21,667 research outputs found
A 100 micro Kelvin bolometer system for SIRTF
Progress toward a prototype of 100 mK bolometric detection system for the Space Infrared Telescope Facility (SIRTF) is described. Two adiabatic demagnetization refrigerators (ADR's) were constructed and used to investigate the capabilities necessary for orbital operation. The first, a laboratory ADR, demonstrated a hold time at 0.1 K of over 12 hours, with temperature stability approx. 3 micro-K RMS achieved by controlling the magnetic field. A durable salt pill and an efficient support system have been demonstrated. A second ADR, the SIRTF flight prototype, has been built and will be flown on a balloon. Techniques for magnetic shielding, low heat leak current leads, and a mechanical heat switch are being developed in this ADR. Plans for construction of 100 mK bolometers are discussed. Three important cosmological investigations which will be carried out by these longest wavelength SIRTF detectors are described
Development of technology for modeling of a 1/8-scale dynamic model of the shuttle Solid Rocket Booster (SRB)
A NASTRAN analysis of the solid rocket booster (SRB) substructure of the space shuttle 1/8-scale structural dynamics model. The NASTRAN finite element modeling capability was first used to formulate a model of a cylinder 10 in. radius by a 200 in. length to investigate the accuracy and adequacy of the proposed grid point spacing. Results were compared with a shell analysis and demonstrated relatively accurate results for NASTRAN for the lower modes, which were of primary interest. A finite element model of the full SRB was then formed using CQUAD2 plate elements containing membrane and bending stiffness and CBAR offset bar elements to represent the longerons and frames. Three layers of three-dimensional CHEXAI elements were used to model the propellant. This model, consisting of 4000 degrees of freedom (DOF) initially, was reduced to 176 DOF using Guyan reduction. The model was then submitted for complex Eigenvalue analysis. After experiencing considerable difficulty with attempts to run the complete model, it was split into two substructres. These were run separately and combined into a single 116 degree of freedom A set which was successfully run. Results are reported
Weak Lensing Determination of the Mass in Galaxy Halos
We detect the weak gravitational lensing distortion of 450,000 background
galaxies (20<R<23) by 790 foreground galaxies (R<18) selected from the Las
Campanas Redshift Survey (LCRS). This is the first detection of weak lensing by
field galaxies of known redshift, and as such permits us to reconstruct the
shear profile of the typical field galaxy halo in absolute physical units
(modulo H_0), and to investigate the dependence of halo mass upon galaxy
luminosity. This is also the first galaxy-galaxy lensing study for which the
calibration errors are negligible. Within a projected radius of 200 \hkpc, the
shear profile is consistent with an isothermal profile with circular velocity
164+-20 km/s for an L* galaxy, consistent with typical disk rotation at this
luminosity. This halo mass normalization, combined with the halo profile
derived by Fischer et al (2000) from lensing analysis SDSS data, places a lower
limit of (2.7+-0.6) x 10^{12}h^{-1} solar masses on the mass of an L* galaxy
halo, in good agreement with satellite galaxy studies. Given the known
luminosity function of LCRS galaxies, and the assumption that for galaxies, we determine that the mass within 260\hkpc of normal
galaxies contributes to the density of the Universe (for
) or for . These lensing data suggest
that (95% CL), only marginally in agreement with the usual
Faber-Jackson or Tully-Fisher scaling. This is the most
complete direct inventory of the matter content of the Universe to date.Comment: 18 pages, incl. 3 figures. Submitted to ApJ 6/7/00, still no response
from the referee after four months
Development of technology for fluid-structure interaction modelling of a 1/8-scale dynamic model of the shuttle External Tank (ET). Volume 2: Supporting data appendixes A through C
For abstract, see N75-21359
Weak gravitational lensing with DEIMOS
We introduce a novel method for weak-lensing measurements, which is based on
a mathematically exact deconvolution of the moments of the apparent brightness
distribution of galaxies from the telescope's PSF. No assumptions on the shape
of the galaxy or the PSF are made. The (de)convolution equations are exact for
unweighted moments only, while in practice a compact weight function needs to
be applied to the noisy images to ensure that the moment measurement yields
significant results. We employ a Gaussian weight function, whose centroid and
ellipticity are iteratively adjusted to match the corresponding quantities of
the source. The change of the moments caused by the application of the weight
function can then be corrected by considering higher-order weighted moments of
the same source. Because of the form of the deconvolution equations, even an
incomplete weighting correction leads to an excellent shear estimation if
galaxies and PSF are measured with a weight function of identical size. We
demonstrate the accuracy and capabilities of this new method in the context of
weak gravitational lensing measurements with a set of specialized tests and
show its competitive performance on the GREAT08 challenge data. A complete C++
implementation of the method can be requested from the authors.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, fixed typo in Eq. 1
Tight-binding study of structure and vibrations of amorphous silicon
We present a tight-binding calculation that, for the first time, accurately
describes the structural, vibrational and elastic properties of amorphous
silicon. We compute the interatomic force constants and find an unphysical
feature of the Stillinger-Weber empirical potential that correlates with a much
noted error in the radial distribution function associated with that potential.
We also find that the intrinsic first peak of the radial distribution function
is asymmetric, contrary to usual assumptions made in the analysis of
diffraction data. We use our results for the normal mode frequencies and
polarization vectors to obtain the zero-point broadening effect on the radial
distribution function, enabling us to directly compare theory and a high
resolution x-ray diffraction experiment
Analytical and experimental investigation of a 1/8-scale dynamic model of the shuttle orbiter. Volume 3A: Supporting data
For abstract, see N75-15681
Applications of BGP-reflection functors: isomorphisms of cluster algebras
Given a symmetrizable generalized Cartan matrix , for any index , one
can define an automorphism associated with of the field of rational functions of independent indeterminates It is an isomorphism between two cluster algebras associated to the
matrix (see section 4 for precise meaning). When is of finite type,
these isomorphisms behave nicely, they are compatible with the BGP-reflection
functors of cluster categories defined in [Z1, Z2] if we identify the
indecomposable objects in the categories with cluster variables of the
corresponding cluster algebras, and they are also compatible with the
"truncated simple reflections" defined in [FZ2, FZ3]. Using the construction of
preprojective or preinjective modules of hereditary algebras by Dlab-Ringel
[DR] and the Coxeter automorphisms (i.e., a product of these isomorphisms), we
construct infinitely many cluster variables for cluster algebras of infinite
type and all cluster variables for finite types.Comment: revised versio
Analytical and experimental investigation of a 1/8-scale dynamic model of the shuttle orbiter. Volume 1: Summary report
A 1/8-scale structural dynamics model of the space shuttle orbiter was analyzed using the NASA Structural Analysis System (NASTRAN). Comparison of the calculated eigenvalues with preliminary test data for the unrestrained condition indicate that the analytical model was consistently stiffer, being about 20% higher in the first mode. The eigenvectors show reasonably good agreement with test data. A series of analytical and experimental investigations undertaken to resolve the discrepancy are described. Modifications in the NASTRAN model based upon these investigations resulted in close agreement for both eigenvalues and eigenvectors
Fast quantum algorithm for numerical gradient estimation
Given a blackbox for f, a smooth real scalar function of d real variables,
one wants to estimate the gradient of f at a given point with n bits of
precision. On a classical computer this requires a minimum of d+1 blackbox
queries, whereas on a quantum computer it requires only one query regardless of
d. The number of bits of precision to which f must be evaluated matches the
classical requirement in the limit of large n.Comment: additional references and minor clarifications and corrections to
version
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