28,163 research outputs found
Achieving Effective Innovation Based On TRIZ Technological Evolution
Organised by: Cranfield UniversityThis paper outlines the conception of effective innovation and discusses the method to achieve it. Effective
Innovation is constrained on the path of technological evolution so that the corresponding path must be
detected before conceptual design of the product. The process of products technological evolution is a
technical developing process that the products approach to Ideal Final Result (IFR). During the process, the
sustaining innovation and disruptive innovation carry on alternately. By researching and forecasting potential
techniques using TRIZ technological evolution theory, the effective innovation can be achieved finally.Mori Seiki – The Machine Tool Compan
Fluctuations of Spatial Patterns as a Measure of Classical Chaos
In problems where the temporal evolution of a nonlinear system cannot be
followed, a method for studying the fluctuations of spatial patterns has been
developed. That method is applied to well-known problems in deterministic chaos
(the logistic map and the Lorenz model) to check its effectiveness in
characterizing the dynamical behaviors. It is found that the indices
are as useful as the Lyapunov exponents in providing a quantitative measure of
chaos.Comment: 10 pages + 7 figures (in ps file), LaTex, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Critical Behavior of Hadronic Fluctuations and the Effect of Final-State Randomization
The critical behaviors of quark-hadron phase transition are explored by use
of the Ising model adapted for hadron production. Various measures involving
the fluctuations of the produced hadrons in bins of various sizes are examined
with the aim of quantifying the clustering properties that are universal
features of all critical phenomena. Some of the measures involve wavelet
analysis. Two of the measures are found to exhibit the canonical power-law
behavior near the critical temperature. The effect of final-state randomization
is studied by requiring the produced particles to take random walks in the
transverse plane. It is demonstrated that for the measures considered the
dependence on the randomization process is weak. Since temperature is not a
directly measurable variable, the average hadronic density of a portion of each
event is used as the control variable that is measurable. The event-to-event
fluctuations are taken into account in the study of the dependence of the
chosen measures on that control variable. Phenomenologically verifiable
critical behaviors are found and are proposed for use as a signature of
quark-hadron phase transition in relativistic heavy-ion collisions.Comment: 17 pages (Latex) + 24 figures (ps file), submitted to Phys. Rev.
Crossover from a pseudogap state to a superconducting state
On the basis of our calculation we deduce that the particular electronic
structure of cuprate superconductors confines Cooper pairs to be firstly formed
in the antinodal region which is far from the Fermi surface, and these pairs
are incoherent and result in the pseudogap state. With the change of doping or
temperature, some pairs are formed in the nodal region which locates the Fermi
surface, and these pairs are coherent and lead to superconductivity. Thus the
coexistence of the pseudogap and the superconducting gap is explained when the
two kinds of gaps are not all on the Fermi surface. It is also shown that the
symmetry of the pseudogap and the superconducting gap are determined by the
electronic structure, and non-s wave symmetry gap favors the high-temperature
superconductivity. Why the high-temperature superconductivity occurs in the
metal region near the Mott metal-insulator transition is also explained.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
Fluence dependent femtosecond quasi-particle and Eu^{2+} -spin relaxation dynamics in EuFe_{2}(As,P)_{2}
We investigated temperature and fluence dependent dynamics of the time
resolved optical reflectivity in undoped spin-density-wave (SDW) and doped
superconducting (SC) EuFe(As,P) with emphasis on the ordered
Eu-spin temperature region. The data indicate that the SDW order
coexists at low temperature with the SC and Eu-ferromagnetic order.
Increasing the excitation fluence leads to a thermal suppression of the
Eu-spin order due to the crystal-lattice heating while the SDW order is
suppressed nonthermally at a higher fluence
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