15,458 research outputs found
Ramsey fringes in a Bose-Einstein condensate between atoms and molecules
In a recent experiment, a Feshbach scattering resonance was exploited to
observe Ramsey fringes in a Rb Bose-Einstein condensate. The oscillation
frequency corresponded to the binding energy of the molecular state. We show
that the observations are remarkably consistent with predictions of a resonance
field theory in which the fringes arise from oscillations between atoms and
molecules.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Water vapor diffusion membranes
The program is reported, which was designed to define the membrane technology of the vapor diffusion water recovery process and to test this technology using commercially available or experimental membranes. One membrane was selected, on the basis of the defined technology, and was subjected to a 30-day demonstration trial
Water vapor diffusion membranes, 2
Transport mechanisms were investigated for the three different types of water vapor diffusion membranes. Membranes representing porous wetting and porous nonwetting structures as well as dense diffusive membrane structures were investigated for water permeation rate as a function of: (1) temperature, (2) solids composition in solution, and (3) such hydrodynamic parameters as sweep gas flow rate, solution flow rate and cell geometry. These properties were measured using nitrogen sweep gas to collect the effluent. In addition, the chemical stability to chromic acid-stabilized urine was measured for several of each type of membrane. A technology based on the mechanism of vapor transport was developed, whereby the vapor diffusion rates and relative susceptibility of membranes to fouling and failure could be projected for long-term vapor recovery trials using natural chromic acid-stabilized urine
Analysis of SPAR 8 single-axis levitation experiment
The melting and resolidification of SPAR 8 payload melting and resolidification of a glass specimen from the in a containerless condition and the retrieval and examination of the specimen from the. The absence of container contact was assured by use of a single-axis acoustic levitation system. However, the sample contacted a wire cage after being held without container contact by the acoustic field for only approximately 87 seconds. At this time, the sample was still molten and, therefore, flowed aroung the wire and continued to adhere to it. An analysis of why the sample did not remain levitated free of container contact is presented. The experiment is described, and experimental observations are discussed and analyzed
Multiprocessor task scheduling in multistage hyrid flowshops: a genetic algorithm approach
This paper considers multiprocessor task scheduling in a multistage hybrid flow-shop environment. The objective is to minimize the make-span, that is, the completion time of all the tasks in the last stage. This problem is of practical interest in the textile and process industries. A genetic algorithm (GA) is developed to solve the problem. The GA is tested against a lower bound from the literature as well as against heuristic rules on a test bed comprising 400 problems with up to 100 jobs, 10 stages, and with up to five processors on each stage. For small problems, solutions found by the GA are compared to optimal solutions, which are obtained by total enumeration. For larger problems, optimum solutions are estimated by a statistical prediction technique. Computational results show that the GA is both effective and efficient for the current problem. Test problems are provided in a web site at www.benchmark.ibu.edu.tr/mpt-h; fsp
Effect of continuous gamma-ray exposure on performance of learned tasks and effect of subsequent fractionated exposures on blood-forming tissue
Sixteen monkeys trained to perform continuous and discrete-avoidance and fixed-ratio tasks with visual and auditory cues were performance-tested before, during, and after 10-day gamma-ray exposures totaling 0, 500, 750, and 1000 rads. Approximately 14 months after the performance-test exposures, surviving animals were exposed to 100-rad gamma-ray fractions at 56-day intervals to observe injury and recovery patterns of blood-forming tissues. The fixed-ratio, food-reward task performance showed a transient decline in all dose groups within 24 hours of the start of gamma-ray exposure, followed by recovery to normal food-consumption levels within 48 to 72 hours. Avoidance tasks were performed successfully by all groups during the 10-day exposure, but reaction times of the two higher dose-rate groups in which animals received 3 and 4 rads per hour or total doses of 750 and 1000 rads, respectively, were somewhat slower
The Distance to the M31 Globular Cluster System
The distance to the centroid of the M31 globular cluster system is determined
by fitting theoretical isochrones to the observed red-giant branches of
fourteen globular clusters in M31. The mean true distance modulus of the M31
globular clusters is found to be 24.47 +/- 0.07 mag. This is consistent with
distance modulii for M31 that have been obtained using other distance
indicators.Comment: 11 pages, 2 postscript figures, uses aaspp4.sty, to be published in
the May 1998 Astronomical Journa
Extreme non-linear response of ultra-narrow optical transitions in cavity QED for laser stabilization
We explore the potential of direct spectroscopy of ultra-narrow optical
transitions of atoms localized in an optical cavity. In contrast to
stabilization against a reference cavity, which is the approach currently used
for the most highly stabilized lasers, stabilization against an atomic
transition does not suffer from Brownian thermal noise. Spectroscopy of
ultra-narrow optical transitions in a cavity operates in a very highly
saturated regime in which non-linear effects such as bistability play an
important role. From the universal behavior of the Jaynes-Cummings model with
dissipation, we derive the fundamental limits for laser stabilization using
direct spectroscopy of ultra-narrow atomic lines. We find that with current
lattice clock experiments, laser linewidths of about 1 mHz can be achieved in
principle, and the ultimate limitations of this technique are at the 1 Hz
level.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Ozone measurement systems improvements studies
Results are summarized of an initial study of techniques for measuring atmospheric ozone, carried out as the first phase of a program to improve ozone measurement techniques. The study concentrated on two measurement systems, the electro chemical cell (ECC) ozonesonde and the Dobson ozone spectrophotometer, and consisted of two tasks. The first task consisted of error modeling and system error analysis of the two measurement systems. Under the second task a Monte-Carlo model of the Dobson ozone measurement technique was developed and programmed for computer operation
Intensity fluctuations in steady state superradiance
Alkaline-earth like atoms with ultra-narrow optical transitions enable
superradiance in steady state. The emitted light promises to have an
unprecedented stability with a linewidth as narrow as a few millihertz. In
order to evaluate the potential usefulness of this light source as an
ultrastable oscillator in clock and precision metrology applications it is
crucial to understand the noise properties of this device. In this paper we
present a detailed analysis of the intensity fluctuations by means of
Monte-Carlo simulations and semi-classical approximations. We find that the
light exhibits bunching below threshold, is to a good approximation coherent in
the superradiant regime, and is chaotic above the second threshold.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
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