42,123 research outputs found
An Experimental and Numerical Investigation of Swirling Flows in a Rectangular Nozzle
The high thrust to weight ratios now possible for military aircraft have made thrust vector pitch control more attractive and versatile than aerodynamic surface pitch control. Use of a rectangular nozzle is a natural consequence because articulation and sealing problems are less formidable than for conventional circular ones. The rectangular nozzle offers the additional possibility that the exhaust may mix rapidly with the ambient air and thereby reduce the radiative signature of the exhaust. A detailed experimental investigation is described, which demonstrates that the formation of axial vortices in the nozzle is dependent on the vorticity distribution at the turbine exhaust. Further, three mechanisms which provide for the formation of axial vortices are identified. A parallel computational investigation was carried out which not only confirmed the relationship between the turbine exhaust vorticity and the vortex pattern formed in the nozzle but also provided details of the flow field between the turbine discharge and the nozzle exit. On the basis of this more detailed understanding, it is now possible to tailor the vortex distribution at the nozzle exit by design of the turbine discharge and the intervening passage
Global Precedence In Visual Search? Not So Fast: Evidence Instead For An Oblique Effect
The evidence from an earlier report of global precedence in visual search is reexamined, Two new experiments are reported. The results of the first experiment indicate that the confusability of oblique orientations (a class-2 oblique effect) rather than global precedence was responsible for the earlier results. The results of the second experiment show that the effect critically depends on the presence of heterogeneous distracters rather than on differences in raw processing speed for different spatial scales. The possible role of symmetry is discussed
Unbounded growth of entanglement in models of many-body localization
An important and incompletely answered question is whether a closed quantum
system of many interacting particles can be localized by disorder. The time
evolution of simple (unentangled) initial states is studied numerically for a
system of interacting spinless fermions in one dimension described by the
random-field XXZ Hamiltonian. Interactions induce a dramatic change in the
propagation of entanglement and a smaller change in the propagation of
particles. For even weak interactions, when the system is thought to be in a
many-body localized phase, entanglement shows neither localized nor diffusive
behavior but grows without limit in an infinite system: interactions act as a
singular perturbation on the localized state with no interactions. The
significance for proposed atomic experiments is that local measurements will
show a large but nonthermal entropy in the many-body localized state. This
entropy develops slowly (approximately logarithmically) over a diverging time
scale as in glassy systems.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, v2. added more dat
Possible Lattice Distortions in the Hubbard Model for Graphene
The Hubbard model on the honeycomb lattice is a well known model for
graphene. Equally well known is the Peierls type of instability of the lattice
bond lengths. In the context of these two approximations we ask and answer the
question of the possible lattice distortions for graphene in zero magnetic
field. The answer is that in the thermodynamic limit only periodic,
reflection-symmetric distortions are allowed and these have at most six atoms
per unit cell as compared to two atoms for the undistorted lattice.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Stability and Absence of Binding for Multi-Polaron Systems
We resolve several longstanding problems concerning the stability and the
absence of multi-particle binding for N\geq 2 polarons. Fr\"ohlich's 1937
polaron model describes non-relativistic particles interacting with a scalar
quantized field with coupling \sqrt\alpha, and with each other by Coulomb
repulsion of strength U. We prove the following: (i) While there is a known
thermodynamic instability for U<2\alpha, stability of matter does hold for
U>2\alpha, that is, the ground state energy per particle has a finite limit as
N\to\infty. (ii) There is no binding of any kind if U exceeds a critical value
that depends on \alpha but not on N. The same results are shown to hold for the
Pekar-Tomasevich model.Comment: 23 page
Electrolytically regenerative hydrogen-oxygen fuel cell Patent
Electrolytically regenerative hydrogen-oxygen fuel cell
Ground state properties of multi-polaron systems
We summarize our recent results on the ground state energy of multi-polaron
systems. In particular, we discuss stability and existence of the thermodynamic
limit, and we discuss the absence of binding in the case of large Coulomb
repulsion and the corresponding binding-unbinding transition. We also consider
the Pekar-Tomasevich approximation to the ground state energy and we study
radial symmetry of the ground state density.Comment: Contribution to the proceedings of ICMP12, Aalborg, Denmark, August
6--11, 2012; 8 page
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