116,308 research outputs found
Radiant source tracker independent of nonconstant irradiance
A tracker of a radiant source is disclosed. The tracker is composed of a sectored matrix of detectors whose output voltages correspond to their respective levels of irradiance. The voltages are each sampled during a variable length period and the resulting samples are shaped into triangular samples by an integration process. They are supplied to a demodulator which provides an output corresponding to the difference of the time-voltage product of appropriate combinations of the samples. This output, after filtering, represents the angle of incidence on the detectors with respect to a central axis. The triangular samples are also supplied to a demodulator whose output is an AGC voltage which is a function of the sum of the time-voltage integrals of the triangular samples
Error-correcting codes for high-speed digital computers
Published document discusses method for correcting errors. According to this method, computer operation becomes fault-tolerant, i.e., its operation is error-free in spite of single hardware element malfunction. Also, method provides for detection and correction of repetitive and spurious processing and transmission errors
Method of making a rocket nozzle
A method is described for forming the interior of a nozzle having uneven walls so that a throat of smooth converging and diverging sides is provided for passing flow. A metallic insert material is placed within the flow passageway adjacent to the area where the sharper throat constriction is to be formed, so that the material will flow through the inlet into the throat space when liquefied
Getting Comfortable with Change: A New Budget Model for Libraries in Transition
published or submitted for publicatio
Specification Testing and Semiparametric Estimation of Regime Switching Models: An Examination of the US Short Term Interest Rate
Development of 30 micrometers extrinsic silicon multiplexed infrared deterctor array
Two hybrid infrared (IR) detector arrays of antimony-doped silicon (Si:Sb) were produced and tested to evaluate their potential for use in low-background IR astronomy applications. The format of the arrays is 58 x 62 elements, with 76 micron-square pixels. A random-access, switched metal-oxide semiconductor field effect transistor (MOSFET) silicon multiplexer is used to read out the array elements. Reduced-background tests of signal, noise, and noise equivalent power were conducted over the temperature range 3.2 to 12 K. The arrays were found to have good sensitivity and good uniformity
Magnetic Excitations of Stripes and Checkerboards in the Cuprates
We discuss the magnetic excitations of well-ordered stripe and checkerboard
phases, including the high energy magnetic excitations of recent interest and
possible connections to the "resonance peak" in cuprate superconductors. Using
a suitably parametrized Heisenberg model and spin wave theory, we study a
variety of magnetically ordered configurations, including vertical and diagonal
site- and bond-centered stripes and simple checkerboards. We calculate the
expected neutron scattering intensities as a function of energy and momentum.
At zero frequency, the satellite peaks of even square-wave stripes are
suppressed by as much as a factor of 34 below the intensity of the main
incommensurate peaks. We further find that at low energy, spin wave cones may
not always be resolvable experimentally. Rather, the intensity as a function of
position around the cone depends strongly on the coupling across the stripe
domain walls. At intermediate energy, we find a saddlepoint at for
a range of couplings, and discuss its possible connection to the "resonance
peak" observed in neutron scattering experiments on cuprate superconductors. At
high energy, various structures are possible as a function of coupling strength
and configuration, including a high energy square-shaped continuum originally
attributed to the quantum excitations of spin ladders. On the other hand, we
find that simple checkerboard patterns are inconsistent with experimental
results from neutron scattering.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, for high-res figs, see
http://physics.bu.edu/~yaodx/spinwave2/spinw2.htm
Behavior and Breakdown of Higher-Order Fermi-Pasta-Ulam-Tsingou Recurrences
We investigate numerically the existence and stability of higher-order
recurrences (HoRs), including super-recurrences, super-super-recurrences, etc.,
in the alpha and beta Fermi-Pasta-Ulam-Tsingou (FPUT) lattices for initial
conditions in the fundamental normal mode. Our results represent a considerable
extension of the pioneering work of Tuck and Menzel on super-recurrences. For
fixed lattice sizes, we observe and study apparent singularities in the periods
of these HoRs, speculated to be caused by nonlinear resonances. Interestingly,
these singularities depend very sensitively on the initial energy and the
respective nonlinear parameters. Furthermore, we compare the mechanisms by
which the super-recurrences in the two model's breakdown as the initial energy
and respective nonlinear parameters are increased. The breakdown of
super-recurrences in the beta-FPUT lattice is associated with the destruction
of the so-called metastable state and hence is associated with relaxation
towards equilibrium. For the alpha-FPUT lattice, we find this is not the case
and show that the super-recurrences break down while the lattice is still
metastable. We close with comments on the generality of our results for
different lattice sizes
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