17,572 research outputs found
Use of context-awareness in mobile peer-to-peer networks
Mobile ad-hoc network are an emerging research field due to the potential range of applications that they support and for the problems they present due to their dynamic nature. Peer-to-peer is an example of a class of applications that have recently been deployed on top of ad-hoc networks. In this paper we propose an approach based on context-awareness to allow peer-to-peer applications to exploit information on the underlying network context to achieve better performance and better group organization. Information such as availability of resources, battery power, services in reach and relative distances can be used to improve the routing structures of the peer-to-peer network, thus reducing the routing overhead
Competing magnetic interactions in CeNi9-xCoxGe4
CeNi9Ge4 exhibits outstanding heavy fermion features with remarkable
non-Fermi- liquid behavior which is mainly driven by single-ion effects. The
substitution of Ni by Cu causes a reduction of both, the RKKY coupling and
Kondo interaction, coming along with a dramatic change of the crystal field
(CF) splitting. Thereby a quasi-quartet ground state observed in CeNi9Ge4
reduces to a two-fold degenerate one in CeNi8CuGe4. This leads to a
modiffcation of the effective spin degeneracy of the Kondo lattice ground state
and to the appearance of antiferromagnetic (AFM) order. To obtain a better
understanding of consequences resulting from a reduction of the effective spin
degeneracy, we stepwise replaced Ni by Co. Thereby an increase of the Kondo and
RKKY interactions through the reduction of the effective d-electron count is
expected. Accordingly, a paramagnetic Fermi liquid ground state should arise.
Our experimental studies, however, reveal AFM order already for small Co
concentrations, which becomes even more pronounced with increasing Co content
x. Thereby the modiffcation of the effective spin degeneracy seems to play a
crucial role in this system
Incentives in peer-to-peer and grid networking
Today, most peer-to-peer networks are based on the assumptionthat the participating nodes are cooperative. Thisworks if the nodes are indifferent or ignorant about the resourcesthey offer, but limits the usability of peer-to-peernetworks to very few scenarios. It specifically excludes theirusage in any non-cooperative peer-to-peer environment, beit Grid networks or mobile ad-hoc networks. By introducingsoft incentives to offer resources to other nodes, we seean overall performance gain in traditional file-sharing networks.We also see soft incentives promoting the convergenceof peer-to-peer and Grid networks, as they increasethe predictability of the participating nodes, and thereforethe reliability of the services provided by the system as awhole. Reliability is what is required by Grid networks, butmissing in peer-to-peer networks
The design and use of macroeconomics simulation using maple software: A pilot study
The mathematical models used in intermediate macroeconomics have become increasingly more sophisticated and challenging for students to learn. This paper demonstrates how mathematics software, such as Maple, can be used to design a simulation as a pedagogical aid. The paper proceeds by developing a system of equations to model the economy, simulating the system with Maple, and illustrating the impacts of fiscal and monetary policy changes. A pilot test of the simulation was performed to see if higher levels of mathematical rigor could be introduced in a principles course. The results indicate that symbolic mathematics software can be an effective teaching and student learning tool.Economics instruction; macroeconomic simulation; Maple software
On the Disalignment of Interstellar Grains
Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain the alignment of grains with
the interstellar magnetic field, including paramagnetic dissipation, radiative
torques, and supersonic gas-grain streaming. These must compete with
disaligning processes, including randomly directed torques arising from
collisions with gas atoms. I describe a novel disalignment mechanism for grains
that have a time-varying electric dipole moment and that drift across the
magnetic field. Depending on the drift speed, this mechanism may yield a much
shorter disalignment timescale than that associated with random gas atom
impacts. For suprathermally rotating grains, the new disaligning process may be
more potent for carbonaceous dust than for silicate dust. This could result in
efficient alignment for silicate grains but poor alignment for carbonaceous
grains.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Ap
Chemical species and chemical reactions of importance in nonequilibrium performance calculations
Computer programs to determine inviscid one dimensional and axisymmetric nonequilibrium nozzle flow field
Droplet size and morphology characterization for diesel sprays under atmospheric operating conditions
The shape of microscopic fuel droplets may differ from the perfect sphere, affecting their external surface area and thus the heat transfer with the surrounding gas. Hence there is a need for the characterization of droplet shapes, and the estimation of external surface area, in order to enable the development of physically accurate mathematical models for the heating and evaporation of diesel fuel sprays. We present ongoing work to automat-ically identify and reconstruct the morphology of fuel droplets, primarily focusing in this study on irregularly-shaped, partially-deformed and oscillating droplets under atmospheric conditions. We used direct imaging tech-niques based on long-working distance microscopy and ultra-high-speed video to conduct a detailed temporal investigation of droplet morphology. We applied purpose-built algorithms to extract droplet size, velocity, vol-ume and external surface area from the microscopic ultra-high-speed video frames. High resolution images of oscillating droplets and a formation of a droplet form ligament, sphericity factors, volume as well as external surface area are presented for 500 bar injection pressure in the near nozzle region (up to 0.7 mm from nozzle exit) under atmospheric conditions. We observed a range of different liquid structures, including perfectly spher-ical, non-spherical droplets and stretched ligaments. We found that large droplets and ligaments exceeding the size of the nozzle hole could be found at the end of injection. In order to estimate droplet volume and external surface area from two-dimensional droplet information, a discrete revolution of the droplet silhouette about its major centroidal axis was used. Special attention was paid to the estimation of actual errors in the prediction of volume and surface characteristics from a droplet silhouette. In addition to the estimation of droplet volume and external surface area, the actual shape reconstruction in 3D coordinates from a droplet silhouette was performed in order to enable future numerical modelling studies of real droplets
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