186 research outputs found
R-matrix calculations of electron impact electronic excitation of BeH
The R-matrix method is used to perform high-level calculations of electron collisions with beryllium mono-hydride at its equilibrium geometry with a particular emphasis on electron impact electronic excitation. Several target and scattering models are considered. The calculations were performed using (1) the UKRMol suite which relies on the use of Gaussian type orbitals (GTOs) to represent the continuum and (2) using the new UKRMol+ suite which allows the inclusion of B-spline type orbitals in the basis for the continuum. The final close-coupling scattering models used the UKRMol+ code and a frozen core, valence full configuration interaction, method based on a diffuse GTO atomic basis set. The calculated electronic properties of the molecule are in very good agreement with state-of-the-art electronic structure calculations. The use of the UKRMol+ suite proved critical since it allowed the use of a large R-matrix sphere (35 Bohr), necessary to contain the diffuse electronic states of the molecule. The corresponding calculations using UKRMol are not possible due to numerical problems associated with the combination of GTO-only continuum and a large R-matrix sphere. This work provides the first demonstration of the utility and numerical stability of the new UKRMol+ code. The inelastic cross sections obtained here present a significant improvement over the results of earlier studies on BeH
Vibrationally resolved electron impact electronic excitation of BeH
Beryllium is being adopted for plasma facing walls in fusion reactors. This has led to the
observation of emissions from the A 2Î state of beryllium hydride. Use of these emissions to
monitor Be erosion requires electron impact excitation rates. Cross sections for electron
impact vibrational excitation within the X 2Σ+ state and vibrationally resolved electronic
excitation to the A 2Î state are reported for BeH, BeD and BeT. Electron collisions are studied
at a range of internuclear separations using the UK molecular R-matrix (UKRmol+) codes.
Electronic excitation is studied both within the Franck–Condon approximation and by explicit
averaging of the T-matrix elements. It is found that (a) inclusion of the effect of higher partial
waves using the Born approximation leads to significant increases in the cross sections and (b)
the Franck–Condon approximation underestimates the importance of collisions for which the
vibrational state changes during electronic excitation
Lewisian quidditism, humility, and diffidence
In ‘Ramseyan Humility’ Lewis presents the Permutation Argument for quidditism. As he presents it the argument is simple enough, but once one digs beneath its surface, and attempts to understand it in strictly Lewisian terms, difficulties arise. The fundamental difficulty is that, as he presents it, the argument only seems to be sound if one rejects views that Lewis explicitly holds. One aim of this paper is to clarify the argument to show that one can make sense of it in strictly Lewisian terms. In so doing I clarify Lewis’s view, clearly lay out the commitments that Lewis has, and define quidditism in strictly Lewisian terms. However, I also have a secondary aim. Lewis accepts that quidditism entails a form of scepticism, that he calls ‘Humility’. However, by an extension of the permutation argument I show that quidditism entails a form of scepticism, that I call ‘Diffidence’, that is far more wide-reaching than Humility
Synthetic spectra of BeH, BeD and BeT for emission modeling in JET plasmas
A theoretical model for isotopologues of beryllium monohydride, BeH, BeD and BeT, A (2)Pi to X (2)Sigma(+) visible and X (2)Sigma(+) to X (2)Sigma(+) infrared rovibronic spectra is presented. The MARVEL procedure is used to compute empirical rovibronic energy levels for BeH, BeD and BeT, using experimental transition data for the X (2)Sigma(+), A (2)Pi, and C (2)Sigma(+) states. The energy levels from these calculations are then used in the program Duo to produce a potential energy curve for the ground state, X (2)Sigma, and to fit an improved potential energy curve for the first excited state, A (2)Pi, including a spin-orbit coupling term, a A-doubling state to state (A-X states) coupling term, and Born-Oppenheimer breakdown terms for both curves. These, along with a previously computed ab initio dipole curve for the X and A states are used to generate vibrational-rotational wavefunctions, transition energies and A-values. From the transition energies and Einstein coefficients, accurate assigned synthetic spectra for BeH and its isotopologues are obtained at given rotational and vibrational temperatures. The BeH spectrum is compared with a high resolution hollow-cathode lamp spectrum and the BeD spectrum with high resolution spectra from JET giving effective vibrational and rotational temperatures. Full A-X and X-X line lists are given for BeH, BeD and BeT and provided as supplementary data on the ExoMol website.EURATOM 633053RCUK Energy Programme P012450/
Electron–He+2 scattering calculation using the R-matrix method: resonant and bound states of He2
The UK molecular R-matrix codes are used to study electron collisions with the He+2 molecular
ion. Full configuration interaction calculations are performed to obtain the potential energy
curves of the ground X 2Σ+u and the first excited 2Σ+g electronic states of He+2. Resonances,
effective quantum numbers, and resonance widths as a function of the internuclear separation are
determined for the lowest singlet 1Σ+g, 1Σ+u, 1Πg and 1Πu and triplet 3Σ+g, 3Σ+u, 3Πg, 3Πu and 3Δu states, which are relevant for the study of the reactive collision of He+2 with low-energy
electrons. In addition, bound states are also calculated for each symmetry of He2 at several
geometries
Synthetic spectra of BeH, BeD and BeT for emission modeling in JET plasmas
A theoretical model for isotopologues of beryllium monohydride, BeH, BeD and BeT, A to X visible and X to X infrared rovibronic spectra is presented. The MARVEL procedure is used to compute empirical rovibronic energy levels for BeH, BeD and BeT, using experimental transition data for the X , A , and C states. The energy levels from these calculations are then used in the program Duo to produce a potential energy curve for the ground state, X , and to fit an improved potential energy curve for the first excited state, A , including a spin–orbit coupling term, a Λ-doubling state to state (A–X states) coupling term, and Born–Oppenheimer breakdown terms for both curves. These, along with a previously computed ab initio dipole curve for the X and A states are used to generate vibrational-rotational wavefunctions, transition energies and A-values. From the transition energies and Einstein coefficients, accurate assigned synthetic spectra for BeH and its isotopologues are obtained at given rotational and vibrational temperatures. The BeH spectrum is compared with a high resolution hollow-cathode lamp spectrum and the BeD spectrum with high resolution spectra from JET giving effective vibrational and rotational temperatures. Full A–X and X–X line lists are given for BeH, BeD and BeT and provided as supplementary data on the ExoMol website
Smart homes and their users:a systematic analysis and key challenges
Published research on smart homes and their users is growing exponentially, yet a clear understanding of who these users are and how they might use smart home technologies is missing from a field being overwhelmingly pushed by technology developers. Through a systematic analysis of peer-reviewed literature on smart homes and their users, this paper takes stock of the dominant research themes and the linkages and disconnects between them. Key findings within each of nine themes are analysed, grouped into three: (1) views of the smart home-functional, instrumental, socio-technical; (2) users and the use of the smart home-prospective users, interactions and decisions, using technologies in the home; and (3) challenges for realising the smart home-hardware and software, design, domestication. These themes are integrated into an organising framework for future research that identifies the presence or absence of cross-cutting relationships between different understandings of smart homes and their users. The usefulness of the organising framework is illustrated in relation to two major concerns-privacy and control-that have been narrowly interpreted to date, precluding deeper insights and potential solutions. Future research on smart homes and their users can benefit by exploring and developing cross-cutting relationships between the research themes identified
Vibrational Properties of Nanoscale Materials: From Nanoparticles to Nanocrystalline Materials
The vibrational density of states (VDOS) of nanoclusters and nanocrystalline
materials are derived from molecular-dynamics simulations using empirical
tight-binding potentials. The results show that the VDOS inside nanoclusters
can be understood as that of the corresponding bulk system compressed by the
capillary pressure. At the surface of the nanoparticles the VDOS exhibits a
strong enhancement at low energies and shows structures similar to that found
near flat crystalline surfaces. For the nanocrystalline materials an increased
VDOS is found at high and low phonon energies, in agreement with experimental
findings. The individual VDOS contributions from the grain centers, grain
boundaries, and internal surfaces show that, in the nanocrystalline materials,
the VDOS enhancements are mainly caused by the grain-boundary contributions and
that surface atoms play only a minor role. Although capillary pressures are
also present inside the grains of nanocrystalline materials, their effect on
the VDOS is different than in the cluster case which is probably due to the
inter-grain coupling of the modes via the grain-boundaries.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Affordances, constraints and information flows as ‘leverage points’ in design for sustainable behaviour
Copyright @ 2012 Social Science Electronic PublishingTwo of Donella Meadows' 'leverage points' for intervening in systems (1999) seem particularly pertinent to design for sustainable behaviour, in the sense that designers may have the scope to implement them in (re-)designing everyday products and services. The 'rules of the system' -- interpreted here to refer to affordances and constraints -- and the structure of information flows both offer a range of opportunities for design interventions to in fluence behaviour change, and in this paper, some of the implications and possibilities are discussed with reference to parallel concepts from within design, HCI and relevant areas of psychology
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