2,118 research outputs found
Stable surface oxides formed during oxidation of lignite chars
The author's pdf has been posted with the permission of the editor.Temperature Programmed Desorption (TPD) experiments were conducted to investigate the properties of stable surface oxides formed during low temperature oxidation of lignite chars. For both Loy Yang and Bowmans char, TPD spectra demonstrate a transition at low conversion. A linear increase is found in the fraction of remaining carbon associated with stable surface oxides as conversion increases for both chars. Compared to Loy Yang char, Bowmans char has a significantly greater number of stable surface oxides yielding CO2 during TPD. It is proposed that the abundant inorganic material in Bowmans char catalyses the formation of CO2- yielding stable surface oxides
Robust Positioning in the Presence of Multipath and NLOS GNSS Signals
GNSS signals can be blocked and reflected by nearby objects, such as buildings, walls, and vehicles. They can also be reflected by the ground and by water. These effects are the dominant source of GNSS positioning errors in dense urban environments, though they can have an impact almost anywhere. Non- line-of-sight (NLOS) reception occurs when the direct path from the transmitter to the receiver is blocked and signals are received only via a reflected path. Multipath interference occurs, as the name suggests, when a signal is received via multiple paths. This can be via the direct path and one or more reflected paths, or it can be via multiple reflected paths. As their error characteristics are different, NLOS and multipath interference typically require different mitigation techniques, though some techniques are applicable to both. Antenna design and advanced receiver signal processing techniques can substantially reduce multipath errors. Unless an antenna array is used, NLOS reception has to be detected using the receiver's ranging and carrier-power-to-noise-density ratio (C/N0) measurements and mitigated within the positioning algorithm. Some NLOS mitigation techniques can also be used to combat severe multipath interference. Multipath interference, but not NLOS reception, can also be mitigated by comparing or combining code and carrier measurements, comparing ranging and C/N0 measurements from signals on different frequencies, and analyzing the time evolution of the ranging and C/N0 measurements
Results on the nucleon spin structure
SMC performed an investigation of the spin structure of the nucleon by
measuring deep inelastic scattering of polarised muons off polarised protons
and deuterons. A summary of the results for spin structure functions and sum
rules is given.Comment: 8 pages, LaTeX, Talk given at the Workshop on "Symmetry and Spin -
PRAHA98", Prag, September 1998. Proceedings to be published by Czech. Journ.
Phy
Production of -pairs at HERA-
The production of -pairs as a possible measure of the polarized gluon
distribution is studied for proton--nucleon collisions at
\sqrt{s} =40\;\mbox{GeV}^2 (HERA-). Possibilities of
reconstructing the helicity state of at least one of the 's are
critically reviewed. The observation of production asymmetries in the single
polarized mode of HERA- is found to be not feasible.Comment: 8 pages, LATeX, 3 figures availabe as .uu-fil
The agglomeration behaviour of lochiel coal during fluidised bed gasification
Fluidised bed gasification (FBG) is a promising process for utilising high-sodium and highsulphur coals, but agglomeration and defluidisation are potential problems. Experiments have been conducted to investigate these phenomena, to assist in elucidating the mechanisms at play and to develop operating solutions. It was found that agglomeration and defluidisation of Lochiel coal occur, within the 4-hour timeframe of these experiments, only when bed temperature exceeds 850°C and the air/fuel ratio is above 2.5. Agglomerates are composed mainly of silicate material, in combination with Na, Ca, Mg, Al and Fe in varying amounts. It is surmised that non-crystalline phases in agglomerates are sodium disilicate, with inclusions of Ca, Fe, Mg and Al that are expected to lower the mixture melting point, causing FBG operating problems when the total inorganic content of the bed rises above approximately 88wt% and with temperatures exceeding 850°C. It is expected that defluidisation can be avoided if operation is maintained outside of these conditions.D. P. McCullough, P. J. Mullinger and P. J. Ashma
Nuclear parton distribution functions and their uncertainties
We analyze experimental data of nuclear structure-function ratios
F_2^A/F_2^{A'} and Drell-Yan cross section ratios for obtaining optimum parton
distribution functions (PDFs) in nuclei. Then, uncertainties of the nuclear
PDFs are estimated by the Hessian method. Valence-quark distributions are
determined by the F_2 data at large x; however, the small-x part is not obvious
from the data. On the other hand, the antiquark distributions are determined
well at x~0.01 from the F_2 data and at x~0.1 by the Drell-Yan data; however,
the large-x behavior is not clear. Gluon distributions cannot be fixed by the
present data and they have large uncertainties in the whole x region.
Parametrization results are shown in comparison with the data. We provide a
useful code for calculating nuclear PDFs at given x and Q^2.Comment: 9 pages, REVTeX, 23 eps files, Phys. Rev. C in press. Nuclear PDF
library is available at http://hs.phys.saga-u.ac.jp/nuclp.htm
Extracting the Proton ubar content from pp->Direct Photon plus Jet Cross Sections
An analysis procedure is proposed to measure the antiquark distributions in
the proton over the region 0.01 < x < 0.1. The procedure involves the
measurement of high p_t asymmetric direct photon and jet final states in pp
interactions. This measurement can be made at the RHIC collider running in pp
mode at an energy of sqrt(s)=500 GeV/c. This analysis identifies a region of
phase space where the contribution from quark-antiquark annihilation
uncharacteristically approaches the magnitude of the contribution from the
leading process, quark-gluon Compton scattering. The forward-backward angular
asymmetry in the parton center of mass is sensitive to the antiquark content of
the proton and the ubar parton density function can be extracted.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figure
Next-to-Leading Order Analysis of Inclusive and Semi-inclusive Polarized Data
We present a combined next-to-leading order QCD analysis to data on both
inclusive and semi-inclusive polarized deep inelastic scattering asymmetries.
Performing NLO QCD global fits with different sets of observables, we evaluate
the impact of the very recent semi-inclusive results presented by SMC in the
extraction of NLO polarized parton distributions.Comment: 22 pages, 4 figures include
Just How Strange? Loops, Poles and the Strangeness Radius of the Nucleon
We consider a simple model for the strangeness radius of the nucleon. The
model is based on vector meson dominance (VMD) and mixing in
addition to a kaon cloud contribution. We find that the VMD contribution is
similar in magnitude and of the same sign as the kaon contribution to the Sachs
strangeness radius and is significantly larger than the kaon contribution to
the Dirac radius. Two figures (not included) can be obtained through the
authors ([email protected]).Comment: 12 pages, DOE/ER/40762--011, U. of MD PP \#93--21
- conversion in nuclei and Z physics
Together with the existence of new neutral gauge bosons, models based on
extended gauge groups (rank ) often predict also new charged fermions. A
mixing of the known fermions with new states with {\it exotic} weak-isospin
assignments (left-handed singlets and right-handed doublets) will induce tree
level flavour changing neutral interactions mediated by exchange, while if
the mixing is only with new states with {\it ordinary} weak-isospin
assignments, the flavour changing neutral currents are mainly due to the
exchange of the lightest new neutral gauge boson . We show that the
present experimental limits on conversion in nuclei give a
nuclear-model-independent bound on the -- vertex which is twice as
strong as that obtained from . In the case of E models these
limits provide quite stringent constraints on the mass and on the
mixing angle. We point out that the proposed experiments to search
for conversion in nuclei have good chances to find evidence of lepton
flavour violation, either in the case that new exotic fermions are present at
the electroweak scale, or if a new neutral gauge boson of E
origin lighter than a few TeV exists.Comment: Plain Tex, 24 pages, + 2 PostScript figure appended after \bye (and
available upon request), UM-TH 93--08, FTUV 93-1
- …
