10,364 research outputs found
Performance evaluation of a second-generation elastic loop mobility system
Tests were conducted to evaluate the mobility performance of a second-generation Elastic Loop Mobility System (ELMS II). Performance on level test lanes and slopes of lunar soil simulant (LSS) and obstacle-surmounting and crevasse-crossing capabilities were investigated. In addition, internal losses and contact pressure distributions were evaluated. To evaluate the soft-soil performance, two basic soil conditions were tested: loose (LSS1) and dense (LSS5). These conditions embrace the spectrum of soil strengths tested during recent studies for NASA related to the mobility performance of the LRV. Data indicated that for the tested range of the various performance parameters, performance was independent of unit load (contact pressure) and ELMS II drum angular velocity, but was influenced by soil strength and ELMS pitch mode. Power requirements were smaller at a given system output for dense soil than for loose soil. The total system output in terms of pull developed or slope-climbing capability was larger for the ELMS II operating in restrained-pitch mode than in free-pitch mode
High-resolution ice nucleation spectra of sea-ice bacteria: implications for cloud formation and life in frozen environments
International audienceEven though studies of Arctic ice forming particles suggest that a bacterial or viral source derived from open leads could be important for cloud formation in the Arctic (Bigg and Leck, 2001), the ice nucleation potential of most polar marine psychrophiles or viruses has not been examined under conditions more closely resembling those in the atmosphere. In this paper, we examined the ice nucleation activity (INA) of several representative Arctic and Antarctic sea-ice bacterial isolates and a polar Colwellia phage virus. High-resolution ice nucleation spectra were obtained for droplets containing bacterial cells or virus particles using a free-fall freezing tube technique. The fraction of frozen droplets at a particular droplet temperature was determined by measuring the depolarized light scattering intensity from solution droplets in free-fall. Our experiments revealed that all sea-ice isolates and the virus nucleated ice at temperatures very close to the homogeneous nucleation temperature for the nucleation medium ? which for artificial seawater was ?42.2±0.3°C. Our results indicated that these marine psychro-active bacteria and viruses are not important for heterogeneous ice nucleation processes in sea ice or polar clouds. These results also suggested that avoidance of ice formation in close proximity to cell surfaces might be one of the cold-adaptation and survival strategies for sea-ice bacteria. The fact that INA occurs at such low temperature could constitute one factor that explains the persistence of metabolic activities at temperatures far below the freezing point of seawater
A Coulomb Gauge Model of Mesons
A model of mesons which is based on the QCD Hamiltonian in Coulomb gauge is
presented. The model relies on a novel quasiparticle basis to improve the
reliability of the Fock space expansion. It is also relativistic, yields chiral
pions, and is tightly constrained by QCD (quark masses are the only
parameters). Applications to hidden flavor mesons yield results which are
comparable to phenomenological constituent quark models while revealing the
limitations of such models.Comment: 13 pages, 1 eps figure, 5 table
Canonical Transformations and Path Integral Measures
This paper is a generalization of previous work on the use of classical
canonical transformations to evaluate Hamiltonian path integrals for quantum
mechanical systems. Relevant aspects of the Hamiltonian path integral and its
measure are discussed and used to show that the quantum mechanical version of
the classical transformation does not leave the measure of the path integral
invariant, instead inducing an anomaly. The relation to operator techniques and
ordering problems is discussed, and special attention is paid to incorporation
of the initial and final states of the transition element into the boundary
conditions of the problem. Classical canonical transformations are developed to
render an arbitrary power potential cyclic. The resulting Hamiltonian is
analyzed as a quantum system to show its relation to known quantum mechanical
results. A perturbative argument is used to suppress ordering related terms in
the transformed Hamiltonian in the event that the classical canonical
transformation leads to a nonquadratic cyclic Hamiltonian. The associated
anomalies are analyzed to yield general methods to evaluate the path integral's
prefactor for such systems. The methods are applied to several systems,
including linear and quadratic potentials, the velocity-dependent potential,
and the time-dependent harmonic oscillator.Comment: 28 pages, LaTe
Life prediction and constitutive models for engine hot section anisotropic materials program
This report presents the results of the first year of a program designed to develop life prediction and constitutive models for two coated single crystal alloys used in gas turbine airfoils. The two alloys are PWA 1480 and Alloy 185. The two oxidation resistant coatings are PWA 273, an aluminide coating, and PWA 286, an overlay NiCoCrAlY coating. To obtain constitutive and/or fatigue data, tests were conducted on coated and uncoated PWA 1480 specimens tensilely loaded in the 100 , 110 , 111 , and 123 directions. A literature survey of constitutive models was completed for both single crystal alloys and metallic coating materials; candidate models were selected. One constitutive model under consideration for single crystal alloys applies Walker's micromechanical viscoplastic formulation to all slip systems participating in the single crystal deformation. The constitutive models for the overlay coating correlate the viscoplastic data well. For the aluminide coating, a unique test method is under development. LCF and TMF tests are underway. The two coatings caused a significant drop in fatigue life, and each produced a much different failure mechanism
Invariant imbedding theory of mode conversion in inhomogeneous plasmas. II. Mode conversion in cold, magnetized plasmas with perpendicular inhomogeneity
A new version of the invariant imbedding theory for the propagation of
coupled waves in inhomogeneous media is applied to the mode conversion of high
frequency electromagnetic waves into electrostatic modes in cold, magnetized
and stratified plasmas. The cases where the external magnetic field is applied
perpendicularly to the direction of inhomogeneity and the electron density
profile is linear are considered. Extensive and numerically exact results for
the mode conversion coefficients, the reflectances and the wave electric and
magnetic field profiles inside the inhomogeneous plasma are obtained. The
dependences of mode conversion phenomena on the magnitude of the external
magnetic field, the incident angle and the wave frequency are explored in
detail.Comment: 11 figures, to be published in Physics of Plasma
BB Intermeson Potentials in the Quark Model
In this paper we derive quark model results for scattering amplitudes and
equivalent low energy potentials for heavy meson pairs, in which each meson
contains a heavy quark. This "BB" system is an attractive theoretical
laboratory for the study of the nuclear force between color singlets; the
hadronic system is relatively simple, and there are lattice gauge theory (LGT)
results for V_BB(r) which may be compared to phenomenological models. We find
that the quark model potential (after lattice smearing) has qualitative
similarities to the LGT potential in the two B*B* channels in which direct
comparison is possible, although there is evidence of a difference in length
scales. The quark model prediction of equal magnitude but opposite sign for I=0
and I=1 potentials also appears similar to LGT results at intermediate r. There
may however be a discrepancy between the LGT and quark model I=1 BB potentials.
A numerical study of the two-meson Schrodinger equations in the (bqbar)(bqbar)
and (cqbar)(cqbar) sectors with the quark model potentials finds a single
"molecule", in the I=0 BB* sector. Binding in other channels might occur if the
quark model forces are augmented by pion exchange.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figures, revtex and epsfig. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Excited heavy tetraquarks with hidden charm
The masses of the excited heavy tetraquarks with hidden charm are calculated
within the relativistic diquark-antidiquark picture. The dynamics of the light
quark in a heavy-light diquark is treated completely relativistically. The
diquark structure is taken into account by calculating the diquark-gluon form
factor. New experimental data on charmonium-like states above open charm
threshold are discussed. The obtained results indicate that X(3872), Y(4260),
Y(4360), Z(4248), Z(4433) and Y(4660) could be tetraquark states with hidden
charm.Comment: 11 page
Theory of the propagation of coupled waves in arbitrarily-inhomogeneous stratified media
We generalize the invariant imbedding theory of the wave propagation and
derive new invariant imbedding equations for the propagation of arbitrary
number of coupled waves of any kind in arbitrarily-inhomogeneous stratified
media, where the wave equations are effectively one-dimensional. By doing this,
we transform the original boundary value problem of coupled second-order
differential equations to an initial value problem of coupled first-order
differential equations, which makes the numerical solution of the coupled wave
equations much easier. Using the invariant imbedding equations, we are able to
calculate the matrix reflection and transmission coefficients and the wave
amplitudes inside the inhomogeneous media exactly and efficiently. We establish
the validity and the usefulness of our results by applying them to the
propagation of circularly-polarized electromagnetic waves in one-dimensional
photonic crystals made of isotropic chiral media. We find that there are three
kinds of bandgaps in these structures and clarify the nature of these bandgaps
by exact calculations.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, to appear in Europhys. Let
Electron-capture branch of 100Tc and tests of nuclear wave functions for double-beta decays
We present a measurement of the electron-capture branch of Tc. Our
value, , implies that the
Mo neutrino absorption cross section to the ground state of Tc
is roughly one third larger than previously thought. Compared to previous
measurements, our value of prevents a smaller disagreement with
QRPA calculations relevant to double- decay matrix elements
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