73,456 research outputs found
Finite element analysis of laminated plates and shells, volume 1
The finite element method is used to investigate the static behavior of laminated composite flat plates and cylindrical shells. The analysis incorporates the effects of transverse shear deformation in each layer through the assumption that the normals to the undeformed layer midsurface remain straight but need not be normal to the mid-surface after deformation. A digital computer program was developed to perform the required computations. The program includes a very efficient equation solution code which permits the analysis of large size problems. The method is applied to the problem of stretching and bending of a perforated curved plate
Collisions of antiprotons with hydrogen molecular ions
Time-dependent close-coupling calculations of the ionization and excitation
cross section for antiproton collisions with molecular hydrogen ions are
performed in an impact-energy range from 0.5 keV to 10 MeV. The
Born-Oppenheimer and Franck-Condon approximations as well as the impact
parameter method are applied in order to describe the target molecule and the
collision process. It is shown that three perpendicular orientations of the
molecular axis with respect to the trajectory are sufficient to accurately
reproduce the ionization cross section calculated by [Sakimoto, Phys. Rev. A
71, 062704 (2005)] reducing the numerical effort drastically. The
independent-event model is employed to approximate the cross section for double
ionization and H+ production in antiproton collisions with H2.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, 4 table
Implementation on a nonlinear concrete cracking algorithm in NASTRAN
A computer code for the analysis of reinforced concrete structures was developed using NASTRAN as a basis. Nonlinear iteration procedures were developed for obtaining solutions with a wide variety of loading sequences. A direct access file system was used to save results at each load step to restart within the solution module for further analysis. A multi-nested looping capability was implemented to control the iterations and change the loads. The basis for the analysis is a set of mutli-layer plate elements which allow local definition of materials and cracking properties
Computing the Girth of a Planar Graph in Linear Time
The girth of a graph is the minimum weight of all simple cycles of the graph.
We study the problem of determining the girth of an n-node unweighted
undirected planar graph. The first non-trivial algorithm for the problem, given
by Djidjev, runs in O(n^{5/4} log n) time. Chalermsook, Fakcharoenphol, and
Nanongkai reduced the running time to O(n log^2 n). Weimann and Yuster further
reduced the running time to O(n log n). In this paper, we solve the problem in
O(n) time.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures, accepted to SIAM Journal on Computin
Experimental and theoretical investigation for the suppression of the plasma arc drop in the thermionic converter
Ion generation and recombination mechanisms in the cesium plasma as they pertain to the advanced mode thermionic energy converter were studied. The decay of highly ionized cesium plasma was studied in the near afterglow to examine the recombination processes. Very low recombination in such a plasma may prove to be of considerable importance in practical converters. The approaches of external cesium generation were vibrationally excited nitrogen as an energy source of ionization of cesium ion, and microwave power as a means of resonant sustenance of the cesium plasma. Experimental data obtained so far show that all three techniques - i.e., the non-LTE high-voltage pulsing, the energy transfer from vibrationally excited diatomic gases, and the external pumping with a microwave resonant cavity - can produce plasmas with their densities significantly higher than the Richardson density. The implication of these findings as related to Lam's theory is discussed
The Decays to -wave Charmonium by Improved Bethe-Salpeter Approach
We re-calculate the exclusive semileptonic and nonleptonic decays of
meson to a -wave charmonium in terms of the improved Bethe-Salpeter (B-S)
approach, which is developed recently. Here the widths for the exclusive
semileptonic and nonleptonic decays, the form factors, and the charged lepton
spectrums for the semileptonic decays are precisely calculated. To test the
concerned approach by comparing with experimental measurements when the
experimental data are available, and to have comparisons with the other
approaches the results obtained by the approach and those by some approaches
else as well as the original B-S approach, which appeared in literature, are
comparatively presented and discussed.Comment: 33 pages, 5 figures, 3 table
Production of the -Wave Excited -States through the Boson Decays
In Ref.[7],we have dealt with the production of the two color-singlet
-wave -quarkonium states and
through the boson decays. As an
important sequential work, we make a further discussion on the production of
the more complicated -wave excited -quarkonium states, i.e.
and (with
). More over, we also calculate the channel with the two color-octet
quarkonium states and , whose contributions to the decay width maybe at the same order of
magnitude as that of the color-singlet -wave states according to the naive
nonrelativistic quantum chromodynamics scaling rules. The -wave states shall
provide sizable contributions to the production, whose decay width is
about 20% of the total decay width . After summing up all
the mentioned -quarkonium states' contributions, we obtain
KeV, where the errors are caused
by the main uncertainty sources.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures and 2 tables. basic formulae in the appendix are
cut off to match the published version, which can be found in v1. to be
published in Eur.Phys.J.
Collective Quartics and Dangerous Singlets in Little Higgs
Any extension of the standard model that aims to describe TeV-scale physics
without fine-tuning must have a radiatively-stable Higgs potential. In little
Higgs theories, radiative stability is achieved through so-called collective
symmetry breaking. In this letter, we focus on the necessary conditions for a
little Higgs to have a collective Higgs quartic coupling. In one-Higgs doublet
models, a collective quartic requires an electroweak triplet scalar. In
two-Higgs doublet models, a collective quartic requires a triplet or singlet
scalar. As a corollary of this study, we show that some little Higgs theories
have dangerous singlets, a pathology where collective symmetry breaking does
not suppress quadratically-divergent corrections to the Higgs mass.Comment: 4 pages; v2: clarified the existing literature; v3: version to appear
in JHE
Repulsive Fermions in Optical Lattices: Phase separation versus Coexistence of Antiferromagnetism and d-Superfluidity
We investigate a system of fermions on a two-dimensional optical square
lattice in the strongly repulsive coupling regime. In this case, the
interactions can be controlled by laser intensity as well as by Feshbach
resonance. We compare the energetics of states with resonating valence bond
d-wave superfluidity, antiferromagnetic long range order and a homogeneous
state with coexistence of superfluidity and antiferromagnetism. We show that
the energy density of a hole has a minimum at doping that
signals phase separation between the antiferromagnetic and d-wave paired
superfluid phases. The energy of the phase-separated ground state is however
found to be very close to that of a homogeneous state with coexisting
antiferromagnetic and superfluid orders. We explore the dependence of the
energy on the interaction strength and on the three-site hopping terms and
compare with the nearest neighbor hopping {\it t-J} model
The impact of satellite temperature soundings on the forecasts of a small national meteorological service
The impact of introducing satellite temperature sounding data on a numerical weather prediction model of a national weather service is evaluated. A dry five level, primitive equation model which covers most of the Northern Hemisphere, is used for these experiments. Series of parallel forecast runs out to 48 hours are made with three different sets of initial conditions: (1) NOSAT runs, only conventional surface and upper air observations are used; (2) SAT runs, satellite soundings are added to the conventional data over oceanic regions and North Africa; and (3) ALLSAT runs, the conventional upper air observations are replaced by satellite soundings over the entire model domain. The impact on the forecasts is evaluated by three verification methods: the RMS errors in sea level pressure forecasts, systematic errors in sea level pressure forecasts, and errors in subjective forecasts of significant weather elements for a selected portion of the model domain. For the relatively short range of the present forecasts, the major beneficial impacts on the sea level pressure forecasts are found precisely in those areas where the satellite sounding are inserted and where conventional upper air observations are sparse. The RMS and systematic errors are reduced in these regions. The subjective forecasts of significant weather elements are improved with the use of the satellite data. It is found that the ALLSAT forecasts are of a quality comparable to the SAR forecasts
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