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EXPLORING HIGH AND MID-FREQUENCY ELASTIC MECHANISMS IN ACOUSTICALLY ILLUMINATED TARGETS IN WATER
We explore some intriguing instances of surface-elastic waves (SEW) on insonified cylindricalshells of different materials in water. These serve as a continuation of similar studies in the pastâfor example, on spherical shells of comparable materials. The waves in question are a generalization of Lamb Waves on flat plates. In this simpler case, noting an overall symmetric and antisymmetric class of wave, each exists as a unique root of Lambâs Characteristic Equations. Similarly, such waves on curved surfaces, in particular that of a cylindrical or spherical shell, will be the root of the appropriate shell equation. This solution, in turn, serves as a mathematical description of the phenomena under discussion. We focus on a few such roots, one of which is the (symmetric) s2b wave in the high frequency range, where we observe the unique case of a phase and group velocity moving in opposite directions. Though this wave has been noted in previous studies, we now explore the behavior with new targets and new materials. In the mid-frequency range, we have the 0th symmetric and antisymmetric roots, and look at the behaviors of these in the case of a "semi-thin" cylindrical shell. This study complements similar experiments done to observe such phenomena with both "thick" and "thin" shells. Among other challenges, the a0 wave transitions from supersonic (relative to surrounding water) to subsonic at a "coincidence frequency" whose position depends on the shell. In this case, mathematical models that assume either subsonic or supersonic conditions must be modified to accommodate a transitional zone between the two. Finally, we compare our semi-thin results to others previous using thick and thin shells. For the tilted semi-thin shell, prominent backscattering contributions are associated with guided helical subsonic waves, and with a meridional supersonic wave. Elastic waves also affect sonar images of the cylinder
Tackling excess noise from bilinear and nonlinear couplings in gravitational-wave interferometers
We describe a tool we improved to detect excess noise in the gravitational
wave (GW) channel arising from its bilinear or nonlinear coupling with
fluctuations of various components of a GW interferometer and its environment.
We also describe a higher-order statistics tool we developed to characterize
these couplings, e.g., by unraveling the frequencies of the fluctuations
contributing to such noise, and demonstrate its utility by applying it to
understand nonlinear couplings in Advanced LIGO engineering data. Once such
noise is detected, it is highly desirable to remove it or correct for it. Such
action in the past has been shown to improve the sensitivity of the instrument
in searches of astrophysical signals. If this is not possible, then steps must
be taken to mitigate its influence, e.g., by characterizing its effect on
astrophysical searches. We illustrate this through a study of the effect of
transient sine-Gaussian noise artifacts on a compact binary coalescence
template bank.Comment: 8 pages and 7 figure
Responsible Oversight of Human Stem Cell Research: The California Institute for Regenerative Medicine's Medical and Ethical Standards
California voters recently approved $3 billion over 10 years for public funding of stem cell research through the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM). Geoffrey Lomax and colleagues discuss the principles that guided the CIRM regulations
Double Photoproduction off the Proton at Threshold
The reaction has been measured using the TAPS
BaF calorimeter at the tagged photon facility of the Mainz Microtron
accelerator. Chiral perturbation theory (ChPT) predicts that close to threshold
this channel is significantly enhanced compared to double pion final states
with charged pions. In contrast to other reaction channels, the lower order
tree terms are strongly suppressed in 2 photoproduction. The consequence
is the dominance of pion loops in the 2 channel close to threshold - a
result that opens new prospects for the test of ChPT and in particular its
inherent loop terms. The present measurement is the first which is sensitive
enough for a conclusive comparison with the ChPT calculation and is in
agreement with its prediction. The data also show good agreement with a
calculation in the unitary chiral approach.Comment: Submitted to PL
IMBER â Research for marine sustainability: Synthesis and the way forward
The Integrated Marine Biogeochemistry and Ecosystem Research (IMBER) project aims at developing a comprehensive understanding of and accurate predictive capacity of ocean responses to accelerating global change and the consequent effects on the Earth system and human society. Understanding the changing ecology and biogeochemistry of marine ecosystems and their sensitivity and resilience to multiple drivers, pressures and stressors is critical to developing responses that will help reduce the vulnerability of marine-dependent human communities. This overview of the IMBER project provides a synthesis of project achievements and highlights the value of collaborative, interdisciplinary, integrated research approaches as developed and implemented through IMBER regional programs, working groups, project-wide activities, national contributions, and external partnerships. A perspective is provided on the way forward for the next 10 years of the IMBER project as the global environmental change research landscape evolves and as new areas of marine research emerge. IMBER science aims to foster collaborative, interdisciplinary and integrated research that addresses key ocean and social science issues and provides the understanding needed to propose innovative societal responses to changing marine systems
Limitations of the heavy-baryon expansion as revealed by a pion-mass dispersion relation
The chiral expansion of nucleon properties such as mass, magnetic moment, and
magnetic polarizability are investigated in the framework of chiral
perturbation theory, with and without the heavy-baryon expansion. The analysis
makes use of a pion-mass dispersion relation, which is shown to hold in both
frameworks. The dispersion relation allows an ultraviolet cutoff to be
implemented without compromising the symmetries. After renormalization, the
leading-order heavy-baryon loops demonstrate a stronger dependence on the
cutoff scale, which results in weakened convergence of the expansion. This
conclusion is tested against the recent results of lattice quantum
chromodynamics simulations for nucleon mass and isovector magnetic moment. In
the case of the polarizability, the situation is even more dramatic as the
heavy-baryon expansion is unable to reproduce large soft contributions to this
quantity. Clearly, the heavy-baryon expansion is not suitable for every
quantity.Comment: Accepted for publication in EPJ C. Made changes based on referee
comments: clarifying sentences to conclusion 1. of Section IV, beginning of
Section V, and new footnote in Section VI, page 8. Added more detailed
explanation in paragraph 4 of Section III. Added citations of Phys.Rev. D60,
034014, and Phys.Lett. B716, 33
Design and assembly sequence analysis of option 3 for CETF reference space station
A design and assembly sequence was conducted on one option of the Dual Keel Space Station examined by a NASA Critical Evaluation Task Force to establish viability of several variations of that option. A goal of the study was to produce and analyze technical data to support Task Force decisions to either examine particular Option 3 variations in more depth or eliminate them from further consideration. An analysis of the phasing assembly showed that use of an Expendable Launch Vehicle in conjunction with the Space Transportation System (STS) can accelerate the buildup of the Station and ease the STS launch rate constraints. The study also showed that use of an Orbital Maneuvering Vehicle on the first flight can significantly benefit Station assembly and, by performing Station subsystem functions, can alleviate the need for operational control and reboost systems during the early flights. In addition to launch and assembly sequencing, the study assessed stability and control, and analyzed node-packaging options and the effects of keel removal on the structural dynamics of the Station. Results of these analyses are presented and discussed
Press shop machine analysis and trending
Historically downtime data collection and reporting systems in many automotive body panel press shops has been somewhat adhoc. The impetus for this study stems from frustration in respect of how this data is collected, assessed for trends and presented. Ideally this data should be used to identify costly repetitious faults for actioning of maintenance work and for feedback to tool design for consideration when designing new parts.Presently this data is stored largely in the form of tacit knowledge by press shop operators; the encumbrance of transferring such information being that there is very often only limited channels to quantify it into something more tangible. Findings show that there tend to be two related obstacles to plant data recording. The first is that automation of down time data collection alone cannot determine fault causes as the majority of press shop events are initiated primarily from operator observation. The second is that excessive subjective operator input can often result in confusion and end up taking greater time in recording than remedying the actual fault.This Paper presents the development of a system that through press mounted touchscreens encourages basic subjective operator input and relates this with basic objective data such as timekeeping. In this way all responses for a given press line become valuable and can be trended and placed in a hierarchy based on their percentage contribution to downtime or statistical importance. This then is capable of statistically alerting maintenance, line flow and/or toolbuild areas as to what issues require their most urgent attention.<br /
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