Langley Research Center is described. The antenna is a deployable and restowable structure consisting of a central telescoping column, a 15-meter-diameter folding hoop, and a mesh reflector surface. The hoop is supported and positioned by 48 quartz cords attached to the column above the hoop, and by 24 graphite cords from the base of the antenna column. The RF reflective surface is a gold plated molybdenum wire mesh supported on a graphite cord truss structure which is attached between the hoop and the column. The surface contour is controlled by 96 graphite cords from the antenna base to the rear of the truss assembly. The antenna is actually a quadaperture reflector with each quadrant of the surface mesh shaped to produce an offset parabolic reflector. Results of near-field and structural tests are given. Controls structures and electromagnetics interaction, surface control system requirements, mesh control adjustment, surface control system actuator assembly, surface control system electronics, the system interface unit, and control stations are discussed
Irreducible holonomy algebras of Riemannian supermanifolds
Possible irreducible holonomy algebras \g\subset\osp(p,q|2m) of Riemannian
supermanifolds under the assumption that \g is a direct sum of simple Lie
superalgebras of classical type and possibly of a one-dimensional center are
classified. This generalizes the classical result of Marcel Berger about the
classification of irreducible holonomy algebras of pseudo-Riemannian manifolds.Comment: 27 pages, the final versio
Spin excitations and quantum criticality in the quasi-one-dimensional Ising-like ferromagnet CoCl2·2D2O in a transverse field
On Local Calabi-Yau Supermanifolds and Their Mirrors
We use local mirror symmetry to study a class of local Calabi-Yau
super-manifolds with bosonic sub-variety V_b having a vanishing first Chern
class. Solving the usual super- CY condition, requiring the equality of the
total U(1) gauge charges of bosons \Phi_{b} and the ghost like fields \Psi_{f}
one \sum_{b}q_{b}=\sum_{f}Q_{f}, as \sum_{b}q_{b}=0 and \sum_{f}Q_{f}=0,
several examples are studied and explicit results are given for local A_{r}
super-geometries. A comment on purely fermionic super-CY manifolds
corresponding to the special case where q_{b}=0, \forall b and \sum_{f}Q_{f}=0
is also made.\bigskipComment: 17 page
Whisker touch guides canopy exploration in a nocturnal, arboreal rodent, the Hazel dormouse (Muscardinus avellanarius)
Dormouse numbers are declining in the UK due to habitat loss and fragmentation. We know that dormice are nocturnal, arboreal, and avoid crossing open spaces between habitats, yet how they navigate around their canopy is unknown. As other rodents use whisker touch sensing to navigate and explore their environment, this study investigates whether Hazel dormice (Muscardinus avellanarius) employ their whiskers to cross between habitats. We analysed high-speed video footage of dormice exploring freely in flat and climbing arenas in near darkness and using infrared light illumination. We confirm that, like rats and mice, dormice move their whiskers back and forth continuously (~10 Hz) in a motion called whisking and recruit them to explore small gaps (<10 cm) by increasing the amplitude and frequency of whisking and also the asymmetry of movement between the left and right whisker fields. When gaps between platforms are larger than 10-15 cm dormice spend more time travelling on the floor. These findings suggest that dormice can actively and purposively move their whiskers to gather relevant information from their canopy at night. As this species is vulnerable to threats on the ground, we also provide evidence that joining habitat patches between dormouse populations is important for promoting natural behaviours and movement between patches
't Hooft lines of ADE-type and Topological Quivers
We investigate 4D Chern-Simons theory with ADE gauge symmetries in the
presence of interacting Wilson and 't Hooft line defects. We analyse the
intrinsic properties of these lines' coupling and explicate the building of
oscillator-type Lax matrices verifying the RLL integrability equation. We
propose gauge quiver diagrams Q encoding the topological data
carried by the Lax operators and give several examples where Darboux
coordinates are interpreted in terms of topological bi-fundamental matter. We
exploit this graphical description to give new results
regarding solutions in representations beyond the fundamentals of , and , and to classify the Lax operators
for simply laced symmetries in a unified E CS theory. For quick access, a
summary list of the leading topological quivers Q is given in
the conclusion section [Figures 29.(a-e), 30.(a-d) and 31.(a-d)].Comment: LaTeX, 74 pages, 32 figure
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