12,790 research outputs found
State-plane trajectories used to observe and control the behavior of a voltage step-up dc-to-dc converter
State-plane analysis techniques are employed to study the voltage step up energy storage dc-to-dc converter. Within this framework, an example converter operating under the influence of a constant on time and a constant frequency controller is examined. Qualitative insight gained through this approach is used to develop a conceptual free running control law for the voltage step up converter which can achieve steady state operation in one on/off cycle of control. Digital computer simulation data is presented to illustrate and verify the theoretical discussions presented
ANISAP: A three-dimensional finite element program for laminated composites subjected to mechanical loading
ANISAP is a 3-D finite element FORTRAN 77 computer code for linear elastic, small strain, analysis of laminated composites with arbitrary geometry including free edges and holes. Individual layers may be isotropic or transversely isotropic in material principal coordinates; individual layers may be rotated off-axis about a global z-axis. The laminate may be a hybrid. Three different isoparametric elements, variable order of gaussian integration, calculation of stresses at element boundaries, and loading by either nodal displacement of forces are included in the program capability. Post processing capability includes failure analysis using the tensor polynominal failure criterion
Finite momentum condensation in a pumped microcavity
We calculate the absorption spectra of a semiconductor microcavity into which
a non-equilibrium exciton population has been pumped. We predict strong peaks
in the spectrum corresponding to collective modes analogous to the Cooper modes
in superconductors and fermionic atomic gases. These modes can become unstable,
leading to the formation of off-equilibrium quantum condensates. We calculate a
phase diagram for condensation, and show that the dominant instabilities can be
at a finite momentum. Thus we predict the formation of inhomogeneous
condensates, similar to Fulde-Ferrel-Larkin-Ovchinnikov states.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, updated to accepted versio
Effects Of The Ionosphere On Ground-Based Detection Of The Global 21 CM Signal From The Cosmic Dawn And The Dark Ages
Detection of the global HI 21 cm signal from Cosmic Dawn and Epoch of
Reionization is the key science driver for several ongoing ground-based and
future ground/space-based experiments. The crucial spectral features in the
global 21 cm signal (turning points) occur at low radio frequencies <100 MHz.
In addition to the human-generated RFI, Earth's ionosphere drastically corrupts
low-frequency radio observations from the ground. In this paper, we examine the
effects of time-varying ionospheric refraction, absorption and thermal emission
at these low radio frequencies and their combined effect on any ground-based
global 21 cm experiment. It should be noted that this is the first study of the
effect of a dynamic ionosphere on global 21 cm experiments. The fluctuations in
the ionosphere are influenced by solar activity with flicker noise
characteristics. The same characteristics are reflected in the ionospheric
corruption to any radio signal passing through the ionosphere. As a result, any
ground based observations of the faint global 21 cm signal are corrupted by
flicker noise (or "" noise, where "" is the dynamical frequency) which
scales as (where is the frequency of observation) in the
presence of a bright galactic foreground (, where is
radio spectral index). Hence, the calibration of the ionosphere for any such
experiment is critical. Any attempt to calibrate the ionospheric effects will
be subject to the inaccuracies in the current ionospheric measurements using
GPS ionospheric measurements, riometer measurements, ionospheric soundings,
etc. Even considering an optimistic improvement in the accuracy of GPS-TEC
(Total Electron Content) measurements, we conclude that the detection of the
global 21 cm signal below 100 MHz is best done from above the Earth's
atmosphere in orbit of the Moon.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures. Submitted to The Astrophysical Journal. This is
an updated version after addressing the comments from the refere
A digital computer simulation and study of a direct-energy-transfer power-conditioning system
A digital computer simulation technique, which can be used to study such composite power-conditioning systems, was applied to a spacecraft direct-energy-transfer power-processing system. The results obtained duplicate actual system performance with considerable accuracy. The validity of the approach and its usefulness in studying various aspects of system performance such as steady-state characteristics and transient responses to severely varying operating conditions are demonstrated experimentally
Friction and Molecular Deformation in the Tensile Regime
Recent molecular level studies of energy dissipation in sliding friction have suggested a contribution from adhesive forces. In order to observe this directly, we have constructed a scanning force microscope with decoupled lateral and normal force sensors to simultaneously observe the onset of both friction and attractive forces. Measurements made on self-assembling alkanethiol films with chemically different tail groups show that friction can increase with stronger adhesive intermolecular forces and from the associated tensile deformation and collective motion of the thiol chains
Evidence for Non-Hydrostatic Gas from the Cluster X-ray to Lensing Mass Ratio
Using a uniform analysis procedure, we measure spatially resolved weak
gravitational lensing and hydrostatic X-ray masses for a sample of 18 clusters
of galaxies. We find a radial trend in the X-ray to lensing mass ratio: at
r2500 we obtain a ratio MX/ML=1.03+/-0.07 which decreases to MX/ML=0.78+/-0.09
at r500. This difference is significant at 3 sigma once we account for
correlations between the measurements. We show that correcting the lensing mass
for excess correlated structure outside the virial radius slightly reduces, but
does not eliminate this trend. An X-ray mass underestimate, perhaps due to
nonthermal pressure support, can explain the residual trend. The trend is not
correlated with the presence or absence of a cool core. We also examine the
cluster gas fraction and find no correlation with ML, an important result for
techniques that aim to determine cosmological parameters using the gas
fraction.Comment: 8 pages, minor modifications, accepted for publication in MNRA
Determining the phonon DOS from specific heat measurements via maximum entropy methods
The maximum entropy and reverse Monte-Carlo methods are applied to the
computation of the phonon density of states (DOS) from heat capacity data. The
approach is introduced and the formalism is described. Simulated data is used
to test the method, and its sensitivity to noise. Heat capacity measurements
from diamond are used to demonstrate the use of the method with experimental
data. Comparison between maximum entropy and reverse Monte-Carlo results shows
the form of the entropy used here is correct, and that results are stable and
reliable. Major features of the DOS are picked out, and acoustic and optical
phonons can be treated with the same approach. The treatment set out in this
paper provides a cost-effective and reliable method for studies of the phonon
properties of materials.Comment: Reprint to improve access. 10 pages, 6 figure
Dark Ages Radio Explorer Mission: Probing the Cosmic Dawn
The period between the creation of the cosmic microwave background at a
redshift of ~1000 and the formation of the first stars and black holes that
re-ionize the intergalactic medium at redshifts of 10-20 is currently
unobservable. The baryonic component of the universe during this period is
almost entirely neutral hydrogen, which falls into local regions of higher dark
matter density. This seeds the formation of large-scale structures including
the cosmic web that we see today in the filamentary distribution of galaxies
and clusters of galaxies. The only detectable signal from these dark ages is
the 21-cm spectral line of hydrogen, redshifted down to frequencies of
approximately 10-100 MHz. Space-based observations of this signal will allow us
to determine the formation epoch and physics of the first sources of ionizing
radiation, and potentially detect evidence for the decay of dark matter
particles. JPL is developing deployable low frequency antenna and receiver
prototypes to enable both all-sky spectral measurements of neutral hydrogen and
ultimately to map the spatial distribution of the signal as a function of
redshift. Such observations must be done from space because of Earth's
ionosphere and ubiquitous radio interference. A specific application of these
technologies is the Dark Ages Radio Explorer (DARE) mission. This small
Explorer class mission is designed to measure the sky-averaged hydrogen signal
from the shielded region above the far side of the Moon. These data will
complement ground-based radio observations of the final stages of intergalactic
re-ionization at higher frequencies. DARE will also serve as a scientific
percursor for space-based interferometry missions to image the distribution of
hydrogen during the cosmic dark ages.Comment: 2015 IEEE Aerospace Conferenc
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