3,808 research outputs found
Characteristics of EMI generated by negative metal-positive dielectric voltage stresses due to spacecraft charging
Charging of spacecraft surfaces by the environmental plasma can result in differential potentials between metallic structure and adjacent dielectric surfaces in which the relative polarity of the voltage stress is either negative dielectric/positive metal or negative metal/positive dielectric. Negative metal/positive dielectric is a stress condition that may arise if relatively large areas of spacecraft surface metals are shadowed from solar UV and/or if the UV intensity is reduced as in the situation in which the spacecraft is entering into or leaving eclipse. The results of experimental studies of negative metal/positive dielectric systems are given. Information is given on: enhanced electron emission I-V curves; e(3) corona noise vs e(3) steady-state current; the localized nature of e(3) and negative metal arc discharge currents; negative metal arc discharges at stress thresholds below 1 kilovolt; negative metal arc discharge characteristics; dependence of blowoff arc discharge current on spacecraft capacitance to space (linear dimension); and damage to second surface mirrors due to negative metal arcs
Quantum effects in the collective light scattering by coherent atomic recoil in a Bose-Einstein condensate
We extend the semiclassical model of the collective atomic recoil laser
(CARL) to include the quantum mechanical description of the center-of-mass
motion of the atoms in a Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC). We show that when the
average atomic momentum is less than the recoil momentum , the
CARL equations reduce to the Maxwell-Bloch equations for two momentum levels.
In the conservative regime (no radiation losses), the quantum model depends on
a single collective parameter, , that can be interpreted as the average
number of photons scattered per atom in the classical limit. When ,
the semiclassical CARL regime is recovered, with many momentum levels populated
at saturation. On the contrary, when , the average momentum
oscillates between zero and , and a periodic train of
hyperbolic secant pulses is emitted. In the dissipative regime (large radiation
losses) and in a suitable quantum limit, a sequential superfluorescence
scattering occurs, in which after each process atoms emit a hyperbolic
secant pulse and populate a lower momentum state. These results describe the
regular arrangement of the momentum pattern observed in recent experiments of
superradiant Rayleigh scattering from a BEC.Comment: submitted for publication on Phys. Rev.
Auroral rocket experiment 2 Final report
Detecting fluxes of energetic neutral hydrogen atoms in interplanetary medium by auroral rocket flight
Thermochemical ablation of rocket nozzle insert materials Final report
Resistance of rocket nozzle throat insert materials to corrosion and meltin
Application of Alloy 718 in M-1 engine components
Alloy 718 applied to components of M-1 rocket engin
Atomic interaction effects in the superradiant light scattering from a Bose-Einstein condensate
We investigate the effects of the atomic interaction in the Superradiant
Rayleigh scattering from a Bose-Einstein condensate driven by a far-detuned
laser beam. We show that for a homogeneous atomic sample the atomic interaction
has only a dispersive effect, whereas in the inhomogeneous case it may increase
the decay of the matter-wave grating.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, presented to the XII International Laser Physics
Workshop, August 24-29, Hamburg, to be published in Laser Physic
Study of an auroral zone rocket experiment Final report
Measurement of flux and energy spectra of protons, energetic particles, hydrogen atoms, and electrons in auroral zone by Nike-Tomahawk sounding rocke
Does matter wave amplification work for fermions?
We discuss the relationship between bosonic stimulation, density
fluctuations, and matter wave gratings. It is shown that enhanced stimulated
scattering, matter wave amplification and atomic four-wave mixing are in
principle possible for fermionic or non-degenerate samples if they are prepared
in a cooperative state. In practice, there are limitations by short coherence
times.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure
Granivory in a desert ecosystem: experimental evidence for indirect facilitation of ants by rodents
Journal ArticleTwo major groups of desert granivores, ants and rodents, coexist as permanent residents of local desert habitats in southwestern North America. At our Sonoran Desert study site, both of the major taxa exhibited short-term increase in density when the other taxon was experimentally removed. Over the longer term, density compensation continued at a relatively constant level for rodents in the absence of ants. In contrast, beginning about 2 years after initiation of experiments, ant populations on rodent removal plots showed a gradual but significant decline relative to densities on control plots. Indirect interactions, mediated through ant and rodent resources, may account for these differences. Removal of harvester ants leads to higher annual plant densities only in small-seeded species. These plants are relatively poor competitors and do not displace the large-seeded annuals, on whose seeds rodents specialize. In contrast, rodent removal leads to a differential increase in large-seeded annuals, which competitively displace the small-seeded resource species of ants. The decline of ant populations on rodent removal plots preceded by several years the first detectable evidence for competitive suppression of small-seeded annuals. Because ants do not excavate buried seed, they probably experienced resource depression before buried seed reserves were exhausted through germination and subsequent competitive inhibition
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