566 research outputs found

    Experimental study of the flow velocity reduction behind fishing net

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    A series of physical model experiments is conducted to investigate the flow velocity reduction downstream from fishing net in current. The plane net is fixed on a steel frame, which is 0.3 m in width and 0.3 m in height, and positioned in the center of the flume normal to the flow direction. In the experiments, the acoustic Doppler velocimeter (ADV) is applied to measure the flow velocity behind the plane net. This paper presents the flow velocity reduction behind the plane net(s) with different solidity, spacing distances between two plane nets and plane net numbers. According to the experimental data, there exists an obvious flow velocity reduction downstream from the\ud plane net and the flow velocity reduction increases with increasing net solidity. For two plane nets with different spacing distances, the average value of flow velocity reduction factor is 0.90 between and 0.83 downstream the two plane nets. As the net number increases from 1 to 4, the minimum flow velocity reduction factor downstream from the\ud plane nets decreases from 0.90 to 0.68. It is found that there is a close relationship between the flow velocity reduction and the above parameters of the plane net. These results should help improve understanding of flow around the net cage

    E-Document Management Based on Web services and XML

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    Document management plays an important role in R&D project management for government funding agencies, universities, and research institutions. The advent of Web services and XML presents new opportunities for e-document management. This paper describes a novel solution for processing large quantities of electronic documents in multiple formats within a short timeframe. The solution is based on Web services for integrating two-tiered distributed processing. It also involves a document extraction process for handling multiple document formats, with XML as the intermediate for information exchange. The application of the solution at the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) proved successful, and the general approach may be applied to a broad range of e-document management settings

    The nucleon's strange electromagnetic and scalar matrix elements

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    Quenched lattice QCD simulations and quenched chiral perturbation theory are used together for this study of strangeness in the nucleon. Dependences of the matrix elements on strange quark mass, valence quark mass and momentum transfer are discussed in both the lattice and chiral frameworks. The combined results of this study are in good agreement with existing experimental data and predictions are made for upcoming experiments. Possible future refinements of the theoretical method are suggested.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figure

    Quenched chiral logarithms in lattice QCD with exact chiral symmetry

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    We examine quenched chiral logarithms in lattice QCD with overlap Dirac quark. For 100 gauge configurations generated with the Wilson gauge action at β=5.8 \beta = 5.8 on the 83×24 8^3 \times 24 lattice, we compute quenched quark propagators for 12 bare quark masses. The pion decay constant is extracted from the pion propagator, and from which the lattice spacing is determined to be 0.147 fm. The presence of quenched chiral logarithm in the pion mass is confirmed, and its coefficient is determined to be δ=0.203±0.014 \delta = 0.203 \pm 0.014 , in agreement with the theoretical estimate in quenched chiral perturbation theory. Further, we obtain the topological susceptibility of these 100 gauge configurations by measuring the index of the overlap Dirac operator. Using a formula due to exact chiral symmetry, we obtain the η′ \eta' mass in quenched chiral perturbation theory, mη′=(901±64) m_{\eta'} = (901 \pm 64) Mev, and an estimate of δ=0.197±0.027 \delta = 0.197 \pm 0.027 , which is in good agreement with that determined from the pion mass.Comment: 24 pages, 6 EPS figures; v2: some clarifications added, to appear in Physical Review

    Dynamics of false vacuum bubbles in Brans-Dicke theory

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    We study the dynamics of false vacuum bubbles in the Brans-Dicke theory of gravity by using the thin shell or thin wall approximation. We consider a false vacuum bubble that has a different value for the Brans-Dicke field between the inside false vacuum region and the outside true vacuum region. Within a certain limit of field values, the difference of field values makes the effective tension of the shell negative. This allows new expanding false vacuum bubbles to be seen by the outside observer, which are disallowed in Einstein gravity.Comment: 29 pages, 20 figure

    Disparate MgII Absorption Statistics towards Quasars and Gamma-Ray Bursts : A Possible Explanation

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    We examine the recent report by Prochter et al. (2006) that gamma-ray burst (GRB) sight lines have a much higher incidence of strong MgII absorption than quasar sight lines. We propose that the discrepancy is due to the different beam sizes of GRBs and quasars, and that the intervening MgII systems are clumpy with the dense part of each cloudlet of a similar size as the quasars, i.e. < 10^16 cm, but bigger than GRBs. We also discuss observational predictions of our proposed model. Most notably, in some cases the intervening MgII absorbers in GRB spectra should be seen varying, and quasars with smaller sizes should show an increased rate of strong MgII absorbers. In fact, our prediction of variable MgII lines in the GRB spectra has been now confirmed by Hao et al. (2007), who observed intervening FeII and MgII lines at z=1.48 to be strongly variable in the multi-epoch spectra of z=4.05 GRB060206.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures; substantially revised model calculation; accepted for publication in Astrophysics & Space Science as a Lette

    Instantons and Scalar Multiquark States: From Small to Large N_c

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    We study scalar quark-anti-quark and two-quark-two-anti-quark correlation functions in the instanton liquid model. We show that the instanton liquid supports a light scalar-isoscalar (sigma) meson, and that this state is strongly coupled to both (qˉq)(\bar{q}q) and (qˉq)2(\bar{q}q)^2. The scalar-isovector a0a_0 meson, on the other hand, is heavy. We also show that these properties are specific to QCD with three colors. In the large NcN_c limit the scalar-isoscalar meson is not light, and it is mainly coupled to (qˉq)(\bar{q}q).Comment: 24 page

    Low-energy couplings of QCD from current correlators near the chiral limit

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    We investigate a new numerical procedure to compute fermionic correlation functions at very small quark masses. Large statistical fluctuations, due to the presence of local ``bumps'' in the wave functions associated with the low-lying eigenmodes of the Dirac operator, are reduced by an exact low-mode averaging. To demonstrate the feasibility of the technique, we compute the two-point correlator of the left-handed vector current with Neuberger fermions in the quenched approximation, for lattices with a linear extent of L~1.5 fm, a lattice spacing a~0.09 fm, and quark masses down to the epsilon-regime. By matching the results with the corresponding (quenched) chiral perturbation theory expressions, an estimate of (quenched) low-energy constants can be obtained. We find agreement between the quenched values of F extrapolated from the p-regime and extracted in the epsilon-regime.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figure

    Approximate Solution of the effective mass Klein-Gordon Equation for the Hulthen Potential with any Angular Momentum

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    The radial part of the effective mass Klein-Gordon equation for the Hulthen potential is solved by making an approximation to the centrifugal potential. The Nikiforov-Uvarov method is used in the calculations. Energy spectra and the corresponding eigenfunctions are computed. Results are also given for the case of constant mass.Comment: 12 page

    Spectral Correlation in Incommensurate Multi-Walled Carbon Nanotubes

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    We investigate the energy spectra of clean incommensurate double-walled carbon nanotubes, and find that the overall spectral properties are described by the so-called critical statistics of Anderson metal-insulator transition. In the energy spectra, there exist three different regimes characterized by Wigner-Dyson, Poisson, and semi-Poisson distributions. This feature implies that the electron transport in incommensurate multi-walled nanotubes can be either diffusive, ballistic, or intermediate between them, depending on the position of the Fermi energy.Comment: final version to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
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