90,686 research outputs found
Hydrogen-fueled postal vehicle performance evaluation
Fuel consumption, range, and emissions data were obtained while operating a hydrogen-fueled postal delivery vehicle over a defined Postal Service Driving Cycle and the 1975 Urban Driving Cycle. The vehicle's fuel consumption was 0.366 pounds of hydrogen per mile over the postal driving cycle and 0.22 pounds of hydrogen per mile over the urban driving cycle. These data correspond to 6.2 and 10.6 mpg equivalent gasoline mileage for the two driving cycles, respectively. The vehicle's range was 24.2 miles while being operated on the postal driving cycle. Vehicle emissions were measured over the urban driving cycle. HC and CO emissions were quite low, as would be expected. The oxides of nitrogen were found to be 4.86 gm/mi, a value which is well above the current Federal and California standards. Vehicle limitations discussed include excessive engine flashbacks, inadequate acceleration capability the engine air/fuel ratio, the water injection systems, and the cab temperature. Other concerns are safety considerations, iron-titanium hydride observed in the fuel system, evidence of water in the engine rocker cover, and the vehicle maintenance required during the evaluation
Supersymmetric Yang-Mills and Supergravity Amplitudes at One Loop
By applying the known expressions for SYM and SUGRA tree amplitudes, we write
generating functions for the NNMHV box coefficients of SYM as well as the MHV,
NMHV, and NNMHV box coefficients for SUGRA. The all-multiplicity generating
functions utilize covariant, on-shell superspace whereby the contribution from
arbitrary external states in the supermultiplet can be extracted by Grassmann
operators. In support of the relation between dual Wilson loops and SYM
scattering amplitudes at weak coupling, the SYM amplitudes are presented in a
manifestly dual superconformal form. We introduce ordered box coefficients for
calculating SUGRA quadruple cuts and prove that ordered coefficients generate
physical cut amplitudes after summing over permutations of the external legs.
The ordered box coefficients are produced by sewing ordered subamplitudes,
previously used in applying on-shell recursion relations at tree level. We
describe our verification of the results against the literature, and a formula
for extracting the contributions from external gluons or gravitons to NNMHV
superamplitudes is presented.Comment: 46 pages, 2 figures, additional references and clarifications
include
Semiclassical energy formulas for power-law and log potentials in quantum mechanics
We study a single particle which obeys non-relativistic quantum mechanics in
R^N and has Hamiltonian H = -Delta + V(r), where V(r) = sgn(q)r^q. If N \geq 2,
then q > -2, and if N = 1, then q > -1. The discrete eigenvalues E_{n\ell} may
be represented exactly by the semiclassical expression E_{n\ell}(q) =
min_{r>0}\{P_{n\ell}(q)^2/r^2+ V(r)}. The case q = 0 corresponds to V(r) =
ln(r). By writing one power as a smooth transformation of another, and using
envelope theory, it has earlier been proved that the P_{n\ell}(q) functions are
monotone increasing. Recent refinements to the comparison theorem of QM in
which comparison potentials can cross over, allow us to prove for n = 1 that
Q(q)=Z(q)P(q) is monotone increasing, even though the factor Z(q)=(1+q/N)^{1/q}
is monotone decreasing. Thus P(q) cannot increase too slowly. This result
yields some sharper estimates for power-potential eigenvlaues at the bottom of
each angular-momentum subspace.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figure
Mission analysis of solar powered aircraft
The effect of a real mission scenario on a solar powered airplane configuration which had been developed in previous work were assessed. The mission used was surveillance of crop conditions over a route from Phoenix to Tucson to Tombstone, Arizona. Appendices are attached which address the applicability of existing platforms and payloads to do this mission
Coulomb plus power-law potentials in quantum mechanics
We study the discrete spectrum of the Hamiltonian H = -Delta + V(r) for the
Coulomb plus power-law potential V(r)=-1/r+ beta sgn(q)r^q, where beta > 0, q >
-2 and q \ne 0. We show by envelope theory that the discrete eigenvalues
E_{n\ell} of H may be approximated by the semiclassical expression
E_{n\ell}(q) \approx min_{r>0}\{1/r^2-1/(mu r)+ sgn(q) beta(nu r)^q}.
Values of mu and nu are prescribed which yield upper and lower bounds.
Accurate upper bounds are also obtained by use of a trial function of the form,
psi(r)= r^{\ell+1}e^{-(xr)^{q}}. We give detailed results for
V(r) = -1/r + beta r^q, q = 0.5, 1, 2 for n=1, \ell=0,1,2, along with
comparison eigenvalues found by direct numerical methods.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Symmetries of Bianchi I space-times
All diagonal proper Bianchi I space-times are determined which admit certain
important symmetries. It is shown that for Homotheties, Conformal motions and
Kinematic Self-Similarities the resulting space-times are defined explicitly in
terms of a set of parameters whereas Affine Collineations, Ricci Collineations
and Curvature Collineations, if they are admitted, they determine the metric
modulo certain algebraic conditions. In all cases the symmetry vectors are
explicitly computed. The physical and the geometrical consequences of the
results are discussed and a new anisitropic fluid, physically valid solution
which admits a proper conformal Killing vector, is given.Comment: 19 pages, LaTex, Accepted for publication in Journal of Mathematical
Physic
General energy bounds for systems of bosons with soft cores
We study a bound system of N identical bosons interacting by model pair
potentials of the form V(r) = A sgn(p)r^p + B/r^2, A > 0, B >= 0. By using a
variational trial function and the `equivalent 2-body method', we find explicit
upper and lower bound formulas for the N-particle ground-state energy in
arbitrary spatial dimensions d > 2 for the two cases p = 2 and p = -1. It is
demonstrated that the upper bound can be systematically improved with the aid
of a special large-N limit in collective field theory
Liver transplantation in patients with situs inversus
Two patients with situs inversus and biliary atresia were treated with hepatic transplantation, one with an auxiliary liver and the other with an orthotopic graft which was placed using a piggy-back technique. Both transplants functioned well initially. The auxiliary liver was rejected after 1 1/2 months, and the patient died after an attempt at retransplantation many months later. The recipient of the orthotopic liver has perfect liver function 10 months postoperatively
- …