16,679 research outputs found
Hydrostatic pressure transducers of carbon and ytterbium Final report
Hydrostatic pressure coefficients of electrical resistivity for carbon and ytterbium pressure transducer
Status of space station power system
The major requirements and guidelines that affect the manned space station configuration and the power systems are explained. The evolution of the space station power system from the NASA program development feasibility phase through the current preliminary design phase is described. Several early station concepts are described and linked to the present concept. The recently completed phase B tradeoff study selections of photovoltaic system technologies are described. The present solar dynamic and power management and distribution systems are also summarized for completeness
Path integrals for stiff polymers applied to membrane physics
Path integrals similar to those describing stiff polymers arise in the
Helfrich model for membranes. We show how these types of path integrals can be
evaluated and apply our results to study the thermodynamics of a minority
stripe phase in a bulk membrane. The fluctuation induced contribution to the
line tension between the stripe and the bulk phase is computed, as well as the
effective interaction between the two phases in the tensionless case where the
two phases have differing bending rigidities.Comment: 11 pages RevTex, 4 figure
Some observations on the renormalization of membrane rigidity by long-range interactions
We consider the renormalization of the bending and Gaussian rigidity of model
membranes induced by long-range interactions between the components making up
the membrane. In particular we analyze the effect of a finite membrane
thickness on the renormalization of the bending and Gaussian rigidity by
long-range interactions. Particular attention is paid to the case where the
interactions are of a van der Waals type.Comment: 11 pages RexTex, no figure
Renormalization of Drift and Diffusivity in Random Gradient Flows
We investigate the relationship between the effective diffusivity and
effective drift of a particle moving in a random medium. The velocity of the
particle combines a white noise diffusion process with a local drift term that
depends linearly on the gradient of a gaussian random field with homogeneous
statistics. The theoretical analysis is confirmed by numerical simulation. For
the purely isotropic case the simulation, which measures the effective drift
directly in a constant gradient background field, confirms the result
previously obtained theoretically, that the effective diffusivity and effective
drift are renormalized by the same factor from their local values. For this
isotropic case we provide an intuitive explanation, based on a {\it spatial}
average of local drift, for the renormalization of the effective drift
parameter relative to its local value. We also investigate situations in which
the isotropy is broken by the tensorial relationship of the local drift to the
gradient of the random field. We find that the numerical simulation confirms a
relatively simple renormalization group calculation for the effective
diffusivity and drift tensors.Comment: Latex 16 pages, 5 figures ep
Perturbation theory for the effective diffusion constant in a medium of random scatterer
We develop perturbation theory and physically motivated resummations of the
perturbation theory for the problem of a tracer particle diffusing in a random
media. The random media contains point scatterers of density uniformly
distributed through out the material. The tracer is a Langevin particle
subjected to the quenched random force generated by the scatterers. Via our
perturbative analysis we determine when the random potential can be
approximated by a Gaussian random potential. We also develop a self-similar
renormalisation group approach based on thinning out the scatterers, this
scheme is similar to that used with success for diffusion in Gaussian random
potentials and agrees with known exact results. To assess the accuracy of this
approximation scheme its predictions are confronted with results obtained by
numerical simulation.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figures, IOP (J. Phys. A. style
Correlation of finite-element structural dynamic analysis with measured free vibration characteristics for a full-scale helicopter fuselage
The correlation achieved with each program provides the material for a discussion of modeling techniques developed for general application to finite-element dynamic analyses of helicopter airframes. Included are the selection of static and dynamic degrees of freedom, cockpit structural modeling, and the extent of flexible-frame modeling in the transmission support region and in the vicinity of large cut-outs. The sensitivity of predicted results to these modeling assumptions are discussed. Both the Sikorsky Finite-Element Airframe Vibration analysis Program (FRAN/Vibration Analysis) and the NASA Structural Analysis Program (NASTRAN) have been correlated with data taken in full-scale vibration tests of a modified CH-53A helicopter
Synaptic plasticity in medial vestibular nucleus neurons: comparison with computational requirements of VOR adaptation
Background: Vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) gain adaptation, a longstanding experimental model of cerebellar learning, utilizes sites of plasticity in both cerebellar cortex and brainstem. However, the mechanisms by which the activity of cortical Purkinje cells may guide synaptic plasticity in brainstem vestibular neurons are unclear. Theoretical analyses indicate that vestibular plasticity should depend upon the correlation between Purkinje cell and vestibular afferent inputs, so that, in gain-down learning for example, increased cortical activity should induce long-term depression (LTD) at vestibular synapses.
Methodology/Principal Findings: Here we expressed this correlational learning rule in its simplest form, as an anti-Hebbian, heterosynaptic spike-timing dependent plasticity interaction between excitatory (vestibular) and inhibitory (floccular) inputs converging on medial vestibular nucleus (MVN) neurons (input-spike-timing dependent plasticity, iSTDP). To test this rule, we stimulated vestibular afferents to evoke EPSCs in rat MVN neurons in vitro. Control EPSC recordings were followed by an induction protocol where membrane hyperpolarizing pulses, mimicking IPSPs evoked by flocculus inputs, were paired with single vestibular nerve stimuli. A robust LTD developed at vestibular synapses when the afferent EPSPs coincided with membrane hyperpolarisation, while EPSPs occurring before or after the simulated IPSPs induced no lasting change. Furthermore, the iSTDP rule also successfully predicted the effects of a complex protocol using EPSP trains designed to mimic classical conditioning.
Conclusions: These results, in strong support of theoretical predictions, suggest that the cerebellum alters the strength of vestibular synapses on MVN neurons through hetero-synaptic, anti-Hebbian iSTDP. Since the iSTDP rule does not depend on post-synaptic firing, it suggests a possible mechanism for VOR adaptation without compromising gaze-holding and VOR performance in vivo
Effective diffusion constant in a two dimensional medium of charged point scatterers
We obtain exact results for the effective diffusion constant of a two
dimensional Langevin tracer particle in the force field generated by charged
point scatterers with quenched positions. We show that if the point scatterers
have a screened Coulomb (Yukawa) potential and are uniformly and independently
distributed then the effective diffusion constant obeys the
Volgel-Fulcher-Tammann law where it vanishes. Exact results are also obtained
for pure Coulomb scatterers frozen in an equilibrium configuration of the same
temperature as that of the tracer.Comment: 9 pages IOP LaTex, no figure
Shell Model Monte Carlo method in the -formalism and applications to the Zr and Mo isotopes
We report on the development of a new shell-model Monte Carlo algorithm which
uses the proton-neutron formalism. Shell model Monte Carlo methods, within the
isospin formulation, have been successfully used in large-scale shell-model
calculations. Motivation for this work is to extend the feasibility of these
methods to shell-model studies involving non-identical proton and neutron
valence spaces. We show the viability of the new approach with some test
results. Finally, we use a realistic nucleon-nucleon interaction in the model
space described by (1p_1/2,0g_9/2) proton and
(1d_5/2,2s_1/2,1d_3/2,0g_7/2,0h_11/2) neutron orbitals above the Sr-88 core to
calculate ground-state energies, binding energies, B(E2) strengths, and to
study pairing properties of the even-even 90-104 Zr and 92-106 Mo isotope
chains
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