10,495 research outputs found
Towards the Formal Reliability Analysis of Oil and Gas Pipelines
It is customary to assess the reliability of underground oil and gas
pipelines in the presence of excessive loading and corrosion effects to ensure
a leak-free transport of hazardous materials. The main idea behind this
reliability analysis is to model the given pipeline system as a Reliability
Block Diagram (RBD) of segments such that the reliability of an individual
pipeline segment can be represented by a random variable. Traditionally,
computer simulation is used to perform this reliability analysis but it
provides approximate results and requires an enormous amount of CPU time for
attaining reasonable estimates. Due to its approximate nature, simulation is
not very suitable for analyzing safety-critical systems like oil and gas
pipelines, where even minor analysis flaws may result in catastrophic
consequences. As an accurate alternative, we propose to use a
higher-order-logic theorem prover (HOL) for the reliability analysis of
pipelines. As a first step towards this idea, this paper provides a
higher-order-logic formalization of reliability and the series RBD using the
HOL theorem prover. For illustration, we present the formal analysis of a
simple pipeline that can be modeled as a series RBD of segments with
exponentially distributed failure times.Comment: 15 page
Anomalous metallic state of CuTiSe: an optical spectroscopy study
We report an optical spectroscopy study on the newly discovered
superconductor CuTiSe. Consistent with the development from a
semimetal or semiconductor with a very small indirect energy gap upon doping
TiSe, it is found that the compound has a low carrier density. Most
remarkably, the study reveals a substantial shift of the "screened" plasma edge
in reflectance towards high energy with decreasing temperature. This
phenomenon, rarely seen in metals, indicates either a sizeable increase of the
conducting carrier concentration or/and a decrease of the effective mass of
carriers with reducing temperature. We attribute the shift primarily to the
later effect.Comment: 4 figures, 4+ page
Emergence of Fermi pockets in an excitonic CDW melted novel superconductor
A superconducting (SC) state (Tc ~ 4.2K) has very recently been observed upon
successful doping of the CDW ordered triangular lattice TiSe, with copper.
Using high resolution photoemission spectroscopy we identify, for the first
time, the momentum space locations of the doped electrons that form the Fermi
sea of the parent superconductor. With doping, we find that the kinematic
nesting volume increases whereas the coherence of the CDW order sharply drops.
In the superconducting doping, we observe the emergence of a large density of
states in the form of a narrow electron pocket near the \textit{L}-point of the
Brillouin Zone with \textit{d}-like character. The \textit{k}-space electron
distributions highlight the unconventional interplay of CDW to SC cross-over
achieved through non-magnetic copper doping.Comment: 4+ pages, 5 figures; Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Lett.
(2007
Fermi surface topology and low-lying quasiparticle structure of magnetically ordered Fe1+xTe
We report the first photoemission study of Fe1+xTe - the host compound of the
newly discovered iron-chalcogenide superconductors. Our results reveal a pair
of nearly electron- hole compensated Fermi pockets, strong Fermi velocity
renormalization and an absence of a spin-density-wave gap. A shadow hole pocket
is observed at the "X"-point of the Brillouin zone which is consistent with a
long-range ordered magneto-structural groundstate. No signature of Fermi
surface nesting instability associated with Q= pi(1/2, 1/2) is observed. Our
results collectively reveal that the Fe1+xTe series is dramatically different
from the undoped phases of the high Tc pnictides and likely harbor unusual
mechanism for superconductivity and quantum magnetic order.Comment: 5 pages, 4 Figures; Submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett. (2009
Semimetal to semimetal charge density wave transition in 1T-TiSe
We report an infrared study on 1-TiSe, the parent compound of the
newly discovered superconductor CuTiSe. Previous studies of this
compound have not conclusively resolved whether it is a semimetal or a
semiconductor: information that is important in determining the origin of its
unconventional CDW transition. Here we present optical spectroscopy results
that clearly reveal that the compound is metallic in both the high-temperature
normal phase and the low-temperature CDW phase. The carrier scattering rate is
dramatically different in the normal and CDW phases and the carrier density is
found to change with temperature. We conclude that the observed properties can
be explained within the scenario of an Overhauser-type CDW mechanism.Comment: 4 pages, 4 page
TeV Gamma Rays from Geminga and the Origin of the GeV Positron Excess
The Geminga pulsar has long been one of the most intriguing MeV-GeV gamma-ray
point sources. We examine the implications of the recent Milagro detection of
extended, multi-TeV gamma-ray emission from Geminga, finding that this reveals
the existence of an ancient, powerful cosmic-ray accelerator that can plausibly
account for the multi-GeV positron excess that has evaded explanation. We
explore a number of testable predictions for gamma-ray and electron/positron
experiments (up to ~100 TeV) that can confirm the first "direct" detection of a
cosmic-ray source.Comment: 4 pages and 3 figures; Minor revisions, accepted for publication in
Physical Review Letter
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