38,971 research outputs found
Resonance Lineshapes in Quasi-One-Dimensional Scattering
An S matrix approach is developed to describe elastic scattering resonances
of systems where the scattered particle is asymptotically confined and the
scattering potential lacks continuous symmetry. Examples are conductance
resonances in microstructures or transmission resonances in waveguide
junctions. The generic resonance is shown to have the asymmetric Fano
lineshape. The asymmetry parameter q is independent of coupling to the
quasi-bound level implying a scaling property of the resonances which can be
tested in transport experiments.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex 3.0, Figure available in Postscrip
Measurement of sigma_Total in e+e- Annihilations Below 10.56 GeV
Using the CLEO III detector, we measure absolute cross sections for e+e- ->
hadrons at seven center-of-mass energies between 6.964 and 10.538 GeV. R, the
ratio of hadronic and muon pair production cross sections, is measured at these
energies with a r.m.s. error <2% allowing determinations of the strong coupling
alpha_s. Using the expected evolution of alpha_s with energy we find
alpha_s(M_Z^2)=0.126 +/- 0.005 ^{+0.015}_{-0.011}, and
Lambda=0.31^{+0.09+0.29}_{-0.08-0.21}.Comment: Comments: Presented at "The 2007 Europhysics Conference on High
Energy Physics," Manchester, England, 19-25 July 2007, to appear in the
proceedings. Three pages, 1 figur
Acoustic excitation: A promising new means of controlling shear layers
Techniques have long been sought for the controlled modification of turbulent shear layers, such as in jets, wakes, boundary layers, and separated flows. Relatively recently published results of laboratory experiments have established that coherent structures exist within turbulent flows. These results indicate that even apparently chaotic flow fields can contain deterministic, nonrandom elements. Even more recently published results show that deliberate acoustic excitation of these coherent structures has a significant effect on the mixing characteristics of shear layers. Therefore, we have initiated a research effort to develop both an understanding of the interaction mechanisms and the ability to use it to favorably modify various shear layers. Acoustic excitation circumvents the need for pumping significant flow rates, as required by suction or blowing. Control of flows by intentional excitation of natural flow instabilities involves new and largely unexplored phenomena and offers considerable potential for improving component performance. Nonintrusive techniques for flow field control may permit much more efficient, flexible propulsion systems and aircraft designs, including means of stall avoidance and recovery. The techniques developed may also find application in many other areas where mixing is important, such as reactors, continuous lasers, rocket engines, and fluidic devices. It is the objective of this paper to examine some potential applications of the acoustic excitation technique to various shear layer flows of practical aerospace systems
School Choice and Student Performance: Are Private Schools Really Better?
Are private schools really better than public schools, or is it simply that better students attend private schools? Although a number of recent studies find that students perform better in private schools (more specifically, Catholic schools), others do not. Typically, however, the instruments used to adjust for nonrandom selection are weak. This study employs uniquely detailed local instruments and jointly models selection into religious and nonreligious private high schools, relative to public high schools—improving instrument power in predicting private sector attendance to roughly three times that of prior studies. Failing to correct adequately for selection leads to a systematic upward bias in the estimated treatment effect for religious schools, but a downward bias for nonreligious private schools. With adequate correction, religious schools are modestly inferior in mathematics and science, while nonreligious schools are substantially superior. However, minority students, particularly in urban areas, benefit from religious schools. Other factors that may make both religious and nonreligious private schools attractive include possibly better retention rates, increased security and discipline, and greater opportunities for a variety of specialized school-day and extracurricular activities.
OpenCL + OpenSHMEM Hybrid Programming Model for the Adapteva Epiphany Architecture
There is interest in exploring hybrid OpenSHMEM + X programming models to
extend the applicability of the OpenSHMEM interface to more hardware
architectures. We present a hybrid OpenCL + OpenSHMEM programming model for
device-level programming for architectures like the Adapteva Epiphany many-core
RISC array processor. The Epiphany architecture comprises a 2D array of
low-power RISC cores with minimal uncore functionality connected by a 2D mesh
Network-on-Chip (NoC). The Epiphany architecture offers high computational
energy efficiency for integer and floating point calculations as well as
parallel scalability. The Epiphany-III is available as a coprocessor in
platforms that also utilize an ARM CPU host. OpenCL provides good functionality
for supporting a co-design programming model in which the host CPU offloads
parallel work to a coprocessor. However, the OpenCL memory model is
inconsistent with the Epiphany memory architecture and lacks support for
inter-core communication. We propose a hybrid programming model in which
OpenSHMEM provides a better solution by replacing the non-standard OpenCL
extensions introduced to achieve high performance with the Epiphany
architecture. We demonstrate the proposed programming model for matrix-matrix
multiplication based on Cannon's algorithm showing that the hybrid model
addresses the deficiencies of using OpenCL alone to achieve good benchmark
performance.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, OpenSHMEM 2016: Third workshop on OpenSHMEM and
Related Technologie
From Microscales to Macroscales in 3D: Selfconsistent Equation of State for Supernova and Neutron Star Models
First results from a fully self-consistent, temperature-dependent equation of
state that spans the whole density range of neutron stars and supernova cores
are presented. The equation of state (EoS) is calculated using a mean-field
Hartree-Fock method in three dimensions (3D). The nuclear interaction is
represented by the phenomenological Skyrme model in this work, but the EoS can
be obtained in our framework for any suitable form of the nucleon-nucleon
effective interaction. The scheme we employ naturally allows effects such as
(i) neutron drip, which results in an external neutron gas, (ii) the variety of
exotic nuclear shapes expected for extremely neutron heavy nuclei, and (iii)
the subsequent dissolution of these nuclei into nuclear matter. In this way,
the equation of state is calculated across phase transitions without recourse
to interpolation techniques between density regimes described by different
physical models. EoS tables are calculated in the wide range of densities,
temperature and proton/neutron ratios on the ORNL NCCS XT3, using up to 2000
processors simultaneously.Comment: 6 pages, 11 figures. Published in conference proceedings Journal of
Physics: Conference Series 46 (2006) 408. Extended version to be submitted to
Phys. Rev.
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