18,105 research outputs found
On the Computation of Structural Vibrations Induced by a Low-speed Turbulent Flow
A method for numerical evaluation of the vibrations of a cylindrical shell structure induced by a low speed external turbulent flow is discussed. The direction of flow is along the axis of revolution of the shell, and the source of excitation is the pressure fluctuations in the turbulent boundary layer. For the investigation of vibration and noise problems it is usually more desirable to utilize the modal expansion approach. The axisymmetric shell structure can be modeled by the assemblage of conical-shell finite-elements. This modeling allows the eigenfunction psi sub mn (x,theta) to be represented in a rectangular product of a longitudinal modal function f sub mn (x) and a circular harmonic function cos m theta (or sin m theta)
Unified Analysis of Cosmological Perturbations in Generalized Gravity
In a class of generalized Einstein's gravity theories we derive the equations
and general asymptotic solutions describing the evolution of the perturbed
universe in unified forms. Our gravity theory considers general couplings
between the scalar field and the scalar curvature in the Lagrangian, thus
includes broad classes of generalized gravity theories resulting from recent
attempts for the unification. We analyze both the scalar-type mode and the
gravitational wave in analogous ways. For both modes the large scale evolutions
are characterized by the same conserved quantities which are valid in the
Einstein's gravity. This unified and simple treatment is possible due to our
proper choice of the gauges, or equivalently gauge invariant combinations.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, no figure
Metal-to-insulator transition in anatase TiO2 thin films induced by growth rate modulation
We demonstrate control of the carrier density of single phase anatase TiO2
thin films by nearly two orders of magnitude by modulating the growth kinetics
during pulsed laser deposition, under fixed thermodynamic conditions. The
resistivity and the intensity of the photoluminescence spectra of these TiO2
samples, both of which correlate with the number of oxygen vacancies, are shown
to depend strongly on the growth rate. A quantitative model is used to explain
the carrier density changes.Comment: 13 pages 3 figure
Percolation of Immobile Domains in Supercooled Thin Polymeric Films
We present an analysis of heterogeneous dynamics in molecular dynamics
simulations of a thin polymeric film, supported by an absorbing structured
surface. Near the glass transition "immobile" domains occur throughout the
film, yet the probability of their occurrence decreasing with larger distance
from the surface. Still, enough immobile domains are located near the free
surface to cause them to percolate in the direction perpendicular to surface,
at a temperature near the glass transition temperature. This result is in
agreement with a recent theoretical model of glass transition
Non-abelian dynamics in first-order cosmological phase transitions
Bubble collisions in cosmological phase transitions are explored, taking the
non-abelian character of the gauge fields into account. Both the QCD and
electroweak phase transitions are considered. Numerical solutions of the field
equations in several limits are presented.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures. Contribution to the CosPA 2003 Cosmology and
Particle Astrophysics Symposium. Typos correcte
Neurodevelopmental Changes in Social Reinforcement Processing: A Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study.
ObjectiveIn the current study we investigated neurodevelopmental changes in response to social and non-social reinforcement.MethodsFifty-three healthy participants including 16 early adolescents (age, 10-15 years), 16 late adolescents (age, 15-18 years), and 21 young adults (age, 21-25 years) completed a social/non-social reward learning task while undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging. Participants responded to fractal image stimuli and received social or non-social reward/non-rewards according to their accuracy. ANOVAs were conducted on both the blood oxygen level dependent response data and the product of a context-dependent psychophysiological interaction (gPPI) analysis involving ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) and bilateral insula cortices as seed regions.ResultsEarly adolescents showed significantly increased activation in the amygdala and anterior insula cortex in response to non-social monetary rewards relative to both social reward/non-reward and monetary non-rewards compared to late adolescents and young adults. In addition, early adolescents showed significantly more positive connectivity between the vmPFC/bilateral insula cortices seeds and other regions implicated in reinforcement processing (the amygdala, posterior cingulate cortex, insula cortex, and lentiform nucleus) in response to non-reward and especially social non-reward, compared to late adolescents and young adults.ConclusionIt appears that early adolescence may be marked by: (i) a selective increase in responsiveness to non-social, relative to social, rewards; and (ii) enhanced, integrated functioning of reinforcement circuitry for non-reward, and in particular, with respect to posterior cingulate and insula cortices, for social non-reward
A human factors evaluation of the robotic interface for Space Station Freedom orbital replaceable units
An orbital replaceable unit (ORU) is often defined as any orbital unit aboard Space Station with a wearout life of less than 30 years. The capability of successful changeout of these units by remote manipulation is critical to the ORU to telerobot interface design. A human factors evaluation of the selected interface showed certain inadequacies of the alignment target concept that was part of the interface package. Alternative target concepts which addressed these inadequacies were developed and are presented. Recommendations will be incorporated into NASA requirements documents which ORU suppliers and manufacturers must then build to
Mid-Infrared Images of Luminous Infrared Galaxies in a Merging Sequence
We report mid-infrared observations of several luminous infrared galaxies
(LIGs) carried out with the Infrared Space Observatory. Our sample was chosen
to represent different phases of a merger sequence of galaxy-galaxy interaction
with special emphasis on early/intermediate stages of merging. The mid-infrared
emission of these LIGs shows extended structures for the early and intermediate
mergers, indicating that most of the mid-infrared luminosities are not from a
central active galactic nucleus (AGN). Both the infrared hardness (indicated by
the IRAS 12, 25, and 60 \micron flux density ratios) and the peak-to-total
flux density ratios of these LIGs increase as projected separation of these
interacting galaxies become smaller, consistent with increasing star formation
activities that are concentrated to a smaller area as the merging process
advances. These observations provide among the first observational constraint
of largely theoretically based scenarios.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, please refer to ApJ Letters for the final
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