344,364 research outputs found
Contactless pellet fabrication
A small object is coated by holding it in the pressure well of an acoustic standing wave pattern, and then applying a mist of liquid coating material at low velocity into the pressure well. The pressure gradient within the well forces the mist particles to be pushed against the object. A lower frequency acoustic wave also can be applied to the coated object, to vibrate it so as to evenly distribute the coated material. The same lower frequency vibrations can be applied to an object in the shape of a hollow sphere, to center the inner and outer surfaces of the sphere while it remains suspended
Apparatus for production of ultrapure amorphous metals utilizing acoustic cooling
Amorphous metals are produced by forming a molten unit of metal and deploying the unit into a bidirectional acoustical levitating field or by dropping the unit through a spheroidizing zone, a slow quenching zone, and a fast quenching zone in which the sphere is rapidly cooled by a bidirectional jet stream created in the standing acoustic wave field produced between a half cylindrical acoustic driver and a focal reflector or a curved driver and a reflector. The cooling rate can be further augmented first by a cryogenic liquid collar and secondly by a cryogenic liquid jacket surrounding a drop tower. The molten unit is quenched to an amorphous solid which can survive impact in a unit collector or is retrieved by a vacuum chuck
On image segmentation using information theoretic criteria
Image segmentation is a long-studied and important problem in image
processing. Different solutions have been proposed, many of which follow the
information theoretic paradigm. While these information theoretic segmentation
methods often produce excellent empirical results, their theoretical properties
are still largely unknown. The main goal of this paper is to conduct a rigorous
theoretical study into the statistical consistency properties of such methods.
To be more specific, this paper investigates if these methods can accurately
recover the true number of segments together with their true boundaries in the
image as the number of pixels tends to infinity. Our theoretical results show
that both the Bayesian information criterion (BIC) and the minimum description
length (MDL) principle can be applied to derive statistically consistent
segmentation methods, while the same is not true for the Akaike information
criterion (AIC). Numerical experiments were conducted to illustrate and support
our theoretical findings.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/11-AOS925 the Annals of
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Penguin diagrams for improved staggered fermions
We calculate, at the one loop level, penguin diagrams for improved staggered
fermion operators constructed using various fat links. The main result is that
diagonal mixing coefficients with penguin operators are identical between the
unimproved operators and the improved operators using such fat links as Fat7,
Fat7+Lepage, , HYP (I) and HYP (II). In addition, it turns out
that the off-diagonal mixing vanishes for those constructed using fat links of
Fat7, and HYP (II). This is a consequence of the the fact that
the improvement by various fat links changes only the mixing with higher
dimension operators and off-diagonal operators. The results of this paper,
combined with those for current-current diagrams, provide the complete matching
at the one loop level with all corrections of included.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
An economical vent cover
Inexpensive formed-plastic vent cover has been developed that allows controlled purge of vent systems and also provides blowout protection. Cover can also be used in relief mode to allow normal system relief flows without disengaging from vent system. Cover consists of two parts made of plastics with varying densities to fit media used and desired pressures
Acoustic suspension system
An acoustic levitation system is described, with single acoustic source and a small reflector to stably levitate a small object while the object is processed as by coating or heating it. The system includes a concave acoustic source which has locations on opposite sides of its axis that vibrate towards and away from a focal point to generate a converging acoustic field. A small reflector is located near the focal point, and preferably slightly beyond it, to create an intense acoustic field that stably supports a small object near the reflector. The reflector is located about one-half wavelength from the focal point and is concavely curved to a radius of curvature (L) of about one-half the wavelength, to stably support an object one-quarter wavelength (N) from the reflector
Pattern formation with trapped ions
Ion traps are a versatile tool to study nonequilibrium statistical physics,
due to the tunability of dissipation and nonlinearity. We propose an experiment
with a chain of trapped ions, where dissipation is provided by laser heating
and cooling, while nonlinearity is provided by trap anharmonicity and beam
shaping. The collective dynamics are governed by an equation similar to the
complex Ginzburg-Landau equation, except that the reactive nature of the
coupling leads to qualitatively different behavior. The system has the unusual
feature of being both oscillatory and excitable at the same time. We account
for noise from spontaneous emission and find that the patterns are observable
for realistic experimental parameters. Our scheme also allows controllable
experiments with noise and quenched disorder.Comment: 4 pages + appendi
Micro Balloon Actuators for Aerodynamic Control
A robust, large-force, large-deflection micro balloon actuator for aerodynamic (manoeuvring) control of transonic aircraft has been developed. Using a novel process, high yield linear arrays of silicone balloons on a robust silicon substrate have been fabricated that can deflect vertically in excess of one mm. Balloon actuators have been tested under cyclic conditions to assess reliability. The actuators have been characterized in a wind tunnel to assess their suitability as aerodynamic control surfaces and flight-tested on a jet fighter to assess their resistance to varied temperatures and pressures at high velocity
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