29,962 research outputs found
Complex Bifurcation from Real Paths
A new bifurcation phenomenon, called complex bifurcation, is studied. The basic idea is simply that real solution paths of real analytic problems frequently have complex paths bifurcating from them. It is shown that this phenomenon occurs at fold points, at pitchfork bifurcation points, and at isola centers. It is also shown that perturbed bifurcations can yield two disjoint real solution branches that are connected by complex paths bifurcating from the perturbed solution paths. This may be useful in finding new real solutions.
A discussion of how existing codes for computing real solution paths may be trivially modified to compute complex paths is included, and examples of numerically computed complex solution paths for a nonlinear two point boundary value problem, and a problem from fluid mechanics are given
Confusion in the courtroom: the effect of confusing questions on eye-witness recall.
This paper examines the influence of confusing questions on the accuracy and confidence of adolescents' recall of a mock crime by answering either simple or confusing questions in written form. One hundred and twenty four adolescents (aged between 13 and 17 years) viewed a brief video of an unusual criminal event and were then asked to complete a question booklet addressing what they had seen. Half of the participants were given four categories of confusing questions (negatives, double negatives, complex syntax, and complex vocabulary - all question types typically used within courtroom examinations); the other half were asked simpler forms of the same questions. The confusing questions did reduce accurate recall of an unusual event. The results also suggested that confusing questions weakened the relationship between confidence and accuracy. Poorly worded questions, exacerbated by repetition, potentially corrupt eyewitness memory and derail investigations. The interaction of retrieval access dynamics with traditionally complicated and intimidating courtroom questioning is also addressed
First energetic neutral atom images from Polar
Energetic neutral atoms are created when energetic magnetospheric ions undergo charge exchange with cold neutral atoms in the Earth\u27s tenuous extended atmosphere (the geocorona). Since they are unaffected by the Earth\u27s magnetic field, these energetic neutrals travel away in straight line trajectories from the points of charge exchange. The remote detection of these particles provides a powerful means through which the global distribution and properties of the geocorona and ring current can be inferred. Due to its 2 × 9 RE polar orbit, the Polar spacecraft provides an excellent platform from which to observe ENAs because it spends much of its time in the polar caps which are usually free from the contaminating energetic charged particles that make observations of ENAs more difficult. In this brief report, we present the first ENA imaging results from Polar. Storm-time ENA images are presented for a northern polar cap apogee pass on August 29, 1996 and for a southern polar cap perigee pass on October 23, 1996. As well, we show with a third event (July 31, 1996) that ENA emissions can also be detected in association with individual substorm
Development of space telescope non-ORU hardware
Since 1979 work has progressed in the development of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) mockup. Underwater simulations to evaluate proposed on-orbit servicing tasks have also been done. These tasks involve the planned changeout of scientific instruments and the unscheduled changeout of other orbital replacement units (ORUs) such as batteries and computers. The HST components and subsystems that originally were designated ORUs were the items that were mission critical and were designed for easy changeout. Mockups of 14 non-ORU items were designed and fabricated for the purpose of evaluating the EVA changetasks in the MSFC Neutral Buoyancy Simulator (NBS). The objectives of this design/fabrication/test activity were to design and fabricate the potential ORUs so they contained realistic interfaces and were compatible with the NBS environments. The attachment of the mockup hardware to the spacecraft mockup was similar to the flight version. Also, the hardware connectors were flight-like
Selectively excited luminescence and magnetic circular dichroism of Cr4+-doped YAG and YGG
Site selective luminescence and magnetic circular dichroism experiments on Cr4+-doped yttrium aluminum garnet and yttrium gallium garnet have been made at low temperature. The spectral assignments for these near-IR lasing materials have been made using experimental data and ligand field calculations guided by the known geometry of the lattices. [S0163-1829(99)07003-4]
The OLYMPUS Internal Hydrogen Target
An internal hydrogen target system was developed for the OLYMPUS experiment
at DESY, in Hamburg, Germany. The target consisted of a long, thin-walled,
tubular cell within an aluminum scattering chamber. Hydrogen entered at the
center of the cell and exited through the ends, where it was removed from the
beamline by a multistage pumping system. A cryogenic coldhead cooled the target
cell to counteract heating from the beam and increase the density of hydrogen
in the target. A fixed collimator protected the cell from synchrotron radiation
and the beam halo. A series of wakefield suppressors reduced heating from beam
wakefields. The target system was installed within the DORIS storage ring and
was successfully operated during the course of the OLYMPUS experiment in 2012.
Information on the design, fabrication, and performance of the target system is
reported.Comment: 9 pages, 13 figure
Non-locality and short-range wetting phenomena
We propose a non-local interfacial model for 3D short-range wetting at planar
and non-planar walls. The model is characterized by a binding potential
\emph{functional} depending only on the bulk Ornstein-Zernike correlation
function, which arises from different classes of tube-like fluctuations that
connect the interface and the substrate. The theory provides a physical
explanation for the origin of the effective position-dependent stiffness and
binding potential in approximate local theories, and also obeys the necessary
classical wedge covariance relationship between wetting and wedge filling.
Renormalization group and computer simulation studies reveal the strong
non-perturbative influence of non-locality at critical wetting, throwing light
on long-standing theoretical problems regarding the order of the phase
transition.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
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