8,058 research outputs found
Low energy ionization of argon atoms by argon atoms
Ionization cross section for production of electrons by collisions between neutral argon atom
Design guide for helicopter transmission seals
A detailed approach for the selection and design of seals for helicopter transmissions is presented. There are two major types of seals presently being used and they are lip type seals and mechanical type seals. Lip type seals can be divided in conventional lip seals and hydrodynamic lip seals. Conventional lip seals can be used for slow-speed, low-pressure, low-temperature sealing. Hydrodynamic lip seals although they are as pressure and temperature limited as conventional lip seals, can operate at a higher speed. Mechanical types seals are comprised of face seals and circumferential seals. Face seals are capable of high speed, high pressure, and high temperature. Circumferential seals can be used in high-speed and high-temperature applications, but will leak excessively at moderate pressures. The performance goals of transmission seals are a life that is at least equal to the scheduled overhaul interval of the gearbox component and a leakage rate of near zero
Some factors influencing radiation of sound from flow interaction with edges of finite surfaces
Edges of surfaces which are exposed to unsteady flow cause both strictly acoustic effects and hydrodynamic effects, in the form of generation of new hydrodynamic sources in the immediate vicinity of the edge. An analytical model is presented which develops the explicit sound-generation role of the velocity and Mach number of the eddy convection past the edge, and the importance of relative scale lengths of the turbulence, as well as the relative intensity of pressure fluctuations. The Mach number (velocity) effects show that the important paramater is the convection Mach number of the eddies. The effects of turbulence scale lengths, isotropy, and spatial density (separation) are shown to be important in determining the level and spectrum of edge sound radiated for the edge dipole mechanism. Experimental data is presented which provides support for the dipole edge noise model in terms of Mach number (velocity) scaling, parametric dependence on flow field parameter, directivity, and edge diffraction effects
NIMBUS-5 sounder data processing system. Part 2: Results
The Nimbus-5 spacecraft carries infrared and microwave radiometers for sensing the temperature distribution of the atmosphere. Methods developed for obtaining temperature profiles from the combined set of infrared and microwave radiation measurements are described. Algorithms used to determine (a) vertical temperature and water vapor profiles, (b) cloud height, fractional coverage, and liquid water content, (c) surface temperature, and (d) total outgoing longwave radiation flux are described. Various meteorological results obtained from the application of the Nimbus-5 sounding data processing system during 1973 and 1974 are presented
Generalized remote state preparation: Trading cbits, qubits and ebits in quantum communication
We consider the problem of communicating quantum states by simultaneously
making use of a noiseless classical channel, a noiseless quantum channel and
shared entanglement. We specifically study the version of the problem in which
the sender is given knowledge of the state to be communicated. In this setting,
a trade-off arises between the three resources, some portions of which have
been investigated previously in the contexts of the quantum-classical trade-off
in data compression, remote state preparation and superdense coding of quantum
states, each of which amounts to allowing just two out of these three
resources. We present a formula for the triple resource trade-off that reduces
its calculation to evaluating the data compression trade-off formula. In the
process, we also construct protocols achieving all the optimal points. These
turn out to be achievable by trade-off coding and suitable time-sharing between
optimal protocols for cases involving two resources out of the three mentioned
above.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures, 1 tabl
Entropy and Entanglement in Quantum Ground States
We consider the relationship between correlations and entanglement in gapped
quantum systems, with application to matrix product state representations. We
prove that there exist gapped one-dimensional local Hamiltonians such that the
entropy is exponentially large in the correlation length, and we present strong
evidence supporting a conjecture that there exist such systems with arbitrarily
large entropy. However, we then show that, under an assumption on the density
of states which is believed to be satisfied by many physical systems such as
the fractional quantum Hall effect, that an efficient matrix product state
representation of the ground state exists in any dimension. Finally, we comment
on the implications for numerical simulation.Comment: 7 pages, no figure
Applications of remote sensing to estuarine management : Final report and annual report number 7
Remote sensing techniques have been applied to problems in estuarine management in the seventh and final year of a NASA grant. A chromaticity technique for multi-date Landsat measurement of suspended sediment has been verified and made operational, and applied to sedimentation analysis of the ·Bay of Fundy Tidal Power Project. Dye-buoy photogrannnetry has been used to measure currents at depth and analyze suspended sediment plumes from hydraulic · dredging. Wetland permit sites and beach erosion site\u27s have been evaluated with aerial photography. Submerged aquatic vegetation has been mapped with tide- and wind-synchronized color photography. Virginia state resource monitoring needs have led to implementation of Landsat data p.rocessing capability for joint work with NASA Goddard on demonstration projects. This final report contains summaries and tables of the projects and activities of the Remote Sensing Center over the past seven years
The asymptotic entanglement cost of preparing a quantum state
We give a detailed proof of the conjecture that the asymptotic entanglement
cost of preparing a bipartite state \rho is equal to the regularized
entanglement of formation of \rho.Comment: 7 pages, no figure
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