20,843 research outputs found
Experience in feeding coal into a liquefaction process development unit
A system for preparing coal slurry and feeding it into a high pressure liquefaction plant is described. The system was developed to provide supporting research and development for the Bureau of Mines coal liquefaction pilot plant. Operating experiences are included
Parametrically excited "Scars" in Bose-Einstein condensates
Parametric excitation of a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC) can be realized by
periodically changing the interaction strength between the atoms. Above some
threshold strength, this excitation modulates the condensate density. We show
that when the condensate is trapped in a potential well of irregular shape,
density waves can be strongly concentrated ("scarred") along the shortest
periodic orbits of a classical particle moving within the confining potential.
While single-particle wave functions of systems whose classical counterpart is
chaotic may exhibit rich scarring patterns, in BEC, we show that nonlinear
effects select mainly those scars that are locally described by stripes.
Typically, these are the scars associated with self retracing periodic orbits
that do not cross themselves in real space. Dephasing enhances this behavior by
reducing the nonlocal effect of interference
The rotational modes of relativistic stars: Numerical results
We study the inertial modes of slowly rotating, fully relativistic compact
stars. The equations that govern perturbations of both barotropic and
non-barotropic models are discussed, but we present numerical results only for
the barotropic case. For barotropic stars all inertial modes are a hybrid
mixture of axial and polar perturbations. We use a spectral method to solve for
such modes of various polytropic models. Our main attention is on modes that
can be driven unstable by the emission of gravitational waves. Hence, we
calculate the gravitational-wave growth timescale for these unstable modes and
compare the results to previous estimates obtained in Newtonian gravity (i.e.
using post-Newtonian radiation formulas). We find that the inertial modes are
slightly stabilized by relativistic effects, but that previous conclusions
concerning eg. the unstable r-modes remain essentially unaltered when the
problem is studied in full general relativity.Comment: RevTeX, 29 pages, 31 eps figure
DataWarp: Building Applications which Make Progress in an Inconsistent World
The usual approach to dealing with imperfections in data is to attempt to eliminate them. However, the nature of modern systems means this is often futile. This paper describes an approach which permits applications to operate notwithstanding inconsistent data. Instead of attempting to extract a single, correct view of the world from its data, a DataWarp application constructs a collection of interpretations. It adopts one of these and continues work. Since it acts on assumptions, the DataWarp application considers its recent work to be provisional, expecting eventually most of these actions will become definitive. Should the application decide to adopt an alternative data view, it may then need to void provisional actions before resuming work. We describe the DataWarp architecture, discuss its implementation and describe an experiment in which a DataWarp application in an environment containing inconsistent data achieves better results than its conventional counterpart
Measurement of Magnetization Dynamics in Single-Molecule Magnets Induced by Pulsed Millimeter-Wave Radiation
We describe an experiment aimed at measuring the spin dynamics of the Fe8
single-molecule magnet in the presence of pulsed microwave radiation. In
earlier work, heating was observed after a 0.2-ms pulse of intense radiation,
indicating that the spin system and the lattice were out of thermal equilibrium
at millisecond time scale [Bal et al., Europhys. Lett. 71, 110 (2005)]. In the
current work, an inductive pick-up loop is used to probe the photon-induced
magnetization dynamics between only two levels of the spin system at much
shorter time scales (from ns to us). The relaxation time for the magnetization,
induced by a pulse of radiation, is found to be on the order of 10 us.Comment: 3 RevTeX pages, including 3 eps figures. The paper will appear in the
Journal of Applied Physics as MMM'05 conference proceeding
Nonlinear r-modes in Rapidly Rotating Relativistic Stars
The r-mode instability in rotating relativistic stars has been shown recently
to have important astrophysical implications (including the emission of
detectable gravitational radiation, the explanation of the initial spins of
young neutron stars and the spin-distribution of millisecond pulsars and the
explanation of one type of gamma-ray bursts), provided that r-modes are not
saturated at low amplitudes by nonlinear effects or by dissipative mechanisms.
Here, we present the first study of nonlinear r-modes in isentropic, rapidly
rotating relativistic stars, via 3-D general-relativistic hydrodynamical
evolutions. Our numerical simulations show that (1) on dynamical timescales,
there is no strong nonlinear coupling of r-modes to other modes at amplitudes
of order one -- unless nonlinear saturation occurs on longer timescales, the
maximum r-mode amplitude is of order unity (i.e., the velocity perturbation is
of the same order as the rotational velocity at the equator). An absolute upper
limit on the amplitude (relevant, perhaps, for the most rapidly rotating stars)
is set by causality. (2) r-modes and inertial modes in isentropic stars are
predominantly discrete modes and possible associated continuous parts were not
identified in our simulations. (3) In addition, the kinematical drift
associated with r-modes, recently found by Rezzolla, Lamb and Shapiro (2000),
appears to be present in our simulations, but an unambiguous confirmation
requires more precise initial data. We discuss the implications of our findings
for the detectability of gravitational waves from the r-mode instability.Comment: 4 pages, 4 eps figures, accepted in Physical Review Letter
Differential rotation of nonlinear r-modes
Differential rotation of r-modes is investigated within the nonlinear theory
up to second order in the mode amplitude in the case of a slowly-rotating,
Newtonian, barotropic, perfect-fluid star. We find a nonlinear extension of the
linear r-mode, which represents differential rotation that produces large scale
drifts of fluid elements along stellar latitudes. This solution includes a
piece induced by first-order quantities and another one which is a pure
second-order effect. Since the latter is stratified on cylinders, it cannot
cancel differential rotation induced by first-order quantities, which is not
stratified on cylinders. It is shown that, unlikely the situation in the
linearized theory, r-modes do not preserve vorticity of fluid elements at
second-order. It is also shown that the physical angular momentum and energy of
the perturbation are, in general, different from the corresponding canonical
quantities.Comment: 9 pages, revtex4; section III revised, comments added in Introduction
and Conclusions, references updated; to appear in Phys. Rev.
Ferromagnetism of He Films in the Low Field Limit
We provide evidence for a finite temperature ferromagnetic transition in
2-dimensions as in thin films of He on graphite, a model system
for the study of two-dimensional magnetism. We perform pulsed and CW NMR
experiments at fields of 0.03 - 0.48 mT on He at areal densities of 20.5 -
24.2 atoms/nm. At these densities, the second layer of He has a
strongly ferromagnetic tendency. With decreasing temperature, we find a rapid
onset of magnetization that becomes independent of the applied field at
temperatures in the vicinity of 1 mK. Both the dipolar field and the NMR
linewidth grow rapidly as well, which is consistent with a large (order unity)
polarization of the He spins.Comment: 4 figure
Bose-Einstein condensation in dark power-law laser traps
We investigate theoretically an original route to achieve Bose-Einstein
condensation using dark power-law laser traps. We propose to create such traps
with two crossing blue-detuned Laguerre-Gaussian optical beams. Controlling
their azimuthal order allows for the exploration of a multitude of
power-law trapping situations in one, two and three dimensions, ranging from
the usual harmonic trap to an almost square-well potential, in which a
quasi-homogeneous Bose gas can be formed. The usual cigar-shaped and
disk-shaped Bose-Einstein condensates obtained in a 1D or 2D harmonic trap take
the generic form of a "finger" or of a "hockey puck" in such Laguerre-Gaussian
traps. In addition, for a fixed atom number, higher transition temperatures are
obtained in such configurations when compared with a harmonic trap of same
volume. This effect, which results in a substantial acceleration of the
condensation dynamics, requires a better but still reasonable focusing of the
Laguerre-Gaussian beams
An Escherichia coli O157 : H7 outbreak?
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