2,563 research outputs found
Analytical study of the optimum geometric configuration of a space shuttle materials laboratory
A steady state, collisionless flow analysis was made of the density distribution within a hemisphere-disc system due to independent, uniformly distributed internal gas sources. The model was used to estimate the density within a molecular shield, deployed from the shuttle orbiter, which contained internal experiments having a prescribed gas source. Contour plots of the density distribution within the system were presented for disc-to-hemisphere radius ratios of .1, .3, .5, .7, and for disc-to-hemisphere surface emission flux density ratios of .01, 1, 100. The hemisphere-disc system was compared to the empty hemisphere, and it was found that if the disc emission flux density was the same as the hemisphere and the disc radius was not greater than 1/3 of the hemisphere radius, the increase in density at the center of the hemisphere-disc system was less than 50%
Green's function for a Schroedinger operator and some related summation formulas
Summation formulas are obtained for products of associated Lagurre
polynomials by means of the Green's function K for the Hamiltonian H =
-{d^2\over dx^2} + x^2 + Ax^{-2}, A > 0. K is constructed by an application of
a Mercer type theorem that arises in connection with integral equations. The
new approach introduced in this paper may be useful for the construction of
wider classes of generating function.Comment: 14 page
Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) data processing
The available and optimal methods for generating SAR imagery for NASA applications were identified. The SAR image quality and data processing requirements associated with these applications were studied. Mathematical operations and algorithms required to process sensor data into SAR imagery were defined. The architecture of SAR image formation processors was discussed, and technology necessary to implement the SAR data processors used in both general purpose and dedicated imaging systems was addressed
Examine the species and beam-energy dependence of particle spectra using Tsallis Statistics
Tsallis Statistics was used to investigate the non-Boltzmann distribution of
particle spectra and their dependence on particle species and beam energy in
the relativistic heavy-ion collisions at SPS and RHIC. Produced particles are
assumed to acquire radial flow and be of non-extensive statistics at
freeze-out. J/psi and the particles containing strangeness were examined
separately to study their radial flow and freeze-out. We found that the strange
hadrons approach equilibrium quickly from peripheral to central A+A collisions
and they tend to decouple earlier from the system than the light hadrons but
with the same final radial flow. These results provide an alternative picture
of freeze-outs: a thermalized system is produced at partonic phase; the
hadronic scattering at later stage is not enough to maintain the system in
equilibrium and does not increase the radial flow of the copiously produced
light hadrons. The J/psi in Pb+Pb collisions at SPS is consistent with early
decoupling and obtains little radial flow. The J/psi spectra at RHIC are also
inconsistent with the bulk flow profile.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, added several references and some clarifications
et
Specific heat of heavy fermion CePd2Si2 in high magnetic fields
We report specific heat measurements on the heavy fermion compound CePd2Si2
in magnetic fields up to 16 T and in the temperature range 1.4-16 K. A sharp
peak in the specific heat signals the antiferromagnetic transition at T_N ~ 9.3
K in zero field. The transition is found to shift to lower temperatures when a
magnetic field is applied along the crystallographic a-axis, while a field
applied parallel to the tetragonal c-axis does not affect the transition. The
magnetic contribution to the specific heat below T_N is well described by a sum
of a linear electronic term and an antiferromagnetic spin wave contribution.
Just below T_N, an additional positive curvature, especially at high fields,
arises most probably due to thermal fluctuations. The field dependence of the
coefficient of the low temperature linear term, gamma_0, extracted from the
fits shows a maximum at about 6 T, at the point where an anomaly was detected
in susceptibility measurements. The relative field dependence of both T_N and
the magnetic entropy at T_N scales as [1-(B/B_0)^2] for B // a, suggesting the
disappearance of antiferromagnetism at B_0 ~ 42 T. The expected suppression of
the antiferromagnetic transition temperature to zero makes the existence of a
magnetic quantum critical point possible.Comment: to be published in Journal of Physics: Condensed Matte
- …