10,742 research outputs found
Normal modes in an overmoded circular waveguide coated with lossy material
The normal modes in an overmoded waveguide coated with a lossy material are analyzed, particularly for their attenuation properties as a function of coating material, layer thickness, and frequency. When the coating material is not too lossy, the low-order modes are highly attenuated even with a thin layer of coating. This coated guide serves as a mode suppressor of the low-order modes, which can be particularly useful for reducing the radar cross section (RCS) of a cavity structure such as a jet inlet. When the coating material is very lossy, low-order modes fall into two distinct groups: highly and lowly attenuated modes. However, as a/lambda (a = radius of the cylinder; lambda = the free-space wavelength) increases, the separation between these two groups becomes less distinctive. The attenuation constants of most of the low-order modes become small, and decrease as a function of lambda sup 2/a sup 3
Numerical methods for analyzing electromagnetic scattering
Numerical methods to analyze electromagnetic scattering are presented. The dispersions and attenuations of the normal modes in a circular waveguide coated with lossy material were completely analyzed. The radar cross section (RCS) from a circular waveguide coated with lossy material was calculated. The following is observed: (1) the interior irradiation contributes to the RCS much more than does the rim diffraction; (2) at low frequency, the RCS from the circular waveguide terminated by a perfect electric conductor (PEC) can be reduced more than 13 dB down with a coating thickness less than 1% of the radius using the best lossy material available in a 6 radius-long cylinder; (3) at high frequency, a modal separation between the highly attenuated and the lowly attenuated modes is evident if the coating material is too lossy, however, a large RCS reduction can be achieved for a small incident angle with a thin layer of coating. It is found that the waveguide coated with a lossy magnetic material can be used as a substitute for a corrugated waveguide to produce a circularly polarized radiation yield
Numerical methods for analyzing electromagnetic scattering
Attenuation properties of the normal modes in an overmoded waveguide coated with a lossy material were analyzed. It is found that the low-order modes, can be significantly attenuated even with a thin layer of coating if the coating material is not too lossy. A thinner layer of coating is required for large attenuation of the low-order modes if the coating material is magnetic rather than dielectric. The Radar Cross Section (RCS) from an uncoated circular guide terminated by a perfect electric conductor was calculated and compared with available experimental data. It is confirmed that the interior irradiation contributes to the RCS. The equivalent-current method based on the geometrical theory of diffraction (GTD) was chosen for the calculation of the contribution from the rim diffraction. The RCS reduction from a coated circular guide terminated by a PEC are planned schemes for the experiments are included. The waveguide coated with a lossy magnetic material is suggested as a substitute for the corrugated waveguide
Wave attenuation and mode dispersion in a waveguide coated with lossy dielectric material
The modal attenuation constants in a cylindrical waveguide coated with a lossy dielectric material are studied as functions of frequency, dielectric constant, and thickness of the dielectric layer. A dielectric material best suited for a large attenuation is suggested. Using Kirchhoff's approximation, the field attenuation in a coated waveguide which is illuminated by a normally incident plane wave is also studied. For a circular guide which has a diameter of two wavelengths and is coated with a thin lossy dielectric layer (omega sub r = 9.1 - j2.3, thickness = 3% of the radius), a 3 dB attenuation is achieved within 16 diameters
Augmenting the Calvin-Benson-Bassham cycle by a synthetic malyl-CoA-glycerate carbon fixation pathway.
The Calvin-Benson-Bassham (CBB) cycle is presumably evolved for optimal synthesis of C3 sugars, but not for the production of C2 metabolite acetyl-CoA. The carbon loss in producing acetyl-CoA from decarboxylation of C3 sugar limits the maximum carbon yield of photosynthesis. Here we design a synthetic malyl-CoA-glycerate (MCG) pathway to augment the CBB cycle for efficient acetyl-CoA synthesis. This pathway converts a C3 metabolite to two acetyl-CoA by fixation of one additional CO2 equivalent, or assimilates glyoxylate, a photorespiration intermediate, to produce acetyl-CoA without net carbon loss. We first functionally demonstrate the design of the MCG pathway in vitro and in Escherichia coli. We then implement the pathway in a photosynthetic organism Synechococcus elongates PCC7942, and show that it increases the intracellular acetyl-CoA pool and enhances bicarbonate assimilation by roughly 2-fold. This work provides a strategy to improve carbon fixation efficiency in photosynthetic organisms
Switchable coupling for superconducting qubits using double resonance in the presence of crosstalk
Several methods have been proposed recently to achieve switchable coupling
between superconducting qubits. We discuss some of the main considerations
regarding the feasibility of implementing one of those proposals: the
double-resonance method. We analyze mainly issues related to the achievable
effective coupling strength and the effects of crosstalk on this coupling
approach. We also find a new, crosstalk-assisted coupling channel that can be
an attractive alternative when implementing the double-resonance coupling
proposal.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Optoelectronics of Inverted Type-I CdS/CdSe Core/Crown Quantum Ring
Inverted type-I heterostructure core/crown quantum rings (QRs) are
quantum-efficient luminophores, whose spectral characteristics are highly
tunable. Here, we study the optoelectronic properties of type-I core/crown
CdS/CdSe QRs in the zincblende phase - over contrasting lateral size and crown
width. For this we inspect their strain profiles, transition energies,
transition matrix elements, spatial charge densities, electronic bandstructure,
band-mixing probabilities, optical gain spectra, maximum optical gains and
differential optical gains. Our framework uses an effective-mass envelope
function theory based on the 8-band kp method employing the valence
force field model for calculating the atomic strain distributions. The gain
calculations are based on the density-matrix equation and take into
consideration the excitonic effects with intraband scattering. Variations in
the QR lateral size and relative widths of core and crown (ergo the
composition) affect their energy levels, band-mixing probabilities, optical
transition matrix elements, emission wavelengths/intensity, etc. The optical
gain of QRs is also strongly dimension and composition dependent with further
dependency on the injection carrier density causing band-filling effect. They
also affect the maximum and differential gain at varying dimensions and
compositions.Comment: Published in AIP Journal of Applied Physics (11 pages, 7 figures
The Response of a Hot-Wire Anemometer to a Bubble of Air in Water
The sensitivity of peak voltage drop and duration of the change In sensor voltages due to the impaction of different size bubbles are confuted and measured. Excellent agreement between these is found for bubbles somewhat larger than the sensor diameter and smaller than Its effective length in water streams in a range of 1.5 to 9 feet per second. The method suggests a reliable method for sizing bubbles in a water stream. The effects due to nondirect hits are not treated
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