173 research outputs found

    Solder Joint Health Monitoring Testbed

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    A method of monitoring the health of selected solder joints, called SJ-BIST, has been developed by Ridgetop Group Inc. under a Small Business Innovative Research (SBIR) contract. The primary goal of this research program is to test and validate this method in a flight environment using realistically seeded faults in selected solder joints. An additional objective is to gather environmental data for future development of physics-based and data-driven prognostics algorithms. A test board is being designed using a Xilinx FPGA. These boards will be tested both in flight and on the ground using a shaker table and an altitude chamber

    Variability in supply and cross-shelf transport of pink shrimp (Farfantepenaeus duorarum) postlarvae into western Florida Bay

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    The variability in the supply of pink shrimp (Farfantepenaeus duorarum) postlarvae and the transport mechanisms of planktonic stages were investigated with field data and simulations of transport. Postlarvae entering the nursery grounds of Florida Bay were collected for three consecutive years at channels that connect the Bay with the Gulf of Mexico, and in channels of the Middle Florida Keys that connect the southeastern margin of the Bay with the Atlantic Ocean. The influx of postlarvae in the Middle Florida Keys was low in magnitude and varied seasonally and among years. In contrast, the greater postlarval influx occurred at the northwestern border of the Bay, where there was a strong seasonal pattern with peaks in influx from July through September each year. Planktonic stages need to travel up to 150 km eastward between spawning grounds (northeast of Dry Tortugas) and nursery grounds (western Florida Bay) in about 30 days, the estimated time of planktonic development for this species. A Lagrangian trajectory model was developed to estimate the drift of planktonic stages across the SW Florida shelf. The model simulated the maximal distance traveled by planktonic stages under various assumptions of behavior. Simulation results indicated that larvae traveling with the instantaneous current and exhibiting a diel behavior travel up to 65 km and 75% of the larvae travel only 30 km. However, the eastward distance traveled increased substantially when a larval response to tides was added to the behavioral variable (distance increased to 200 km and 85% of larvae traveled 150 km). The question is, when during larval development, and where on the shallow SW Florida shelf, does the tidal response become incorporated into the behavior of pink shrimp

    SPDE in Hilbert Space with Locally Monotone Coefficients

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    In this paper we prove the existence and uniqueness of strong solutions for SPDE in Hilbert space with locally monotone coefficients, which is a generalization of the classical result of Krylov and Rozovskii for monotone coefficients. Our main result can be applied to different types of SPDEs such as stochastic reaction-diffusion equations, stochastic Burgers type equation, stochastic 2-D Navier-Stokes equation, stochastic pp-Laplace equation and stochastic porous media equation with some non-monotone perturbations.Comment: 20 pages, add Remark 3.1 for stochastic Burgers equatio

    Final State Interaction Effects on γ\gamma from B→DKB \to D K

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    The implications of a negligible annihilation contribution in B→DKB \to D K decays are reanalyzed and are shown to lead to no new constraints on the weak phase γ\gamma from color-allowed B±→DK±B^{\pm} \to D K^{\pm} decays. A test of negligible annihilation is proposed in B+→D+K0B^+ \to D^+ K^0 (or B+→D+K∗0B^+ \to D^+ K^{*0}), and an application is presented in which γ\gamma can be determined from these processes (or corresponding B→DK∗B \to D K^* decays) supplemented with isospin-related neutral BB decays

    CKM Phases from CP Asymmetries

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    Measuring phases in the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa matrix through CP asymmetries in B decays is a major goal of current and future experiments. Methods based on charge-conjugation and isospin symmetries involve very little theoretical uncertainties, while schemes based on flavor SU(3) involve uncertainties due to SU(3) breaking. Resolving these uncertainties requires further studies involving a dialogue between theory and experiments.Comment: minor corrections, several references added and update

    Semilinear mixed problems on Hilbert complexes and their numerical approximation

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    Arnold, Falk, and Winther recently showed [Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 47 (2010), 281-354] that linear, mixed variational problems, and their numerical approximation by mixed finite element methods, can be studied using the powerful, abstract language of Hilbert complexes. In another recent article [arXiv:1005.4455], we extended the Arnold-Falk-Winther framework by analyzing variational crimes (a la Strang) on Hilbert complexes. In particular, this gave a treatment of finite element exterior calculus on manifolds, generalizing techniques from surface finite element methods and recovering earlier a priori estimates for the Laplace-Beltrami operator on 2- and 3-surfaces, due to Dziuk [Lecture Notes in Math., vol. 1357 (1988), 142-155] and later Demlow [SIAM J. Numer. Anal., 47 (2009), 805-827], as special cases. In the present article, we extend the Hilbert complex framework in a second distinct direction: to the study of semilinear mixed problems. We do this, first, by introducing an operator-theoretic reformulation of the linear mixed problem, so that the semilinear problem can be expressed as an abstract Hammerstein equation. This allows us to obtain, for semilinear problems, a priori solution estimates and error estimates that reduce to the Arnold-Falk-Winther results in the linear case. We also consider the impact of variational crimes, extending the results of our previous article to these semilinear problems. As an immediate application, this new framework allows for mixed finite element methods to be applied to semilinear problems on surfaces.Comment: 22 pages; v2: major revision, particularly sharpening of error estimates in Section

    Growing Up in Civil Rights Richmond: A Community Remembers

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    Published on the occasion of the exhibition Growing Up in Civil Rights Richmond: A Community Remembers, Joel and Lila Harnett Museum of Art, University of Richmond Museums, January 17 to May 10, 2019. Organized by the University of Richmond Museums, the exhibition was developed by Ashley Kistler, independent curator, and Laura Browder, Tyler and Alice Haynes Professor of American Studies, University of Richmond. The exhibition, related programs, and publication are made possible in part with funds from the Louis S. Booth Arts Fund and with support from the University’s Cultural Affairs Committee. The printed exhibition catalogue was made possible in part with support from the Elizabeth Firestone Graham Foundation. Published by University of Richmond Museums, Richmond, Virginia. Edited by N. Elizabeth Schlatter, University of Richmond Museums, and Ashley Kistler, independent curator. Designed by DELANO Creative, Richmond, Virginia Printed by Worth Higgins & Associates Inc., Richmond, Virginia. Cover: Brian Palmer (American, born 1964), Deborah Taylor, Franklin Military Academy (formerly East End High School), 2017, archival inkjet print on paper, 30 x 40 inches, lent courtesy of the artist.https://scholarship.richmond.edu/exhibition-catalogs/1006/thumbnail.jp

    Second order direct CP asymmetry in B_(s) -> X l nu

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    A direct CP asymmetry in inclusive semileptonic B_(s) decays vanishes by CPT to lowest order in weak interactions. Calculating the asymmetry at second order weak interactions in the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa framework we find A_{sl} = (-3.2 \pm 0.9) x 10^{-9}. A maximal asymmetry which is two orders of magnitude larger is estimated in a left-right symmetric model. This quite generic upper bound implies negligible effects on wrong-sign lepton asymmetries in B^0 and B_s decays.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures. A few changes and new references, separate section on decays to wrong-sign leptons; some clarification

    Biscayne Bay commercial pink shrimp, Farfantepenaeus duorarum, fisheries, 1986-2005

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    The Biscayne Bay bait (1986–2005) and food (1989–2005) fisheries for pink shrimp were examined using dealer-reported individual vessel-trip landings data, separated by waterbody code to represent only catches from Biscayne Bay. Annual landings varied little during the 1980’s and early 1990’s, and landings of the bait shrimp fishery exceeded those of the food shrimp fishery. The number of trips and landings in both fisheries increased from the late 1990’s through 2002 and food shrimp landings exceeded landings of bait shrimp; landings in both fisheries decreased sharply in 2003. Landings in both fisheries increased in 2004 and 2005, but the increase in food shrimp landings was stronger. Annual catch per trip was much lower in the bait fishery than the food fishery. Each fishery exploited shrimp of a different size. The bait fishery targeted shrimp less than 19 mm carapace length (CL), whereas the food fishery caught shrimp greater than 19 mm CL. We compared monthly bait shrimp catch per unit of effort (CPUE) from the fishery to an estimate of shrimp density from a fishery-independent sampling effort over a 3-yr period and found a strong statistical relationship with the density estimate lagged by 3 mo. The relationship supported the use of bait shrimp fishery CPUE as an index of abundance in upcoming assessments of the effect of a massive water-management-based ecosystem restoration project on pink shrimp in Biscayne Bay. Project implementation will affect freshwater inflows to the bay and salinity patterns. An abundance index with a lengthy pre-implementation history that can be carried into the operational phase of the restoration project will be invaluable in assessing project effects and protecting an important fishery resource of Biscayne Bay. The bait shrimp fishery can provide a continuing index of shrimp abundance from late 1986 forward

    U-Spin Symmetry in Doubly Cabibbo-Suppressed Charmed Meson Decays

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    We prove a U-spin amplitude triangle relation among doubly Cabibbo-suppressed (DCS) charmed meson decays, D0→K+π−,D0→K0π0D^0\to K^+\pi^-, D^0 \to K^0\pi^0 and Ds+→K0K+D^+_s \to K^0 K^+, congruent to an isospin relation among corresponding Cabibbo-favored (CF) decays. U-spin breaking in relative phases between CF and DCS amplitudes affects time-dependent studies of D^0-\od mixing. Comparison of final state phase patterns in DCS and CF amplitude triangles, which can shed some light on these phases, is carried out in a phenomenological framework incorporating resonance contributions.Comment: Two references updated, to appear in Phys. Lett.
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