1,577 research outputs found
The interaction of a Sears-type sinusoidal gust with a cambered aerofoil in the presence of non-uniform streamwise flow
The unsteady load response of an aerofoil encountering a gust is often modelled using analytical transfer functions, which assume idealised behaviour of both the flow and the aerofoil. One such transfer function is the Sears function, which models a pure transverse gust interacting with a flat-plate aerofoil at zero mean incidence. The function was extended by Goldstein and Atassi to account for camber and incidence as well as the presence of a streamwise gust component. Atassi showed that the effects of camber and incidence (i.e. non-zero mean aerofoil loading) are not negligible when there is a streamwise gust component. In this work, new experimental data is shown for an aerofoil with non-zeroloading encountering a gust with both streamwise and transverse components. The data gives validation of the Atassi model. Some of the flow physics behind the Atassi model is also investigated, including the superposition of the gust onto the aerofoil potential field and the propagation of the gust along the aerofoil surface
Theory of Pump Depletion and Spike Formation in Stimulated Raman Scattering
By using the inverse spectral transform, the SRS equations are solved and the
explicit output data is given for arbitrary laser pump and Stokes seed profiles
injected on a vacuum of optical phonons. For long duration laser pulses, this
solution is modified such as to take into account the damping rate of the
optical phonon wave. This model is used to interprete the experiments of Druhl,
Wenzel and Carlsten (Phys. Rev. Lett., (1983) vol. 51, p. 1171), in particular
the creation of a spike of (anomalous) pump radiation. The related nonlinear
Fourier spectrum does not contain discrete eigenvalue, hence this Raman spike
is not a soliton.Comment: LaTex file, includes two figures in LaTex format, 9 page
Revision 1 Size and position of the healthy meniscus, and its Correlation with sex, height, weight, and bone area- a cross-sectional study
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Meniscus extrusion or hypertrophy may occur in knee osteoarthritis (OA). However, currently no data are available on the position and size of the meniscus in asymptomatic men and women with normal meniscus integrity.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Three-dimensional coronal DESSwe MRIs were used to segment and quantitatively measure the size and position of the medial and lateral menisci, and their correlation with sex, height, weight, and tibial plateau area. 102 knees (40 male and 62 female) were drawn from the Osteoarthritis Initiative "non-exposed" reference cohort, including subjects without symptoms, radiographic signs, or risk factors for knee OA. Knees with MRI signs of meniscus lesions were excluded.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The tibial plateau area was significantly larger (p < 0.001) in male knees than in female ones (+23% medially; +28% laterally), as was total meniscus surface area (p < 0.001, +20% medially; +26% laterally). Ipsi-compartimental tibial plateau area was more strongly correlated with total meniscus surface area in men (r = .72 medially; r = .62 laterally) and women (r = .67; r = .75) than contra-compartimental or total tibial plateau area, body height or weight. The ratio of meniscus versus tibial plateau area was similar between men and women (p = 0.22 medially; p = 0.72 laterally). Tibial coverage by the meniscus was similar between men and women (50% medially; 58% laterally), but "physiological" medial meniscal extrusion was greater in women (1.83 ± 1.06mm) than in men (1.24mm ± 1.18mm; p = 0.011).</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>These data suggest that meniscus surface area strongly scales with (ipsilateral) tibial plateau area across both sexes, and that tibial coverage by the meniscus is similar between men and women.</p
A bright nanowire single photon source based on SiV centers in diamond
The practical implementation of many quantum technologies relies on the
development of robust and bright single photon sources that operate at room
temperature. The negatively charged silicon-vacancy (SiV-) color center in
diamond is a possible candidate for such a single photon source. However, due
to the high refraction index mismatch to air, color centers in diamond
typically exhibit low photon out-coupling. An additional shortcoming is due to
the random localization of native defects in the diamond sample. Here we
demonstrate deterministic implantation of Si ions with high conversion
efficiency to single SiV- centers, targeted to fabricated nanowires. The
co-localization of single SiV- centers with the nanostructures yields a ten
times higher light coupling efficiency than for single SiV- centers in bulk
diamond. This enhanced photon out-coupling, together with the intrinsic
scalability of the SiV- creation method, enables a new class of devices for
integrated photonics and quantum science.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
Sick leave patterns in common musculoskeletal disorders – a study of doctor prescribed sick leave
Comparative data on sick leave within musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) is limited. Our objective was to give a descriptive overview of sick leave patterns in different MSDs
Ultrafast photon-photon interaction in a strongly coupled quantum dot-cavity system
We study dynamics of the interaction between two weak light beams mediated by
a strongly coupled quantum dot-photonic crystal cavity system. First, we
perform all optical switching of a weak continuous-wave signal with a pulsed
control beam, and then perform switching between two pulsed beams (40ps pulses)
at the single photon level. Our results show that the quantum dot-nanocavity
system creates strong, controllable interactions at the single photon level
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