1,429 research outputs found
Localized buckling in sandwich struts with inhomogeneous deformation in both face plates
A nonlinear analytical model for investigating localized interactive buckling in simply supported thin-face plate sandwich struts with weak cores is extended to account for local deformations in both face plates, which have been observed in experiments and finite element simulations. The original model is based on potential energy principles with large displacement assumptions. It assumes Timoshenko shear deformable theory for the core and approximates the overall mode as a half-sine wave along the length of the strut while the local face plate displacements are initially unknown and are found as solutions of the governing equations. The extended model is able to capture measurable local face plate displacements in the less compressed face plate, beyond the secondary bifurcation which leads to localized interactive buckling, for the case where overall buckling is critical. Moreover, the allowance of local displacements in both face plates allows the extended model to predict the post-buckling behavior better in cases where local buckling is critical. The results from this model compare very well with nonlinear finite element simulations with respect to both the equilibrium paths and panel deformations
Instanton test of non-supersymmetric deformations of the AdS_5 x S^5
We consider instanton effects in a non-supersymmetric gauge theory obtained
by marginal deformations of the N=4 SYM. This gauge theory is expected to be
dual to type IIB string theory on the AdS_5 times deformed-S^5 background. From
an instanton calculation in the deformed gauge theory we extract the prediction
for the dilaton-axion field \tau in dual string theory. In the limit of small
deformations where the supergravity regime is valid, our instanton result
reproduces the expression for \tau of the supergravity solution found by
Frolov.Comment: 15 page
Mid-Air Haptic Rendering of 2D Geometric Shapes with a Dynamic Tactile Pointer
IEEE An important challenge that affects ultrasonic midair haptics, in contrast to physical touch, is that we lose certain exploratory procedures such as contour following. This makes the task of perceiving geometric properties and shape identification more difficult. Meanwhile, the growing interest in mid-air haptics and their application to various new areas requires an improved understanding of how we perceive specific haptic stimuli, such as icons and control dials in mid-air. We address this challenge by investigating static and dynamic methods of displaying 2D geometric shapes in mid-air. We display a circle, a square, and a triangle, in either a static or dynamic condition, using ultrasonic mid-air haptics. In the static condition, the shapes are presented as a full outline in mid-air, while in the dynamic condition, a tactile pointer is moved around the perimeter of the shapes. We measure participants' accuracy and confidence of identifying shapes in two controlled experiments (). Results reveal that in the dynamic condition people recognise shapes significantly more accurately, and with higher confidence. We also find that representing polygons as a set of individually drawn haptic strokes, with a short pause at the corners, drastically enhances shape recognition accuracy. Our research supports the design of mid-air haptic user interfaces in application scenarios such as in-car interactions or assistive technology in education
ABJ(M) Chiral Primary Three-Point Function at Two-loops
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons
Attribution License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits any use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.archiveprefix: arXiv primaryclass: hep-th reportnumber: QMUL-PH-14-10 slaccitation: %%CITATION = ARXIV:1404.1117;%%archiveprefix: arXiv primaryclass: hep-th reportnumber: QMUL-PH-14-10 slaccitation: %%CITATION = ARXIV:1404.1117;%%archiveprefix: arXiv primaryclass: hep-th reportnumber: QMUL-PH-14-10 slaccitation: %%CITATION = ARXIV:1404.1117;%%Article funded by SCOAP
Spectral statistics of random geometric graphs
We use random matrix theory to study the spectrum of random geometric graphs,
a fundamental model of spatial networks. Considering ensembles of random
geometric graphs we look at short range correlations in the level spacings of
the spectrum via the nearest neighbour and next nearest neighbour spacing
distribution and long range correlations via the spectral rigidity Delta_3
statistic. These correlations in the level spacings give information about
localisation of eigenvectors, level of community structure and the level of
randomness within the networks. We find a parameter dependent transition
between Poisson and Gaussian orthogonal ensemble statistics. That is the
spectral statistics of spatial random geometric graphs fits the universality of
random matrix theory found in other models such as Erdos-Renyi, Barabasi-Albert
and Watts-Strogatz random graph.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figures. Substantially updated from previous versio
Monte Carlo validation of a mu-SPECT imaging system on the lightweight grid CiGri
à paraître dans Future Generation Computer SystemsMonte Carlo Simulations (MCS) are nowadays widely used in the field of nuclear medicine for system and algorithms designs. They are valuable for accurately reproducing experimental data, but at the expense of a long computing time. An efficient solution for shorter elapsed time has recently been proposed: grid computing. The aim of this work is to validate a small animal gamma camera MCS and to confirm the usefulness of grid computing for such a study. Good matches between measured and simulated data were achieved and a crunching factor up to 70 was attained on a lightweight campus grid
Self-Organization in Multimode Microwave Phonon Laser (Phaser): Experimental Observation of Spin-Phonon Cooperative Motions
An unusual nonlinear resonance was experimentally observed in a ruby phonon
laser (phaser) operating at 9 GHz with an electromagnetic pumping at 23 GHz.
The resonance is manifested by very slow cooperative self-detunings in the
microwave spectra of stimulated phonon emission when pumping is modulated at a
superlow frequency (less than 10 Hz). During the self-detuning cycle new and
new narrow phonon modes are sequentially ``fired'' on one side of the spectrum
and approximately the same number of modes are ``extinguished'' on the other
side, up to a complete generation breakdown in a certain final portion of the
frequency axis. This is usually followed by a short-time refractority, after
which the generation is fired again in the opposite (starting) portion of the
frequency axis. The entire process of such cooperative spectral motions is
repeated with high degree of regularity. The self-detuning period strongly
depends on difference between the modulation frequency and the resonance
frequency. This period is incommensurable with period of modulation. It
increases to very large values (more than 100 s) when pointed difference is
less than 0.05 Hz. The revealed phenomenon is a kind of global spin-phonon
self- organization. All microwave modes of phonon laser oscillate with the same
period, but with different, strongly determined phase shifts - as in optical
lasers with antiphase motions.Comment: LaTeX2e file (REVTeX4), 5 pages, 5 Postscript figures. Extended and
revised version of journal publication. More convenient terminology is used.
Many new bibliographic references are added, including main early theoretical
and experimental papers on microwave phonon lasers (in English and in
Russian
The Johnson-Segalman model with a diffusion term in Couette flow
We study the Johnson-Segalman (JS) model as a paradigm for some complex
fluids which are observed to phase separate, or ``shear-band'' in flow. We
analyze the behavior of this model in cylindrical Couette flow and demonstrate
the history dependence inherent in the local JS model. We add a simple gradient
term to the stress dynamics and demonstrate how this term breaks the degeneracy
of the local model and prescribes a much smaller (discrete, rather than
continuous) set of banded steady state solutions. We investigate some of the
effects of the curvature of Couette flow on the observable steady state
behavior and kinetics, and discuss some of the implications for metastability.Comment: 14 pp, to be published in Journal of Rheolog
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