764 research outputs found

    Experimental investigation into vibro-acoustic emission signal processing techniques to quantify leak flow rate in plastic water distribution pipes

    Get PDF
    Leakage from water distribution pipes is a problem worldwide, and are commonly detected using the Vibro-Acoustic Emission (VAE) produced by the leak. The ability to quantify leak flow rate using VAE would have economic and operational benefits. However the complex interaction between variables and the leak’s VAE signal make classification of leak flow rate difficult and therefore there has been a lack of research in this area. The aim of this study is to use VAE monitoring to investigate signal processing techniques that quantify leak flow rate. A number of alternative signal processing techniques are deployed and evaluated, including VAE counts, signal Root Mean Square (RMS), peak in magnitude of the power spectral density and octave banding. A strong correlation between the leak flow rate and signal RMS was found which allowed for the development of a flow prediction model. The flow prediction model was also applied to two other media types representing buried water pipes and it was found that the surrounding media had a strong influence on the VAE signal which reduced the accuracy of flow classification. A further model was developed for buried pipes, and was found to yield good leak flow quantification using VAE. This paper therefore presents a useful method for water companies to prioritise maintenance and repair of leaks on water distribution pipes

    Next-to-leading Corrections to the Higgs Boson Transverse Momentum Spectrum in Gluon Fusion

    Get PDF
    We present a fully analytic calculation of the Higgs boson transverse momentum and rapidity distributions, for nonzero Higgs pp_\perp, at next-to-leading order in the infinite-top-mass approximation. We separate the cross section into a part that contains the dominant soft, virtual, collinear, and small-pp_\perp-enhanced contributions, and the remainder, which is organized by the contributions due to different parton helicities. We use this cross section to investigate analytically the small-pp_\perp limit and compare with the expectation from the resummation of large logarithms of the type lnmH/p\ln{m_H/p_\perp}. We also compute numerically the cross section at moderate pp_\perp where a fixed-order calculation is reliable. We find a KK-factor that varies from 1.61.8\approx1.6-1.8, and a reduction in the scale dependence, as compared to leading order. Our analysis suggests that the contribution of current parton distributions to the total uncertainty on this cross section at the LHC is probably less than that due to uncalculated higher orders.Comment: 40 pages, 10 figures, JHEP style (minor changes, added reference

    Consistent histories of systems and measurements in spacetime

    Full text link
    Traditional interpretations of quantum theory in terms of wave function collapse are particularly unappealing when considering the universe as a whole, where there is no clean separation between classical observer and quantum system and where the description is inherently relativistic. As an alternative, the consistent histories approach provides an attractive "no collapse" interpretation of quantum physics. Consistent histories can also be linked to path-integral formulations that may be readily generalized to the relativistic case. A previous paper described how, in such a relativistic spacetime path formalism, the quantum history of the universe could be considered to be an eignestate of the measurements made within it. However, two important topics were not addressed in detail there: a model of measurement processes in the context of quantum histories in spacetime and a justification for why the probabilities for each possible cosmological eigenstate should follow Born's rule. The present paper addresses these topics by showing how Zurek's concepts of einselection and envariance can be applied in the context of relativistic spacetime and quantum histories. The result is a model of systems and subsystems within the universe and their interaction with each other and their environment.Comment: RevTeX 4; 37 pages; v2 is a revision in response to reviewer comments, connecting the discussion in the paper more closely to consistent history concepts; v3 has minor editorial corrections; accepted for publication in Foundations of Physics; v4 has a couple minor typographical correction

    Differential Cross Section for Higgs Boson Production Including All-Orders Soft Gluon Resummation

    Full text link
    The transverse momentum QTQ_T distribution is computed for inclusive Higgs boson production at the energy of the CERN Large Hadron Collider. We focus on the dominant gluon-gluon subprocess in perturbative quantum chromodynamics and incorporate contributions from the quark-gluon and quark-antiquark channels. Using an impact-parameter bb-space formalism, we include all-orders resummation of large logarithms associated with emission of soft gluons. Our resummed results merge smoothly at large QTQ_T with the fixed-order expectations in perturbative quantum chromodynamics, as they should, with no need for a matching procedure. They show a high degree of stability with respect to variation of parameters associated with the non-perturbative input at low QTQ_T. We provide distributions dσ/dydQTd\sigma/dy dQ_T for Higgs boson masses from MZM_Z to 200 GeV. The average transverse momentum at zero rapidity yy grows approximately linearly with mass of the Higgs boson over the range MZ<mh0.18mh+18M_Z < m_h \simeq 0.18 m_h + 18 ~GeV. We provide analogous results for ZZ boson production, for which we compute 25 \simeq 25 GeV. The harder transverse momentum distribution for the Higgs boson arises because there is more soft gluon radiation in Higgs boson production than in ZZ production.Comment: 42 pages, latex, 26 figures. All figures replaced. Some changes in wording. Published in Phys. Rev. D67, 034026 (2003

    Experimental investigation into techniques to predict leak shapes in water distribution systems using vibration measurements

    Get PDF
    Water loss from leaking pipes represents a substantial loss of revenue as well as environmental and public health concerns. Leak location is normally identified by placing sensors either side of the leak and recording and analysing the leak noise. The leak noise contains information about the leak’s characteristics, including its shape. Whilst a tool which non-invasively provides information about a leak’s shape from the leak noise would be useful for water industry practitioners, no tool currently exists. This study evaluates the effect of various leak shapes on the vibration signal and presents a unique methodology for predicting the leak shape from the vibration signal. An innovative signal processing technique which utilises the machine learning method Random Forest classifiers is used in combination with a number of signal features in order to develop a leak shape prediction algorithm. The results demonstrate a robust methodology for predicting leak shape at several leak flow rates and backfill types, providing a useful tool for water companies to assess leak repair based on leak shape

    Joint Resummation for Higgs Production

    Full text link
    We study the application of the joint resummation formalism to Higgs production via gluon-gluon fusion at the LHC, defining inverse transforms by analytic continuation. We work at next-to-leading logarithmic accuracy. We find that at low Q_T the resummed Higgs Q_T distributions are comparable in the joint and pure-Q_T formalisms, with relatively small influence from threshold enhancement in this range. We find a modest (about ten percent) decrease in the inclusive cross section, relative to pure threshold resummation.Comment: 22 pages, LaTeX, 5 figures as eps file

    Assessing ground support of plastic pipes using ultrasound

    Get PDF
    The ability to detect early signs of failure in buried pipe infrastructure is necessary to facilitate the continued use of ageing infrastructure for delivery of society’s essential services and move beyond disruptive and expensive reactive maintenance and repair. This paper reports detailed experiments on the use of in-pipe ultrasound techniques for assessment of ground conditions around buried plastic pipes. Two sets of ultrasonic experiment on the soil conditions are presented: (1) existence, shape, and dimension of void, and (2) water content in the soil. The ultrasound technique is shown to be capable for detecting water filled voids and assessing the soil support, critical early indicators of failure. The technique requires water as the transmission media hence is naturally suited to application in operational water distribution systems. The work represents an important advance in in-pipe condition assessment of plastic pipes, demonstrates the practical capability of the ultrasound technique, which is critical for progression towards proactive maintenance, offering cost and service improvements

    Pseudoscalar Higgs boson production associated with a single bottom quark at hadron colliders

    Full text link
    We compute the complete next-to-leading order (NLO) SUSY-QCD corrections for the associated production of a pseudoscalar Higgs boson with a bottom quark via bottom-gluon fusion at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and the Fermilab Tevatron. We find that the NLO QCD correction in the MSSM reaches 4040%\sim50% at the LHC and 4545%\sim80% at the Tevatron in our chosen parameter space

    Pedagogic model for Deeply Virtual Compton Scattering with quark-hadron duality

    Get PDF
    We show how quark-hadron duality can emerge for valence spin averaged structure functions, and for the non-forward distributions of Deeply Virtual Compton Scattering. Novel factorisations of the non-forward amplitudes are proposed. Some implications for large angle scattering and deviations from the quark counting rules are illustrated.Comment: Version accepted by Phys. Rev.

    Experimental Implementation of the Quantum Random-Walk Algorithm

    Full text link
    The quantum random walk is a possible approach to construct new quantum algorithms. Several groups have investigated the quantum random walk and experimental schemes were proposed. In this paper we present the experimental implementation of the quantum random walk algorithm on a nuclear magnetic resonance quantum computer. We observe that the quantum walk is in sharp contrast to its classical counterpart. In particular, the properties of the quantum walk strongly depends on the quantum entanglement.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, published versio
    corecore