10,575 research outputs found

    Applicability valuation for evaluation of surface deflection in automotive outer panels

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    Upon unloading in a forming process there is elastic recovery, which is the release of the elastic strains and the redistribution of the residual stresses through the thickness direction, thus producing surface deflection. It causes changes in shape and dimensions that can create major problem in the external appearance of outer panels. Thus surface deflection prediction is an important issue in sheet metal forming industry. Many factors could affect surface deflection in the process, such as material variations in mechanical properties, sheet thickness, tool geometry, processing parameters and lubricant condition. The shape and dimension problem in press forming is defined as a trouble mainly caused by the elastic recovery of materials during the forming. The use of high strength steel sheets in the manufacturing of automobile outer panels has increased in the automotive industry over the years because of its lightweight and fuel-efficient improvement. But one of the major concerns of stamping is surface deflection in the formed outer panels. Hence, to be cost effective, accurate prediction must be made of its formability. The automotive industry places rigi

    Neutron and muon-induced background studies for the AMoRE double-beta decay experiment

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    AMoRE (Advanced Mo-based Rare process Experiment) is an experiment to search a neutrinoless double-beta decay of 100^{100}Mo in molybdate crystals. The neutron and muon-induced backgrounds are crucial to obtain the zero-background level (<10−510^{-5} counts/(keV⋅\cdotkg⋅\cdotyr)) for the AMoRE-II experiment, which is the second phase of the AMoRE project, planned to run at YEMI underground laboratory. To evaluate the effects of neutron and muon-induced backgrounds, we performed Geant4 Monte Carlo simulations and studied a shielding strategy for the AMORE-II experiment. Neutron-induced backgrounds were also included in the study. In this paper, we estimated the background level in the presence of possible shielding structures, which meet the background requirement for the AMoRE-II experiment

    Long beating wavelength in the Schwarz-Hora effect

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    Thirty years ago, H.Schwarz has attempted to modulate an electron beam with optical frequency. When a 50-keV electron beam crossed a thin crystalline dielectric film illuminated with laser light, electrons produced the electron-diffraction pattern not only at a fluorescent target but also at a nonfluorescent target. In the latter case the pattern was of the same color as the laser light (the Schwarz-Hora effect). This effect was discussed extensively in the early 1970s. However, since 1972 no reports on the results of further attempts to repeat those experiments in other groups have appeared, while the failures of the initial such attempts have been explained by Schwarz. The analysis of the literature shows there are several unresolved up to now contradictions between the theory and the Schwarz experiments. In this work we consider the interpretation of the long-wavelength spatial beating of the Schwarz-Hora radiation. A more accurate expression for the spatial period has been obtained, taking into account the mode structure of the laser field within the dielectric film. It is shown that the discrepancy of more than 10% between the experimental and theoretical results for the spatial period cannot be reduced by using the existing quantum models that consider a collimated electron beam.Comment: 3 pages, RevTe

    Effects of 3D-printed polycaprolactone/��-tricalcium phosphate membranes on guided bone regeneration

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    This study was conducted to compare 3D-printed polycaprolactone (PCL) and polycaprolactone/��-tricalcium phosphate (PCL/��-TCP) membranes with a conventional commercial collagen membrane in terms of their abilities to facilitate guided bone regeneration (GBR). Fabricated membranes were tested for dry and wet mechanical properties. Fibroblasts and preosteoblasts were seeded into the membranes and rates and patterns of proliferation were analyzed using a kit-8 assay and by scanning electron microscopy. Osteogenic differentiation was verified by alizarin red S and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) staining. An in vivo experiment was performed using an alveolar bone defect beagle model, in which defects in three dogs were covered with different membranes. CT and histological analyses at eight weeks after surgery revealed that 3D-printed PCL/��-TCP membranes were more effective than 3D-printed PCL, and substantially better than conventional collagen membranes in terms of biocompatibility and bone regeneration and, thus, at facilitating GBR. ? 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.118Ysciescopu

    Room temperature spin coherence in ZnO

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    Time-resolved optical techniques are used to explore electron spin dynamics in bulk and epilayer samples of n-type ZnO as a function of temperature and magnetic field. The bulk sample yields a spin coherence time T2* of 20 ns at T = 30 K. Epilayer samples, grown by pulsed laser deposition, show a maximum T2* of 2 ns at T = 10 K, with spin precession persisting up to T = 280 K.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure

    Key distillation from quantum channels using two-way communication protocols

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    We provide a general formalism to characterize the cryptographic properties of quantum channels in the realistic scenario where the two honest parties employ prepare and measure protocols and the known two-way communication reconciliation techniques. We obtain a necessary and sufficient condition to distill a secret key using this type of schemes for Pauli qubit channels and generalized Pauli channels in higher dimension. Our results can be applied to standard protocols such as BB84 or six-state, giving a critical error rate of 20% and 27.6%, respectively. We explore several possibilities to enlarge these bounds, without any improvement. These results suggest that there may exist weakly entangling channels useless for key distribution using prepare and measure schemes.Comment: 21 page

    Diversity-aware mutation adequacy criterion for improving fault detection capability

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    Many existing testing techniques adopt diversity as an important criterion for the selection and prioritization of tests. However, mutation adequacy has been content with simply maximizing the number of mutants that have been killed. We propose a novel mutation adequacy criterion that considers the diversity in the relationship between tests and mutants, as well as whether mutants are killed. Intuitively, the proposed criterion is based on the notion that mutants can be distinguished by the sets of tests that kill them. A test suite is deemed adequate by our criterion if the test suite distinguishes all mutants in terms of their kill patterns. Our hypothesis is that, simply by using a stronger adequacy criterion, it is possible to improve fault detection capabilities of mutation-adequate test suites. The empirical evaluation selects tests for real world applications using the proposed mutation adequacy criterion to test our hypothesis. The results show that, for real world faults, test suites adequate to our criterion can increase the fault detection success rate by up to 76.8 percentage points compared to test suites adequate to the traditional criterion

    Quantum mechanics emerges from information theory applied to causal horizons

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    It is suggested that quantum mechanics is not fundamental but emerges from classical information theory applied to causal horizons. The path integral quantization and quantum randomness can be derived by considering information loss of fields or particles crossing Rindler horizons for accelerating observers. This implies that information is one of the fundamental roots of all physical phenomena. The connection between this theory and Verlinde's entropic gravity theory is also investigated.Comment: REvtex4-1, 6pages, 2 figures, final versio
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