12,912 research outputs found
ST/STIS Spectroscopy of the White Dwarfs in the Short-Period Dwarf Novae LL And and EF Peg
We present new HST/STIS observations of the short-period dwarf novae LL And
and EF Peg during deep quiescence. We fit stellar models to the UV spectra and
use optical and IR observations to determine the physical parameters of the
whitedwarfs in the systems, the distances to the binaries, and the properties
of thesecondary stars. Both white dwarfs are relatively cool, having T_{eff}
near 15000K, and consistent with a mass of 0.6 M-sun. The white dwarf in LL And
appears to be of solar abundance or slightly lower while that in EF Peg is near
0.1-0.3 solar. LL And is found to be 760 pc away while EF Peg is closer at 380
pc. EF Peg appears to have an ~M5V secondary star, consistent with that
expected for its orbital period, while the secondary object in LL And remains a
mystery.Comment: Accepted in Ap
Noise suppression in inverse weak value based phase detection
We examine the effect of different sources of technical noise on inverse weak
value-based precision phase measurements. We find that this type of measurement
is similarly robust to technical noise as related experiments in the weak value
regime. In particular, the measurements considered here are robust to additive
Gaussian white noise and angular jitter noise commonly encountered in optical
experiments. Additionally, we show the same techniques used for precision phase
measurement can be used with the same technical advantages for optical
frequency measurements.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Fluid thrust control system
A pure fluid thrust control system is described for a pump-fed, regeneratively cooled liquid propellant rocket engine. A proportional fluid amplifier and a bistable fluid amplifier control overshoot in the starting of the engine and take it to a predetermined thrust. An ejector type pump is provided in the line between the liquid hydrogen rocket nozzle heat exchanger and the turbine driving the fuel pump to aid in bringing the fluid at this point back into the regular system when it is not bypassed. The thrust control system is intended to function in environments too severe for mechanical controls
Technical advantages for weak value amplification: When less is more
The technical merits of weak value amplification techniques are analyzed. We
consider models of several different types of technical noise in an optical
context and show that weak value amplification techniques (which only use a
small fraction of the photons) compare favorably with standard techniques
(which uses all of them). Using the Fisher information metric, we demonstrate
that weak value techniques can put all of the Fisher information about the
detected parameter into a small portion of the events and show how this fact
alone gives technical advantages. We go on to consider a time correlated noise
model, and find that a Fisher information analysis indicates that while the
standard method can have much larger information about the detected parameter
than the postselected technique. However, the estimator needed to gather the
information is technically difficult to implement, showing that the inefficient
(but practical) signal-to-noise estimation of the parameter is usually
superior. We also describe other technical advantages unique to imaginary weak
value amplification techniques, focusing on beam deflection measurements. In
this case, we discuss combined noise types (such as detector transverse jitter,
angular beam jitter before the interferometer and turbulence) for which the
interferometric weak value technique gives higher Fisher information over
conventional methods. We go on to calculate the Fisher information of the
recently proposed photon recycling scheme for beam deflection measurements, and
show it further boosts the Fisher information by the inverse postselection
probability relative to the standard measurement case
Gravitational sensing with weak value based optical sensors
Using weak values amplification angular resolution limits, we theoretically
investigate the gravitational sensing of objects. By inserting a force-sensing
pendulum into a weak values interferometer, the optical response can sense
accelerations to a few 10's of
, with optical powers of
. We convert this precision into range and mass sensitivity,
focusing in detail on simple and torsion pendula. Various noise sources present
are discussed, as well as the necessary cooling that should be applied to reach
the desired levels of precision.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, Quantum Stud.: Math. Found. (2018
Experimental Violation of Two-Party Leggett-Garg Inequalities with Semi-weak Measurements
We generalize the derivation of Leggett-Garg inequalities to systematically
treat a larger class of experimental situations by allowing multi-particle
correlations, invasive detection, and ambiguous detector results. Furthermore,
we show how many such inequalities may be tested simultaneously with a single
setup. As a proof of principle, we violate several such two-particle
inequalities with data obtained from a polarization-entangled biphoton state
and a semi-weak polarization measurement based on Fresnel reflection. We also
point out a non- trivial connection between specific two-party Leggett-Garg
inequality violations and convex sums of strange weak values.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Sudangrasses and other crops for temporary forage
"Warm season annuals are excellent supplemental forages for summer grazing. They are heat tolerant and very productive when moisture and fertility are available. They furnish high quality when grazed but have some deficiencies when used for hay or silage."--First page.Howell N. Wheaton (Department of Agronomy, College of Agriculture)New 10/82/10
White, ladino and sweet clover
File: Agron. 4 7/77/8MHowell N. Wheaton (Department of Agronomy, College of Agriculture
Quadruple Simulations of Thermographic Inspections of Impacted Composites
Thermography has been shown to be a viable technique for inspection of composites. Impact damage in composites typically contains multiple overlapping delaminations at different depths. Understanding the limitations of the thermographic inspection is enhanced by performing simulations of the technique. Most simulations of composite thermographic inspections have focused on simulations of a single delamination at a fixed depth. The quadrupole method has been shown as a viable technique for rapid three-dimensional thermographic simulations of a delamination. This method is expanded to enable rapid simulation of multiple overlapping delaminations at different depths. Quadrupole simulations are compared to finite element simulations of multiple delaminations at different depths. The simulations are also compared to the thermographic measurements on impacted composites where shape and depth of the delaminations are known from x-ray computed tomography data
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