128,767 research outputs found
The breakage prediction for hydromechanical deep drawing based on local bifurcation theory
A criterion of sheet metal localized necking under plane stress was established based on the bifurcation theory and the characteristics theory of differential equation. In order to be capable to incorporate the directional dependence of the plastic strain rate on stress rate, Ito-Goya’s constitutive equation which gave a one to one relationship between stress rate component and plastic strain rate component was employed. The hydromechanical deep drawing process of a cylindrical cup part was simulated using the commercial software ABAQUS IMPLICIT. The onset of breakage of the part during the forming process was predicted by combining the simulation results with the local necking criterion. The proposed method is applied to the hydro-mechanical deep drawing process for A2219 aluminum alloy sheet metal to predict the breakage of the cylindrical cup part. The proposed method can be applied to the prediction of breakage in the forming of the automotive bodies
Quantum Field Effects on Cosmological Phase Transition in Anisotropic Spacetimes
The one-loop renormalized effective potentials for the massive
theory on the spatially homogeneous models of Bianchi type I and
Kantowski-Sachs type are evaluated. It is used to see how the quantum field
affects the cosmological phase transition in the anisotropic spacetimes. For
reasons of the mathematical technique it is assumed that the spacetimes are
slowly varying or have specially metric forms. We obtain the analytic results
and present detailed discussions about the quantum field corrections to the
symmetry breaking or symmetry restoration in the model spacetimes.Comment: Latex 17 page
A first step toward higher order chain rules in abelian functor calculus
One of the fundamental tools of undergraduate calculus is the chain rule. The
notion of higher order directional derivatives was developed by Huang,
Marcantognini, and Young, along with a corresponding higher order chain rule.
When Johnson and McCarthy established abelian functor calculus, they proved a
chain rule for functors that is analogous to the directional derivative chain
rule when . In joint work with Bauer, Johnson, and Riehl, we defined an
analogue of the iterated directional derivative and provided an inductive proof
of the analogue to the chain rule of Huang et al.
This paper consists of the initial investigation of the chain rule found in
Bauer et al., which involves a concrete computation of the case when . We
describe how to obtain the second higher order directional derivative chain
rule for abelian functors. This proof is fundamentally different in spirit from
the proof given in Bauer et al. as it relies only on properties of cross
effects and the linearization of functors
Remark on approximation in the calculation of the primordial spectrum generated during inflation
We re-examine approximations in the analytical calculation of the primordial
spectrum of cosmological perturbation produced during inflation. Taking two
inflation models (chaotic inflation and natural inflation) as examples, we
numerically verify the accuracy of these approximations.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, to appear in PR
A Study of Anyon Statistics by Breit Hamiltonian Formalism
We study the anyon statistics of a dimensional Maxwell-Chern-Simons
(MCS) gauge theory by using a systemmetic metheod, the Breit Hamiltonian
formalism.Comment: 25 pages, LATE
Non-Thermal Production of WIMPs and the Sub-Galactic Structure of the Universe
There is increasing evidence that conventional cold dark matter (CDM) models
lead to conflicts between observations and numerical simulations of dark matter
halos on sub-galactic scales. Spergel and Steinhardt showed that if the CDM is
strongly self-interacting, then the conflicts disappear. However, the
assumption of strong self-interaction would rule out the favored candidates for
CDM, namely weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs), such as the
neutralino. In this paper we propose a mechanism of non-thermal production of
WIMPs and study its implications on the power spectrum. We find that the
non-vanishing velocity of the WIMPs suppresses the power spectrum on small
scales compared to what it obtained in the conventional CDM model. Our results
show that, in this context, WIMPs as candidates for dark matter can work well
both on large scales and on sub-galactic scales.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures; typo corrected; to appear in PR
A three dimensional extinction map of the Galactic Anticentre from multi-band photometry
We present a three dimensional extinction map in band. The map has a
spatial angular resolution, depending on latitude, between 3 -- 9\,arcmin and
covers the entire XSTPS-GAC survey area of over 6,000\, for Galactic
longitude and latitude . By cross-matching the photometric catalog of the Xuyi Schmidt
Telescope Photometric Survey of the Galactic Anticentre (XSTPS-GAC) with those
of 2MASS and WISE, we have built a multi-band photometric stellar sample of
about 30 million stars and applied spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting
to the sample. By combining photometric data from the optical to the
near-infrared, we are able to break the degeneracy between the intrinsic
stellar colours and the amounts of extinction by dust grains for stars with
high photometric accuracy, and trace the extinction as a function of distance
for low Galactic latitude and thus highly extincted regions. This has allowed
us to derive the best-fit extinction and distance information of more than 13
million stars, which are used to construct the three dimensional extinction
map. We have also applied a Rayleigh-Jeans colour excess (RJCE) method to the
data using the 2MASS and WISE colour . The resulting RJCE extinction
map is consistent with the integrated two dimensional map deduced using the
best-fit SED algorithm. However for individual stars, the amounts of extinction
yielded by the RJCE method suffer from larger errors than those given by the
best-fit SED algorithm.Comment: 20 pages, 18 figures, accepted in MNRA
Dust-to-gas ratio, factor and CO-dark gas in the Galactic anticentre: an observational study
We investigate the correlation between extinction and H~{\sc i} and CO
emission at intermediate and high Galactic latitudes (|b|>10\degr) within the
footprint of the Xuyi Schmidt Telescope Photometric Survey of the Galactic
anticentre (XSTPS-GAC) on small and large scales. In Paper I (Chen et al.
2014), we present a three-dimensional dust extinction map within the footprint
of XSTPS-GAC, covering a sky area of over 6,000\,deg at a spatial angular
resolution of 6\,arcmin. In the current work, the map is combined with data
from gas tracers, including H~{\sc i} data from the Galactic Arecibo L-band
Feed Array H~{\sc i} survey and CO data from the Planck mission, to constrain
the values of dust-to-gas ratio and CO-to-
conversion factor for the entire GAC
footprint excluding the Galactic plane, as well as for selected star-forming
regions (such as the Orion, Taurus and Perseus clouds) and a region of diffuse
gas in the northern Galactic hemisphere. For the whole GAC footprint, we find
\, and \,. We have also
investigated the distribution of "CO-dark" gas (DG) within the footprint of GAC
and found a linear correlation between the DG column density and the -band
extinction: . The mass fraction of DG is found to be toward
the Galactic anticentre, which is respectively about 23 and 124 per cent of the
atomic and CO-traced molecular gas in the same region. This result is
consistent with the theoretical work of Papadopoulos et al. but much larger
than that expected in the cloud models by Wolfire et al.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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