115 research outputs found
Instability and Chaos in Non-Linear Wave Interaction: a simple model
We analyze stability of a system which contains an harmonic oscillator
non-linearly coupled to its second harmonic, in the presence of a driving
force. It is found that there always exists a critical amplitude of the driving
force above which a loss of stability appears. The dependence of the critical
input power on the physical parameters is analyzed. For a driving force with
higher amplitude chaotic behavior is observed. Generalization to interactions
which include higher modes is discussed.
Keywords: Non-Linear Waves, Stability, Chaos.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure
Using the Uncharged Kerr Black Hole as a Gravitational Mirror
We extend the study of the possibility to use the Schwarzschild black hole as
a gravitational mirror to the more general case of an uncharged Kerr black
hole. We use the null geodesic equation in the equatorial plane to prove a
theorem concerning the conditions the impact parameter has to satisfy if there
shall exist boomerang photons. We derive an equation for these boomerang
photons and an equation for the emission angle. Finally, the radial null
geodesic equation is integrated numerically in order to illustrate boomerang
photons.Comment: 11 pages Latex, 3 Postscript figures, uufiles to compres
HF radar observations of high-aspect angle backscatter from the E-region
International audienceWe present evidence for the observation of high-aspect angle HF radar backscatter from the auroral electrojets, and describe the spectral characteristics of these echoes. Such backscatter is observed at very near ranges where ionospheric refraction is not sufficient to bring the sounding radio waves to orthogonality with the magnetic field; the frequency dependence of this propagation effect is investigated with the Stereo upgrade of the CUTLASS Iceland radar. We term the occurrence of such echoes the "high-aspect angle irregularity region" or HAIR. It is suggested that backscatter is observed at aspect angles as high as 30°, with an aspect sensitivity as low as 1dB deg–1. These echoes are distinguished from normal electrojet backscatter by having low Doppler shifts with an azimuthal dependence that appears more consistent with the direction of the convection electric field than with the expected electron drift direction. This is discussed in terms of the linear theory dispersion relation for electrojet waves. Key words. Ionosphere (ionospheric irregularities; plasma waves and instabilities; auroral ionosphere
Sphere rolling on the surface of a cone
We analyse the motion of a sphere that rolls without slipping on a conical
surface having its axis in the direction of the constant gravitational field of
the Earth. This nonholonomic system admits a solution in terms of quadratures.
We exhibit that the only circular of the system orbit is stable and furthermore
show that all its solutions can be found using an analogy with central force
problems. We also discuss the case of motion with no gravitational field, that
is, of motion on a freely falling cone.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, to be published in Eur J Phy
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Fabrication and Characterization of Borosilicate Glasses Containing Alpha-Radionuclides and Silver From Conversion and Mixed-Oxide Facilities Proposed for Russia
Liquid and solid radioactive wastes are formed during conversion of plutonium metal to oxide and during fabrication of weapons-grade plutonium into mixed-oxide (MOX) fuel. In Russia, these wastes are to be processed for disposition by immobilization in either borosilicate glass or cement matrices depending upon the waste stream-specific radionuclide contents. Vitrification is planned for the liquid high-level waste raffinate stream containing the bulk of the Am-241 produced from Pu-241 decay. Previous work on the Russian MOX Fuel Fabrication Facility (R-MFFF) by the Public Joint Stock Corporation (TVEL) [1] showed that this waste stream may contain significant amounts of silver derived from the electrochemical dissolution of PuO2 using a Ag(II) catalyst. The work reported here further investigated silver solubility limits, which, if exceeded in a production glass melter, allow discrete silver grains to form in the glass and also deposit over time on the bottom of a joule-heated ceramic melter. In melters with immersed electrodes, such as the Russian EP-100 for phosphate glasses or the US Duratek DP-100 type melters for borosilicate glasses that are being considered for use at the Siberian Chemical Combine (SCC) Tomsk site, the undissolved silver could cause a short circuit and an unacceptable production melter failure. The silver solubility limit of 3.85 wt% Ag{sub 2}O in liquid, alpha-bearing wastes determined in this work will guide the production scale use of borosilicate glass compositions, and effectively increase the capacity of the ceramic melters and reduce the total volume of solidified vitrified wastes at SCC Tomsk that require storage prior to geologic disposal
Midlands Cadences: Narrative Voices in the Work of Alan Sillitoe
This paper will examine excerpts from a range of Alan Sillitoe’s prose fiction, most notably Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1958) and short stories from the collection The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Runner (1958), via a comparative exploration of the texts’ representations of Midlands English demotic. Both texts enact Bakhtin’s notion of novelistic dialogism and find much expressive capital in the tension between discourses: between the oral and the written. Indeed, it could be argued that much of Sillitoe’s work functions as a direct challenge to dominant notions of the literary. The narrative discourse attempts to trace a link between the quotidian experience of the Midlands English working classes represented and the demotic language which they speak. His technique also explores the link between language and sensibility; i.e. verbal articulacy need not be a limit to expression of a character’s distinctive identity. In contrast to the more radical techniques of novelists like James Kelman and Irvine Welsh, all instances of phonetically-rendered demotic remain imprisoned by what Joyce called ‘perverted commas’ – as direct speech. However, the diegetic narrative discourse itself is redolent of registers rooted in 1950s English working class life. The texts also contain different methods of representing their protagonists’ consciousness through their own idiolect. In Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, this is evidenced by the use of the second person ‘you’. It functions simultaneously as a representation of Seaton’s consciousness in the oral register which he might choose to articulate it, and as a dialogic ‘sideways glance’ at the reader and assumed shared experience. The second is more redolent of internal monologue, using the first-person form (as seen in the homodiegetic narration of the second novel); crucially, though, it remains in Standard English, if explicitly orientated towards oral register.
Sillitoe’s is a novelistic discourse which refuses to normalise itself to accord with the conventions of classic realism, and as such prefigures the ambitions of many contemporary writers who incline their narrative voices towards the oral – asserting the right of a character’s dialect/idiolect to be the principal register of the narrative. The paper will demonstrate this thesis through the ideas of Bakhtin, and through an analytical taxonomy derived from literary stylistics. It aims to propose a model which can be used to analyse and explore any fiction which has been labelled as ‘working class’, and asserts that such an approach leads to a more principled characterisation of working class fiction (based on its use of language) than current literary-critical discussions based simply on cultural/social context and biography
The Ks-band Tully-Fisher Relation - A Determination of the Hubble Parameter from 218 ScI Galaxies and 16 Galaxy Clusters
The value of the Hubble Parameter (H0) is determined using the
morphologically type dependent Ks-band Tully-Fisher Relation (K-TFR). The slope
and zero point are determined using 36 calibrator galaxies with ScI morphology.
Calibration distances are adopted from direct Cepheid distances, and group or
companion distances derived with the Surface Brightness Fluctuation Method or
Type Ia Supernova. Distances are determined to 16 galaxy clusters and 218 ScI
galaxies with minimum distances of 40.0 Mpc. From the 16 galaxy clusters a
weighted mean Hubble Parameter of H0=84.2 +/-6 km s-1 Mpc-1 is found. From the
218 ScI galaxies a Hubble Parameter of H0=83.4 +/-8 km s-1 Mpc-1 is found. When
the zero point of the K-TFR is corrected to account for recent results that
find a Large Magellanic Cloud distance modulus of 18.39 +/-0.05 a Hubble
Parameter of 88.0 +/-6 km s-1 Mpc-1 is found. A comparison with the results of
the Hubble Key Project (Freedman et al 2001) is made and discrepancies between
the K-TFR distances and the HKP I-TFR distances are discussed. Implications for
Lamda-CDM cosmology are considered with H0=84 km s-1 Mpc-1. (Abridged)Comment: 37 pages including 12 tables and 7 figures. Final version accepted
for publication in the Journal of Astrophysics & Astronom
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