55,560 research outputs found
Preliminary estimates of vertical momentum flux
Preliminary results of themomentum flux and flux divergence during a transient episode, as a jet stream moved over the radar are given. The zonal and meridional momentum flux and flux divergences displayed remarkable continuity with altitude in time, increasing in intensity as lee waves and other gravity-wave activity developed while the jet stream approached. The momentum flux values observed compare favorably with aircraft measurements made over similar topography, at least during the early part of the day. The accelerations due to the momentum flux divergence seem rather large at first glance, especially for the late part of the day. However, there may be compensating forces due to effects not considered here, such as transverse circulations or, scales of motion to small to be resolved by these data
Measurements of vertical velocity over flat terrain by ST radar and other related uses of the radar data set
The need to study vertical velocity measurements from an ST radar located on the plains, far from the mountains is pointed out, as all presently available clear-air radars are located in or near mountains. The construction and operation of a VHF Doppler (ST) radar in the midwestern part of the United States to make meteorological measurements is also discussed. While primary interest is in measuring the synoptic-scale vertical velocities in the troposphere and lower stratosphere, it should be stressed, however, that the radar data set generated during the radar experiment would have many other valuable uses of interest to us and others some of whom are listed below. The required radar parameters, approximate costs, and recommended mode of operation are also detailed
Positron scattering and annihilation on noble gas atoms
Positron scattering and annihilation on noble gas atoms below the positronium
formation threshold is studied ab initio using many-body theory methods. The
many-body theory provides a near-complete understanding of the
positron-noble-gas-atom system at these energies and yields accurate numerical
results. It accounts for positron-atom and electron-positron correlations,
e.g., polarization of the atom by the incident positron and the
non-perturbative process of virtual positronium formation. These correlations
have a large effect on the scattering dynamics and result in a strong
enhancement of the annihilation rates compared to the independent-particle
mean-field description. Computed elastic scattering cross sections are found to
be in good agreement with recent experimental results and Kohn variational and
convergent close-coupling calculations. The calculated values of the
annihilation rate parameter (effective number of electrons
participating in annihilation) rise steeply along the sequence of noble gas
atoms due to the increasing strength of the correlation effects, and agree well
with experimental data.Comment: 24 pages, 17 figure
A Modified Stern-Gerlach Experiment Using a Quantum Two-State Magnetic Field
The Stern-Gerlach experiment has played an important role in our
understanding of quantum behavior. We propose and analyze a modified version of
this experiment where the magnetic field of the detector is in a quantum
superposition, which may be experimentally realized using a superconducting
flux qubit. We show that if incident spin- particles couple with the
two-state magnetic field, a discrete target distribution results that resembles
the distribution in the classical Stern-Gerlach experiment. As an application
of the general result, we compute the distribution for a square waveform of the
incident fermion. This experimental setup allows us to establish: (1) the
quantization of the intrinsic angular momentum of a spin- particle, and
(2) a correlation between EPR pairs leading to nonlocality, without necessarily
collapsing the particle's spin wavefunction.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figure
A methodology for full-system power modeling in heterogeneous data centers
The need for energy-awareness in current data centers has encouraged the use of power modeling to estimate their power consumption. However, existing models present noticeable limitations, which make them application-dependent, platform-dependent, inaccurate, or computationally complex. In this paper, we propose a platform-and application-agnostic methodology for full-system power modeling in heterogeneous data centers that overcomes those limitations. It derives a single model per platform, which works with high accuracy for heterogeneous applications with different patterns of resource usage and energy consumption, by systematically selecting a minimum set of resource usage indicators and extracting complex relations among them that capture the impact on energy consumption of all the resources in the system. We demonstrate our methodology by generating power models for heterogeneous platforms with very different power consumption profiles. Our validation experiments with real Cloud applications show that such models provide high accuracy (around 5% of average estimation error).This work is supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness under contract TIN2015-65316-P, by the Gener-
alitat de Catalunya under contract 2014-SGR-1051, and by the European Commission under FP7-SMARTCITIES-2013 contract 608679 (RenewIT) and FP7-ICT-2013-10 contracts 610874 (AS- CETiC) and 610456 (EuroServer).Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
A comparison of vertical velocities measured from specular and nonspecular echoes by a VHF radar
For a number of years, there have been doubts about the accuracy of vertical wind velocities measured with quasi-specular reflections from mesosphere-stratosphere-troposphere (MST) radar. The concern has been that the layers producing the quasi-specular reflection process this hypothetical tilt. Because of the quasi-specular reflection process, this hypothetical tilt would control the effective zenith angle of the radar antenna beam so that a small component of the horizontal velocity would be included in what was assumed to be a truly vertical beam. The purpose here is to test the hypothesis that there is an effect on the wind velocities measured on a vertical antenna beam due to a long-term tilting of the stable atmospheric layers that cause quasi-specular reflection. Gravity waves have been observed to cause short-term tilting of turbulent layers and specularly reflecting layers. In both cases, the effect was a wave-like deformation atmospheric layers with a period of a few minutes. This geometry is shown. Because of this influence of gravity waves, it was expected that there would be short-term variations in the vertical velocity
Traversing probe Patent
Flow meter for measuring stagnation pressure in boundary layer around high speed flight vehicl
The proposed flatland radar
A flexible very high frequency (VHF) stratosphere-troposphere (ST) radar configured for meteorological research is to be constructed near Urbana, Illinois. Measurement of small vertical velocities associated with synoptic-scale meteorology can be performed. A large Doppler microwave radar (CHILL) is located a few km from the site of the proposed ST radar. Since the microwave radar can measure the location and velocity of hydrometeors and the VHF ST radar can measure clear (or cloudy) air velocities, simultaneous observations by these two radars of stratiform or convective weather systems would provide valuable meteorological information
Effect of positron-atom interactions on the annihilation gamma spectra of molecules
Calculations of gamma spectra for positron annihilation on a selection of
molecules, including methane and its fluoro-substitutes, ethane, propane,
butane and benzene are presented. The annihilation gamma spectra characterise
the momentum distribution of the electron-positron pair at the instant of
annihilation. The contribution to the gamma spectra from individual molecular
orbitals is obtained from electron momentum densities calculated using modern
computational quantum chemistry density functional theory tools. The
calculation, in its simplest form, effectively treats the low-energy
(thermalised, room-temperature) positron as a plane wave and gives annihilation
gamma spectra that are about 40% broader than experiment, although the main
chemical trends are reproduced. We show that this effective "narrowing" of the
experimental spectra is due to the action of the molecular potential on the
positron, chiefly, due to the positron repulsion from the nuclei. It leads to a
suppression of the contribution of small positron-nuclear separations where the
electron momentum is large. To investigate the effect of the nuclear repulsion,
as well as that of short-range electron-positron and positron-molecule
correlations, a linear combination of atomic orbital description of the
molecular orbitals is employed. It facilitates the incorporation of correction
factors which can be calculated from atomic many-body theory and account for
the repulsion and correlations. Their inclusion in the calculation gives gamma
spectrum linewidths that are in much better agreement with experiment.
Furthermore, it is shown that the effective distortion of the electron momentum
density, when it is observed through positron annihilation gamma spectra, can
be approximated by a relatively simple scaling factor.Comment: 26 pages, 12 figure
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