5,768 research outputs found
New methodology for assessing the probability of contaminating Mars
Methodology is proposed to assess the probability that the planet Mars will be contaminated by terrestrial microorganisms aboard a spacecraft. The present NASA methods are extended to permit utilization of detailed information on microbial characteristics, the lethality of release and transport mechanisms, and of other information about the Martian environment. Different types of microbial release are distinguished, and for each release mechanism a probability of growth is computed. Using this new methodology, an assessment was carried out for the 1975 Viking landings on Mars. The resulting probability of contamination for each Viking lander is 6 x 10 to the -6 power, and is amenable to revision as additional information becomes available
Assessment of the probability of contaminating Mars
New methodology is proposed to assess the probability that the planet Mars will by biologically contaminated by terrestrial microorganisms aboard a spacecraft. Present NASA methods are based on the Sagan-Coleman formula, which states that the probability of contamination is the product of the expected microbial release and a probability of growth. The proposed new methodology extends the Sagan-Coleman approach to permit utilization of detailed information on microbial characteristics, the lethality of release and transport mechanisms, and of other information about the Martian environment. Three different types of microbial release are distinguished in the model for assessing the probability of contamination. The number of viable microbes released by each mechanism depends on the bio-burden in various locations on the spacecraft and on whether the spacecraft landing is accomplished according to plan. For each of the three release mechanisms a probability of growth is computed, using a model for transport into an environment suited to microbial growth
Implications of non-feasible transformations among icosahedral orbitals
The symmetric group that permutes the six five-fold axes of an
icosahedron is introduced to go beyond the simple rotations that constitute the
icosahedral group . Owing to the correspondence , the
calculation of the Coulomb energies for the icosahedral configurations
based on the sequence can be brought
to bear on Racah's classic theory for the atomic d shell based on . Among the elements of is the kaleidoscope
operator that rotates the weight space of SO(5) by . Its use
explains some puzzling degeneracies in d^3 involving the spectroscopic terms
^2P, ^2F, ^2G and ^2H.Comment: Tentatively scheduled to appear in Physical Preview Letters Apr 5,
99. Revtex, 1 ps figur
More on coupling coefficients for the most degenerate representations of SO(n)
We present explicit closed-form expressions for the general group-theoretical
factor appearing in the alpha-topology of a high-temperature expansion of
SO(n)-symmetric lattice models. This object, which is closely related to
6j-symbols for the most degenerate representation of SO(n), is discussed in
detail.Comment: 9 pages including 1 table, uses IOP macros Update of Introduction and
Discussion, References adde
Scattering and absorption of ultracold atoms by nanotubes
We investigate theoretically how cold atoms, including Bose-Einstein
condensates, are scattered from, or absorbed by nanotubes with a view to
analysing recent experiments. In particular we consider the role of potential
strength, quantum reflection, atomic interactions and tube vibrations on atom
loss rates. Lifshitz theory calculations deliver a significantly stronger
scattering potential than that found in experiment and we discuss possible
reasons for this. We find that the scattering potential for dielectric tubes
can be calculated to a good approximation using a modified pairwise summation
approach, which is efficient and easily extendable to arbitrary geometries.
Quantum reflection of atoms from a nanotube may become a significant factor at
low temperatures, especially for non-metallic tubes. Interatomic interactions
are shown to increase the rate at which atoms are lost to the nanotube and lead
to non-trivial dynamics. Thermal nanotube vibrations do not significantly
increase loss rates or reduce condensate fractions, but lower frequency
oscillations can dramatically heat the cloud.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Inactivation of Kell blood group antigens by 2-aminoethylisothiouronium bromide
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/75007/1/j.1365-2141.1982.tb07295.x.pd
Analytical Work in Support of the Design and Operation of Two Dimensional Self Streamlining Test Sections
A method has been developed for accurately computing the imaginary flow fields outside a flexible walled test section, applicable to lifting and non-lifting models. The tolerances in the setting of the flexible walls introduce only small levels of aerodynamic interference at the model. While it is not possible to apply corrections for the interference effects, they may be reduced by improving the setting accuracy of the portions of wall immediately above and below the model. Interference effects of the truncation of the length of the streamlined portion of a test section are brought to an acceptably small level by the use of a suitably long test section with the model placed centrally
Analytic Treatment of Positronium Spin Splittings in Light-Front QED
We study the QED bound-state problem in a light-front hamiltonian approach.
Starting with a bare cutoff QED Hamiltonian, , with matrix elements
between free states of drastically different energies removed, we perform a
similarity transformation that removes the matrix elements between free states
with energy differences between the bare cutoff, , and effective
cutoff, \lam (\lam < \Lam). This generates effective interactions in the
renormalized Hamiltonian, . These effective interactions are derived
to order in this work, with . is renormalized
by requiring it to satisfy coupling coherence. A nonrelativistic limit of the
theory is taken, and the resulting Hamiltonian is studied using bound-state
perturbation theory (BSPT). The effective cutoff, \lam^2, is fixed, and the
limit, 0 \longleftarrow m^2 \alpha^2\ll \lam^2 \ll m^2 \alpha \longrightarrow
\infty, is taken. This upper bound on \lam^2 places the effects of
low-energy (energy transfer below \lam) emission in the effective
interactions in the sector. This lower bound on \lam^2
insures that the nonperturbative scale of interest is not removed by the
similarity transformation. As an explicit example of the general formalism
introduced, we show that the Hamiltonian renormalized to reproduces
the exact spectrum of spin splittings, with degeneracies dictated by rotational
symmetry, for the ground state through . The entire calculation is
performed analytically, and gives the well known singlet-triplet ground state
spin splitting of positronium, . We discuss remaining
corrections other than the spin splittings and how they can be treated in
calculating the spectrum with higher precision.Comment: 46 pages, latex, 3 Postscript figures included, section on remaining
corrections added, title changed, error in older version corrected, cutoff
placed in a windo
Radio-frequency dressed lattices for ultracold alkali atoms
Ultracold atomic gases in periodic potentials are powerful platforms for exploring quantum physics in regimes dominated by many-body effects as well as for developing applications that benefit from quantum mechanical effects. Further advances face a range of challenges including the realization of potentials with lattice constants smaller than optical wavelengths as well as creating schemes for effective addressing and manipulation of single sites. In this paper we propose a dressed-based scheme for creating periodic potential landscapes for ultracold alkali atoms with the capability of overcoming such difficulties. The dressed approach has the advantage of operating in a low-frequency regime where decoherence and heating effects due to spontaneous emission do not take place. These results highlight the possibilities of atom-chip technology in the future development of quantum simulations and quantum technologies, and provide a realistic scheme for starting such an exploration
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