11,038 research outputs found
Estimation of unsteady aerodynamic forces using pointwise velocity data
A novel method to estimate unsteady aerodynamic force coefficients from
pointwise velocity measurements is presented. The methodology is based on a
resolvent-based reduced-order model which requires the mean flow to obtain
physical flow structures and pointwise measurement to calibrate their
amplitudes. A computationally-affordable time-stepping methodology to obtain
resolvent modes in non-trivial flow domains is introduced and compared to
previous existing matrix-free and matrix-forming strategies. The technique is
applied to the unsteady flow around an inclined square cylinder at low Reynolds
number. The potential of the methodology is demonstrated through good agreement
between the fluctuating pressure distribution on the cylinder and the temporal
evolution of the unsteady lift and drag coefficients predicted by the model and
those computed by direct numerical simulation.Comment: In revie
Dimensions of Grace: Factor Analysis of Three Grace Scales
Measuring grace is challenging. Prior research found the Grace Scale (GS), Richmont Grace Scale (RGS), and The Amazing Grace Scale (TAGS) to be reliable, have promising convergent and divergent validity, and to inter-correlate strongly. However, they may tap different constructs, or grace may be multidimensional (Bufford, Blackburn, Sisemore, & Bassett, 2015). Here two exploratory factor analyses of the combined items showed five factors: experiencing God’s grace, costly grace, grace to self, grace from others, and grace to others, partially paralleling Watson, Chen and Sisemore (2011). Items from all three scales loaded on Factor 1, only items from the RGS loaded on Factor 2. The remaining factors were mostly GS items and a few RGS items. The three scales measure somewhat different constructs. Preliminary validity for the five factors is promising. Regressions showed that combinations of the other four proposed scales accounted for at most about one third of the variance on any given grace factor. The five factors showed different patterns of relationships to criterion variables. We propose a 36 item Dimensions of Grace Scale combining items from all three scales for further exploration
Spin and Orbital Splitting in Ferromagnetic Contacted Single Wall Carbon Nanotube Devices
We observed the coulomb blockade phenomena in ferromagnetic contacting single
wall semiconducting carbon nanotube devices. No obvious Coulomb peaks shift was
observed with existing only the Zeeman splitting at 4K. Combining with other
effects, the ferromagnetic leads prevent the orbital spin states splitting with
magnetic field up to 2 Tesla at 4K. With increasing magnetic field further,
both positive or negative coulomb peaks shift slopes are observed associating
with clockwise and anticlockwise orbital state splitting. The strongly
suppressed/enhanced of the conductance has been observed associating with the
magnetic field induced orbital states splitting/converging
Habitat conversion and global avian biodiversity loss
The magnitude of the impacts of human activities on global biodiversity has been documented at several organizational levels. However, although there have been numerous studies of the effects of local-scale changes in land use (e.g. logging) on the abundance of groups of organisms, broader continental or global-scale analyses addressing the same basic issues remain largely wanting. None the less, changing patterns of land use, associated with the appropriation of increasing proportions of net primary productivity by the human population, seem likely not simply to have reduced the diversity of life, but also to have reduced the carrying capacity of the environment in terms of the numbers of other organisms that it can sustain.
Here, we estimate the size of the existing global breeding bird population, and then make a first approximation as to how much this has been modified as a consequence of land-use changes wrought by human activities. Summing numbers across different land-use classes gives a best current estimate of a global population of less than 100 billion breeding bird individuals. Applying the same methodology to estimates of original land-use distributions suggests that conservatively this may represent a loss of between a fifth and a quarter of pre-agricultural bird numbers. This loss is shared across a range of temperate and tropical land-use types
Singlet-Triplet Physics and Shell Filling in Carbon Nanotube Double Quantum Dots
An artifcial two-atomic molecule, also called a double quantum dot (DQD), is
an ideal system for exploring few electron physics. Spin-entanglement between
just two electrons can be explored in such systems where singlet and triplet
states are accessible. These two spin-states can be regarded as the two states
in a quantum two-state system, a so-called singlet-triplet qubit. A very
attractive material for realizing spin based qubits is the carbon nanotube
(CNT), because it is expected to have a very long spin coherence time. Here we
show the existence of a gate-tunable singlet-triplet qubit in a CNT DQD. We
show that the CNT DQD has clear shell structures of both four and eight
electrons, with the singlet-triplet qubit present in the four-electron shells.
We furthermore observe inelastic cotunneling via the singlet and triplet
states, which we use to probe the splitting between singlet and triplet, in
good agreement with theory.Comment: Supplement available at:
http://www.fys.ku.dk/~hij/public/singlet-triple_supp.pd
High magnetic field studies of the Vortex Lattice structure in YBa2Cu3O7
We report on small angle neutron scattering measurements of the vortex
lattice in twin-free YBa2Cu3O7, extending the previously investigated maximum
field of 11~T up to 16.7~T with the field applied parallel to the c axis. This
is the first microscopic study of vortex matter in this region of the
superconducting phase. We find the high field VL displays a rhombic structure,
with a field-dependent coordination that passes through a square configuration,
and which does not lock-in to a field-independent structure. The VL pinning
reduces with increasing temperature, but is seen to affect the VL correlation
length even above the irreversibility temperature of the lattice structure. At
high field and temperature we observe a melting transition, which appears to be
first order, with no detectable signal from a vortex liquid above the
transition
No Evidence for Orbital Loop Currents in Charge Ordered YBaCuO from Polarized Neutron Diffraction
It has been proposed that the pseudogap state of underdoped cuprate
superconductors may be due to a transition to a phase which has circulating
currents within each unit cell. Here, we use polarized neutron diffraction to
search for the corresponding orbital moments in two samples of underdoped
YBaCuO with doping levels and 0.123. In contrast to
some other reports using polarized neutrons, but in agreement with nuclear
magnetic resonance and muon spin rotation measurements, we find no evidence for
the appearance of magnetic order below 300 K. Thus, our experiment suggests
that such order is not an intrinsic property of high-quality cuprate
superconductor single crystals. Our results provide an upper bound for a
possible orbital loop moment which depends on the pattern of currents within
the unit cell. For example, for the CC- pattern proposed by Varma,
we find that the ordered moment per current loop is less than 0.013 for
.Comment: Comments in arXiv:1710.08173v1 fully addresse
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