8,563 research outputs found
Closed-circuit television welding- electrode guidance system
Closed-circuit TV camera is mounted parallel to electrode and moves along with it. Camera is scanned along seam so seam is viewed parallel with scan lines on TV monitor. Two fiber optics illuminators are attached to guidance system; they illuminate seam for TV camera
A proof of the generalized second law for rapidly changing fields and arbitrary horizon slices
The generalized second law is proven for semiclassical quantum fields falling
across a causal horizon, minimally coupled to general relativity. The proof is
much more general than previous proofs in that it permits the quantum fields to
be rapidly changing with time, and shows that entropy increases when comparing
any slice of the horizon to any earlier slice. The proof requires the existence
of an algebra of observables restricted to the horizon, satisfying certain
axioms (Determinism, Ultralocality, Local Lorentz Invariance, and Stability).
These axioms are explicitly verified in the case of free fields of various
spins, as well as 1+1 conformal field theories. The validity of the axioms for
other interacting theories is discussed.Comment: 44 pages, 1 fig. v3: clarified Sec. 2; signs, factors/notation
corrected in Eq. 75-80, 105-107; reflects published version. v4: clearer
axioms in Sec. 2.3, fixed compensating factor of 2 errors in Eq. 54,74 etc.,
and other errors. Results unaffected. v5: fixed typos. v6: replaced faulty
1+1 CFT argument, added note on recent progres
A reliable Pade analytical continuation method based on a high accuracy symbolic computation algorithm
We critique a Pade analytic continuation method whereby a rational polynomial
function is fit to a set of input points by means of a single matrix inversion.
This procedure is accomplished to an extremely high accuracy using a novel
symbolic computation algorithm. As an example of this method in action we apply
it to the problem of determining the spectral function of a one-particle
thermal Green's function known only at a finite number of Matsubara frequencies
with two example self energies drawn from the T-matrix theory of the Hubbard
model. We present a systematic analysis of the effects of error in the input
points on the analytic continuation, and this leads us to propose a procedure
to test quantitatively the reliability of the resulting continuation, thus
eliminating the black magic label frequently attached to this procedure.Comment: 11 pages, 8 eps figs, revtex format; revised version includes
reference to anonymous ftp site containing example codes (MapleVr5.1
worksheets) displaying the implementation of the algorithm, including the
padematinv.m library packag
Improved shaping approach to the preliminary design of low-thrust trajectories
This paper presents a general framework for the development of shape-based approaches to low-thrust trajectory design. A novel shaping method, based on a three-dimensional description of the trajectory in spherical coordinates, is developed within this general framework. Both the exponential sinusoid and the inverse polynomial shaping are demonstrated to be particular two-dimensional cases of the spherical one. The pseudoequinoctial shaping is revisited within the new framework, and the nonosculating nature of the pseudoequinoctial elements is analyzed. A two step approach is introduced to solve the time of flight constraint, related to the design of low-thrust arcs with boundary constraints for both spherical and pseudoequinoctial shaping. The solution derived from the shaping approach is improved with a feedback linear-quadratic controller and compared against a direct collocation method based on finite elements in time. The new shaping approach and the combination of shaping and linear-quadratic controller are tested on three case studies: a mission to Mars, a mission to asteroid 1989ML, a mission to comet Tempel-1, and a mission to Neptune
Quantum interference between charge excitation paths in a solid state Mott insulator
The competition between electron localization and de-localization in Mott
insulators underpins the physics of strongly-correlated electron systems.
Photo-excitation, which re-distributes charge between sites, can control this
many-body process on the ultrafast timescale. To date, time-resolved studies
have been performed in solids in which other degrees of freedom, such as
lattice, spin, or orbital excitations come into play. However, the underlying
quantum dynamics of bare electronic excitations has remained out of reach.
Quantum many-body dynamics have only been detected in the controlled
environment of optical lattices where the dynamics are slower and lattice
excitations are absent. By using nearly-single-cycle near-IR pulses, we have
measured coherent electronic excitations in the organic salt ET-F2TCNQ, a
prototypical one-dimensional Mott Insulator. After photo-excitation, a new
resonance appears on the low-energy side of the Mott gap, which oscillates at
25 THz. Time-dependent simulations of the Mott-Hubbard Hamiltonian reproduce
the oscillations, showing that electronic delocalization occurs through quantum
interference between bound and ionized holon-doublon pairs.Comment: 4 figures and supplementary informatio
Imprints of the nuclear symmetry energy on gravitational waves from the axial w-modes of neutron stars
The eigen-frequencies of the axial w-modes of oscillating neutron stars are
studied using the continued fraction method with an Equation of State (EOS)
partially constrained by the recent terrestrial nuclear laboratory data. It is
shown that the density dependence of the nuclear symmetry energy
affects significantly both the frequencies and the damping
times of these modes. Besides confirming the previously found universal
behavior of the mass-scaled eigen-frequencies as functions of the compactness
of neutron stars, we explored several alternative universal scaling functions.
Moreover, the -mode is found to exist only for neutron stars having a
compactness of independent of the EOS used.Comment: Version appeared in Phys. Rev. C80, 025801 (2009
Integrable discretizations of the sine-Gordon equation
The inverse scattering theory for the sine-Gordon equation discretized in
space and both in space and time is considered.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX2
Recommended from our members
Things turned upside down
Aim: Soils and their biological communities face increasing pressure from multiple global drivers, including land management and climate change. In soils, earthworms play key roles in ecosystem functioning, but the environmental controls on their global communities are not fully understood. Here, an earthworm dataset was compiled to investigate the effects of environmental controls and land management on global earthworm communities. Location: 40 ° S – 65 ° N. Time period: 1962 to 2016. Major taxa studied: Earthworms Methods: A dataset of 899 earthworm community observations, together with environmental variables, was compiled across 169 globally distributed sites. Sites included natural forests and grasslands or managed arable, pasture or plantation ecosystems. Total, anecic, endogeic and epigeic abundances were compared in natural and managed ecosystems to quantify the effects of land management across climates. A hierarchical model was used to test interactions between earthworm communities with environmental controls and management across eighteen ecosystem types. Results: Land management prompted little change in total earthworm abundance at the global scale, but reduced species richness and shifted community composition. Endogeic earthworms were more abundant in managed ecosystems, while anecic and epigeic earthworms show variable responses across ecosystem types. Global relationships between total earthworm species richness and abundance were explained by climate, soil pH and land management. Main conclusions: Land management modulates the effects of environmental controls on global earthworm communities, through direct disturbance and indirect changes in edaphic conditions
The Antibacterial Effects of Zinc Ion Migration from Zinc-Based Glass Polyalkenoate Cements
Zinc-based glass polyalkenoate cements have been synthesised and their potential use in orthopaedic applications investigated. Zinc ions were released from the materials in a rapid burst over the first 24 h after synthesis, with the release rate falling below detectable levels after 7 days. Cement-implanted bone samples were prepared, and the released zinc was shown, using energy dispersive X-ray analysis, to penetrate from the cement into the adjacent bone by up to 40 μm. Finally, the cements exhibited antibacterial activity against Streptococcus mutans and Actinomyces viscosus that reflected the pattern of zinc release, with the inhibition of growth greatest shortly after cement synthesis and little or no inhibition measureable after 30 days. © Springer Science + Business Media, LLC 2006
Salmonella Pathogenesis and Processing of Secreted Effectors by Caspase-3
The enteric pathogen Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium causes food poisoning resulting in gastroenteritis. The S. Typhimurium effector Salmonella invasion protein A (SipA) promotes gastroenteritis by functional motifs that trigger either mechanisms of inflammation or bacterial entry. During infection of intestinal epithelial cells, SipA was found to be responsible for the early activation of caspase-3, an enzyme that is required for SipA cleavage at a specific recognition motif that divided the protein into its two functional domains and activated SipA in a manner necessary for pathogenicity. Other caspase-3 cleavage sites identified in S. Typhimurium appeared to be restricted to secreted effector proteins, which indicates that this may be a general strategy used by this pathogen for processing of its secreted effectors
- …