2,585 research outputs found
Control of large space structures
The control of large space structures was studied to determine what, if any, limitations are imposed on the size of spacecraft which may be controlled using current control system design technology. Using a typical structure in the 35 to 70 meter size category, a control system design that used actuators that are currently available was designed. The amount of control power required to maintain the vehicle in a stabilized gravity gradient pointing orientation that also damped various structural motions was determined. The moment of inertia and mass properties of this structure were varied to verify that stability and performance were maintained. The study concludes that the structure's size is required to change by at least a factor of two before any stability problems arise. The stability margin that is lost is due to the scaling of the gravity gradient torques (the rigid body control) and as such can easily be corrected by changing the control gains associated with the rigid body control. A secondary conclusion from the study is that the control design that accommodates the structural motions (to damp them) is a little more sensitive than the design that works on attitude control of the rigid body only
M-Horizons
We solve the Killing spinor equations and determine the near horizon
geometries of M-theory that preserve at least one supersymmetry. The M-horizon
spatial sections are 9-dimensional manifolds with a Spin(7) structure
restricted by geometric constraints which we give explicitly. We also provide
an alternative characterization of the solutions of the Killing spinor
equation, utilizing the compactness of the horizon section and the field
equations, by proving a Lichnerowicz type of theorem which implies that the
zero modes of a Dirac operator coupled to 4-form fluxes are Killing spinors. We
use this, and the maximum principle, to solve the field equations of the theory
for some special cases and present some examples.Comment: 36 pages, latex. Reference added, minor typos correcte
All null supersymmetric backgrounds of N=2, D=4 gauged supergravity coupled to abelian vector multiplets
The lightlike supersymmetric solutions of N=2, D=4 gauged supergravity
coupled to an arbitrary number of abelian vector multiplets are classified
using spinorial geometry techniques. The solutions fall into two classes,
depending on whether the Killing spinor is constant or not. In both cases, we
give explicit examples of supersymmetric backgrounds. Among these BPS
solutions, which preserve one quarter of the supersymmetry, there are
gravitational waves propagating on domain walls or on bubbles of nothing that
asymptote to AdS_4. Furthermore, we obtain the additional constraints obeyed by
half-supersymmetric vacua. These are divided into four categories, that include
bubbles of nothing which are asymptotically AdS_4, pp-waves on domain walls,
AdS_3 x R, and spacetimes conformal to AdS_3 times an interval.Comment: 55 pages, uses JHEP3.cls. v2: Minor errors corrected, small changes
in introductio
Solutions of Minimal Four Dimensional de Sitter Supergravity
Pseudo-supersymmetric solutions of minimal , de Sitter
supergravity are classified using spinorial geometry techniques. We find three
classes of solutions. The first class of solution consists of geometries which
are fibrations over a 3-dimensional manifold equipped with a Gauduchon-Tod
structure. The second class of solution is the cosmological Majumdar-Papapetrou
solution of Kastor and Traschen, and the third corresponds to gravitational
waves propagating in the Nariai cosmology.Comment: 17 Pages. Minor correction to section 4; equation (4.21) corrected
and (old) equation (4.26) deleted; the final result is unchange
Beira Litoral (Portugal). 1:50000
Pertenece al 'Massena's Retreat' ; N 3Orientado con flecha en cuadranteRelieve representado por normalesRelación de las principales posiciones, divisiones y cuerpos de los ejércitos indicados por clave alfabéticaIndica vegetación, caminos y las posiciones de los ejércitos por clave cromátic
LabView Interface for School-Network DAQ Card
A low-cost DAQ card has been developed for school-network cosmic ray detector
projects, providing digitized data from photomultiplier tubes via a standard
serial interface. To facilitate analysis of these data and to provide students
with a starting point for custom readout systems, a model interface has been
developed using the National Instruments LabVIEW(R) system. This user-friendly
interface allows one to initialize the trigger coincidence conditions for
data-taking runs and to monitor incoming or pre-recorded data sets with
updating singles- and coincidence-rate plots and other user-selectable
histograms.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures. Presented as Paper NS26-119 at IEEE-NSS 2003,
Portland, OR, by R. J. Wilke
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