6,050 research outputs found
Technology utilization in a non-urban region: Further impact and technique of the Technology Use Studies Center, 2
The clientele served by the Technology Use Studies Center (TUSC) is updated. Manufacturing leads the list of client firms. The standard industrial classification (SIC) range of these firms is broad. Substantial numbers of college and university faculties are using TUSC services. Field operations inherent in the functions of dissemination and assistance are reviewed. Increasing emphasis among clientele is on environmental concerns and management. A record is provided of the institutions contacted and the extent of TUSC involvement with them, as well as TUSC's cooperation with agencies and organizations. The impact of TUSC and the NASA-sponsored Technology Utilization Program on other public agencies is discussed
Technology utilization in a non-urban region: Further impact and technique of the Technology Use Studies Center
Updated information pertaining to clients who receive and use information disseminated by the Technology Use Studies Center (TUSC) is reported. Charts are provided which indicate TUSC's performance in information dissemination and technical assistance in terms of quantities of searches accomplished during several contract years. The faculty information service is described, along with details of cooperation with other agencies. Specific searches are listed according to subject, client, and client location, and a measure of client response to services provided is indicated by the included selection of transfer and impact reports. The impetus behind the formation of the general aviation news letter is also described
Technology utilization
Documentation is presented for selected transfer and impact reports provided to the business community, government agencies, and such other requestors as schools, universities, and health services. Statistical data are also included on the characteristics of the TUSC technical searches
Search and dissemination in data processing
Manual retrieval methods were used to complete 54 searches of interest for the General Aviation Newsletter. Subjects of search ranged from television transmission to machine tooling, Apollo moon landings, electronic equipment, and aerodynamics studies
Technology utilization data searches
Technology Use Studies Center activities, functions, and services are reported for this period. Transfers and searches are described. Characteristics of TUSC searches are tabulated
Effects of temperature upon the collapse of a Bose-Einstein condensate in a gas with attractive interactions
We present a study of the effects of temperature upon the excitation
frequencies of a Bose-Einstein condensate formed within a dilute gas with a
weak attractive effective interaction between the atoms. We use the
self-consistent Hartree-Fock Bogoliubov treatment within the Popov
approximation and compare our results to previous zero temperature and
Hartree-Fock calculations The metastability of the condensate is monitored by
means of the excitation frequency. As the number of atoms in the
condensate is increased, with held constant, this frequency goes to zero,
signalling a phase transition to a dense collapsed state. The critical number
for collapse is found to decrease as a function of temperature, the rate of
decrease being greater than that obtained in previous Hartree-Fock
calculations.Comment: 4 pages LaTeX, 3 eps figures. To appear as a letter in J. Phys.
Scalar second order evolution equations possessing an irreducible sl-valued zero curvature representation
We find all scalar second order evolution equations possessing an
sl-valued zero curvature representation that is not reducible to a proper
subalgebra of sl. None of these zero-curvature representations admits a
parameter.Comment: 10 pages, requires nath.st
Gas Purity effect on GEM Performance in He and Ne at Low Temperatures
The performance of Gas Electron Multipliers (GEMs) in gaseous He, Ne, He+H2
and Ne+H2 was studied at temperatures in the range of 3-293 K. This paper
reports on previously published measurements and additional studies on the
effects of the purity of the gases in which the GEM performance is evaluated.
In He, at temperatures between 77 and 293 K, triple-GEM structures operate at
rather high gains, exceeding 1000. There is an indication that this high gain
is achieved through the Penning effect as a result of impurities in the gas. At
lower temperatures the gain-voltage characteristics are significantly modified
probably due to the freeze-out of these impurities. Double-GEM and single-GEM
structures can operate down to 3 K at gains reaching only several tens at a gas
density of about 0.5 g/l; at higher densities the maximum gain drops further.
In Ne, the maximum gain also drops at cryogenic temperatures. The gain drop in
Ne at low temperatures can be re-established in Penning mixtures of Ne+H2: very
high gains, exceeding 104, have been obtained in these mixtures at 30-77 K, at
a density of 9.2 g/l which corresponds to saturated Ne vapor density at 27 K.
The addition of small amounts of H2 in He also re-establishes large GEM gains
above 30 K but no gain was observed in He+H2 at 4 K and a density of 1.7 g/l
(corresponding to roughly one-tenth of the saturated vapor density). These
studies are, in part, being pursued in the development of two-phase He and Ne
detectors for solar neutrino detection.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figure
One-dimensional Bose chemistry: effects of non-integrability
Three-body collisions of ultracold identical Bose atoms under tight
cylindrical confinement are analyzed. A Feshbach resonance in two-body
collisions is described by a two-channel zero-range interaction. Elimination of
the closed channel in the three-body problem reduces the interaction to a
one-channel zero-range one with an energy dependent strength. The related
problem with an energy independent strength (the Lieb-Liniger-McGuire model)
has an exact solution and forbids all chemical processes, such as three-atom
association and diatom dissociation, as well as reflection in atom-diatom
collisions. The resonant case is analyzed by a numerical solution of the
Faddeev-Lovelace equations. The results demonstrate that as the internal
symmetry of the Lieb-Liniger-McGuire model is lifted, the reflection and
chemical reactions become allowed and may be observed in experiments.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Energy flow of moving dissipative topological solitons
We study the energy flow due to the motion of topological solitons in
nonlinear extended systems in the presence of damping and driving. The total
field momentum contribution to the energy flux, which reduces the soliton
motion to that of a point particle, is insufficient. We identify an additional
exchange energy flux channel mediated by the spatial and temporal inhomogeneity
of the system state. In the well-known case of a DC external force the
corresponding exchange current is shown to be small but non-zero. For the case
of AC driving forces, which lead to a soliton ratchet, the exchange energy flux
mediates the complete energy flow of the system. We also consider the case of
combination of AC and DC external forces, as well as spatial discretization
effects.Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Chao
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