14,295 research outputs found
Effects of Vacancies on Properties of Relaxor Ferroelectrics: a First-Principles Study
A first-principles-based model is developed to investigate the influence of
lead vacancies on the properties of relaxor ferroelectric Pb(Sc1/2Nb1/2)O3
(PSN). Lead vacancies generate large, inhomogeneous, electric fields that
reduce barriers between energy minima for different polarization directions.
This naturally explains why relaxors with significant lead vacancy
concentrations have broadened dielectric peaks at lower temperatures, and why
lead vacancies smear properties in the neighborhood of the ferroelectric
transition in PSN. We also reconsider the conventional wisdom that lead
vacancies reduce the magnitude of dielectric response.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur
Investigation of a pulsed electrothermal thruster system
The performance of an ablative wall Pulsed Electrothermal (PET) thruster is accurately characterized on a calibrated thrust stand, using polyethylene propellant. The thruster is tested for four configurations of capillary length and pulse length. The exhaust velocity is determined with twin time-of-flight photodiode stagnation probes, and the ablated mass is measured from the loss over ten shots. Based on the measured thrust impulse and the ablated mass, the specific impulse varies from 1000 to 1750 seconds. The thrust to power varies from .05 N/kW (quasi-steady mode) to .10 N/kW (unsteady mode). The thruster efficiency varies from .56 at 1000 seconds to .42 at 1750 seconds. A conceptual design is presented for a 40 kW PET propulsion system. The point design system performance is .62 system efficiency at 1000 seconds specific impulse. The system's reliability is enhanced by incorporating 20, 20 kW thruster modules which are fired in pairs. The thruster design is non-ablative, and uses water propellant, from a central storage tank, injected through the cathode
Vibrations of closed-shell Lennard-Jones icosahedral and cuboctahedral clusters and their effect on the cluster ground state energy
Vibrational spectra of closed shell Lennard-Jones icosahedral and
cuboctahedral clusters are calculated for shell numbers between 2 and 9.
Evolution of the vibrational density of states with the cluster shell number is
examined and differences between icosahedral and cuboctahedral clusters
described. This enabled a quantum calculation of quantum ground state energies
of the clusters in the quasiharmonic approximation and a comparison of the
differences between the two types of clusters. It is demonstrated that in the
quantum treatment, the closed shell icosahedral clusters binding energies
differ from those of cuboctahedral clusters more than is the case in classical
treatment
Discovery of Bright Variable X-ray Sources in NGC 1569 with Chandra
From the analysis of a ~100 ks Chandra observation of the dwarf starburst
galaxy NGC 1569, we have found that the X-ray point sources, CXOU
043048.1+645050 and CXOU 043048.6+645058, showed significant time variability.
During this observation, the X-ray flux of CXOU 043048.1+645050 increased by 10
times in only 2 x 10^4 s. Since the spectrum in its bright phase was fitted
with a disk blackbody model with kT_in ~0.43 keV and the bolometric luminosity
is L_bol ~10^38 ergs s^-1, this source is an X-ray binary with a stellar mass
black-hole. Since the spectrum in its faint phase was also fitted with a disk
blackbody model, the time variability can be explained by a change of the
accretion rate onto the black hole. The other variable source, CXOU
043048.6+645058, had a flat spectrum with a photon index of ~1.6. This source
may be an X-ray binary with an X-ray luminosity of several x 10^37 ergs s^-1.
In addition, three other weak sources showed possible time variability. Taking
all of the variability into account may suggest an abundant population of
compact X-ray sources in NGC 1569.Comment: 15 pages including 4 Postscript figures; accepted for publication in
ApJ
Unlocking the Keyhole - H2 and PAH emission from molecular clumps in the Keyhole Nebula
To better understand the environment surrounding CO emission clumps in the
Keyhole Nebula, we have made images of the region in H2 1-0 S(1) (2.122 um)
emission and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission at 3.29 um. Our
results show that the H2 and PAH emission regions are morphologically similar,
existing as several clumps, all of which correspond to CO emission clumps and
dark optical features. The emission confirms the existence of photodissociation
regions (PDRs) on the surface of the clumps. By comparing the velocity range of
the CO emission with the optical appearance of the H2 and PAH emission, we
present a model of the Keyhole Nebula in which the most negative velocity
clumps are in front of the ionization region, the clumps at intermediate
velocities are in it, and those which have the least negative velocities are at
the far side. It may be that these clumps, which appear to have been swept up
from molecular gas by the stellar winds from eta Car, are now being over-run by
the ionization region and forming PDRs on their surfaces. These clumps comprise
the last remnants of the ambient molecular cloud around eta Car.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, to be published in MNRA
Covid-19 and lack of linked datasets for care homes
No abstract available
Computable analysis of linear rearrangement optimization
Optimization problems over rearrangement classes arise in various areas such as mathematics, fluid mechanics, biology, and finance. When the generator of the rearrangement class is two-valued, they reduce to shape optimization and free boundary problems which can exhibit intriguing symmetry breaking phenomena. A robust framework is required for computable analysis of these problems. In this paper, as a first step towards such a robust framework, we provide oracle Turing machines that compute the distribution function, decreasing rearrangement, and linear rearrangement optimizers, with respect to functions that are continuous and have no significant flat zones. This assumption on the reference function is necessary, as otherwise, the aforementioned operations may not be computable. We prove that the results can be computed to within any degree of accuracy, conforming to the framework of Type-II Theory of Effectivity
Cutting and Shuffling a Line Segment: Mixing by Interval Exchange Transformations
We present a computational study of finite-time mixing of a line segment by
cutting and shuffling. A family of one-dimensional interval exchange
transformations is constructed as a model system in which to study these types
of mixing processes. Illustrative examples of the mixing behaviors, including
pathological cases that violate the assumptions of the known governing theorems
and lead to poor mixing, are shown. Since the mathematical theory applies as
the number of iterations of the map goes to infinity, we introduce practical
measures of mixing (the percent unmixed and the number of intermaterial
interfaces) that can be computed over given (finite) numbers of iterations. We
find that good mixing can be achieved after a finite number of iterations of a
one-dimensional cutting and shuffling map, even though such a map cannot be
considered chaotic in the usual sense and/or it may not fulfill the conditions
of the ergodic theorems for interval exchange transformations. Specifically,
good shuffling can occur with only six or seven intervals of roughly the same
length, as long as the rearrangement order is an irreducible permutation. This
study has implications for a number of mixing processes in which
discontinuities arise either by construction or due to the underlying physics.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures, ws-ijbc class; accepted for publication in
International Journal of Bifurcation and Chao
Sine-Gordon description of the scaling three-state Potts antiferromagnet on the square lattice
The scaling limit as T->0 of the antiferromagnetic three-state Potts model on
the square lattice is described by the sine-Gordon quantum field theory at a
specific value of the coupling. We show that the correspondence follows
unambigously from an analysis of the sine-Gordon operator space based on
locality, and that the scalar operators carrying solitonic charge play an
essential role in the description of the lattice model. We then evaluate the
correlation functions within the form factor approach and give a number of
universal predictions that can be checked in numerical simulations.Comment: 10 pages, late
Monte Carlo study of the antiferromagnetic three-state Potts model with staggered polarization field on the square lattice
Using the Wang-Landau Monte Carlo method, we study the antiferromagnetic (AF)
three-state Potts model with a staggered polarization field on the square
lattice. We obtain two phase transitions; one belongs to the ferromagnetic
three-state Potts universality class, and the other to the Ising universality
class. The phase diagram obtained is quantitatively consistent with the
transfer matrix calculation. The Ising transition in the large nearest-neighbor
interaction limit has been made clear by the detailed analysis of the energy
density of states.Comment: accepted for publication in J. Phys.
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