947 research outputs found
Survival of Organic Materials in Hypervelocity Impacts of Ice on Sand, Ice, and Water in the Laboratory
The survival of organic molecules in shock impact events has been investigated in the laboratory. A frozen mixture of anthracene and stearic acid, solvated in dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), was fired in a two-stage light gas gun at speeds of ?2 and ?4?km s?1 at targets that included water ice, water, and sand. This involved shock pressures in the range of 2â12 GPa. It was found that the projectile materials were present in elevated quantities in the targets after impact and in some cases in the crater ejecta as well. For DMSO impacting water at 1.9?km s?1 and 45° incidence, we quantify the surviving fraction after impact as 0.44±0.05. This demonstrates successful transfer of organic compounds from projectile to target in high-speed impacts. The range of impact speeds used covers that involved in impacts of terrestrial meteorites on the Moon, as well as impacts in the outer Solar System on icy bodies such as Pluto. The results provide laboratory evidence that suggests that exogenous delivery of complex organic molecules from icy impactors is a viable source of such material on target bodies
Model metadata report for Manchester and Salford, NW England
This report describes the creation of a 3D geological model of natural and artificial superficial
deposits in Manchester and Salford, NW England. The Manchester and Salford model forms part
of the Lower Mersey Corridor, NW England. The Lower Mersey Corridor includes models
within the region comprising:
Manchester-Salford
Warrington
Liverpool
Irlam
The location of the geological models is shown in Figure 1 and the spacing of cross-sections is
shown in Figure 2.
Figure 1 Location of Manchester and Salford 3D geological model and its relationship to
others in the Lower Mersey Corridor area of NW England.
The 3D models include natural and artificial superficial deposits. Cross-sections for Manchester
and Salford include schematic bedrock correlations for illustration only. Bedrock is not included
in the calculated mode
COMPUTATION OF OPTIMAL CONTROLS FOR A NUCLEAR ROCKET REACTOR.
Various optimal reactor control problems with complicated constraints are solved for a nuclear rocket engine. The technique utilizes a digital computer with the numerical algorithm formed by a succession of linear programming problems. Each programming problem has a solution which is used to relinearize the system's dynamical equations
Integrated modelling of geoscience information to support sustainable urban planning
The provision of reliable and up-to-date geoscientific information for the urban
environment has assumed increasing importance in recent years as
legislative changes have forced developers, planning authorities and
regulators to consider more fully the implications and impact on the
environment of large-scale development initiatives. To comply with the
principles of sustainable development, developers are increasingly required to
demonstrate that proposals are based on the best possible scientific
information and analysis of risk. Nowhere is this more relevant than in the
context of urban regeneration, where planning policy guidance gives priority to
re-use of previously developed (brownfield) land. In England, brownfield sites
suitable for re-development cover an area equivalent to half the size of
London
Cornerstones of Sampling of Operator Theory
This paper reviews some results on the identifiability of classes of
operators whose Kohn-Nirenberg symbols are band-limited (called band-limited
operators), which we refer to as sampling of operators. We trace the motivation
and history of the subject back to the original work of the third-named author
in the late 1950s and early 1960s, and to the innovations in spread-spectrum
communications that preceded that work. We give a brief overview of the NOMAC
(Noise Modulation and Correlation) and Rake receivers, which were early
implementations of spread-spectrum multi-path wireless communication systems.
We examine in detail the original proof of the third-named author
characterizing identifiability of channels in terms of the maximum time and
Doppler spread of the channel, and do the same for the subsequent
generalization of that work by Bello.
The mathematical limitations inherent in the proofs of Bello and the third
author are removed by using mathematical tools unavailable at the time. We
survey more recent advances in sampling of operators and discuss the
implications of the use of periodically-weighted delta-trains as identifiers
for operator classes that satisfy Bello's criterion for identifiability,
leading to new insights into the theory of finite-dimensional Gabor systems. We
present novel results on operator sampling in higher dimensions, and review
implications and generalizations of the results to stochastic operators, MIMO
systems, and operators with unknown spreading domains
Spontaneous heavy cluster emission rates using microscopic potentials
The nuclear cluster radioactivities have been studied theoretically in the
framework of a microscopic superasymmetric fission model (MSAFM). The nuclear
interaction potentials required for binary cold fission processes are
calculated by folding in the density distribution functions of the two
fragments with a realistic effective interaction. The microscopic nuclear
potential thus obtained has been used to calculate the action integral within
the WKB approximation. The calculated half lives of the present MSAFM
calculations are found to be in good agreement over a wide range of observed
experimental data.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
The Quantum Mechanical Arrows of Time
The familiar textbook quantum mechanics of laboratory measurements
incorporates a quantum mechanical arrow of time --- the direction in time in
which state vector reduction operates. This arrow is usually assumed to
coincide with the direction of the thermodynamic arrow of the quasiclassical
realm of everyday experience. But in the more general context of cosmology we
seek an explanation of all observed arrows, and the relations between them, in
terms of the conditions that specify our particular universe. This paper
investigates quantum mechanical and thermodynamic arrows in a time-neutral
formulation of quantum mechanics for a number of model cosmologies in fixed
background spacetimes. We find that a general universe may not have well
defined arrows of either kind. When arrows are emergent they need not point in
the same direction over the whole of spacetime. Rather they may be local,
pointing in different directions in different spacetime regions. Local arrows
can therefore be consistent with global time symmetry.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, revtex4, typos correcte
Cold Plasma Wave Analysis in Magneto-Rotational Fluids
This paper is devoted to investigate the cold plasma wave properties. The
analysis has been restricted to the neighborhood of the pair production region
of the Kerr magnetosphere. The Fourier analyzed general relativistic
magnetohydrodynamical equations are dealt under special circumstances and
dispersion relations are obtained. We find the -component of the complex
wave vector numerically. The corresponding components of the propagation
vector, attenuation vector, phase and group velocities are shown in graphs. The
direction and dispersion of waves are investigated.Comment: 22 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophys. Space
Sc
A closer look at the uncertainty relation of position and momentum
We consider particles prepared by the von Neumann-L\"uders projection. For
those particles the standard deviation of the momentum is discussed. We show
that infinite standard deviations are not exceptions but rather typical. A
necessary and sufficient condition for finite standard deviations is given.
Finally, a new uncertainty relation is derived and it is shown that the latter
cannot be improved.Comment: 3 pages, introduction shortened, content unchange
Energy relaxation of an excited electron gas in quantum wires: many-body electron LO-phonon coupling
We theoretically study energy relaxation via LO-phonon emission in an excited
one-dimensional electron gas confined in a GaAs quantum wire structure. We find
that the inclusion of phonon renormalization effects in the theory extends the
LO-phonon dominated loss regime down to substantially lower temperatures. We
show that a simple plasmon-pole approximation works well for this problem, and
discuss implications of our results for low temperature electron heating
experiments in quantum wires.Comment: 10 pages, RevTex, 4 figures included. Also available at
http://www-cmg.physics.umd.edu/~lzheng
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