82,470 research outputs found
Effect of Diethylenetriamine and Triethylamine sensitization on the critical diameter of Nitromethane
In this work, the critical diameter for detonation was measured for Nitromethane (NM) sensitized with two different amines: Diethylenetriamine (DETA) and Triethylamine (TEA). The critical diameter in glass and polyvinylchloride tubes is found to decrease rapidly as the amount of sensitizer is increased, then increase past a critical amount of sensitizer. Thus the critical diameter reaches a minimum at a critical concentration of sensitizer. It was also found that the critical diameter is lower with DETA than with TEA
Mean squared error of empirical predictor
The term ``empirical predictor'' refers to a two-stage predictor of a linear
combination of fixed and random effects. In the first stage, a predictor is
obtained but it involves unknown parameters; thus, in the second stage, the
unknown parameters are replaced by their estimators. In this paper, we consider
mean squared errors (MSE) of empirical predictors under a general setup, where
ML or REML estimators are used for the second stage. We obtain second-order
approximation to the MSE as well as an estimator of the MSE correct to the same
order. The general results are applied to mixed linear models to obtain a
second-order approximation to the MSE of the empirical best linear unbiased
predictor (EBLUP) of a linear mixed effect and an estimator of the MSE of EBLUP
whose bias is correct to second order. The general mixed linear model includes
the mixed ANOVA model and the longitudinal model as special cases
Distributed Adaptive Networks: A Graphical Evolutionary Game-Theoretic View
Distributed adaptive filtering has been considered as an effective approach
for data processing and estimation over distributed networks. Most existing
distributed adaptive filtering algorithms focus on designing different
information diffusion rules, regardless of the nature evolutionary
characteristic of a distributed network. In this paper, we study the adaptive
network from the game theoretic perspective and formulate the distributed
adaptive filtering problem as a graphical evolutionary game. With the proposed
formulation, the nodes in the network are regarded as players and the local
combiner of estimation information from different neighbors is regarded as
different strategies selection. We show that this graphical evolutionary game
framework is very general and can unify the existing adaptive network
algorithms. Based on this framework, as examples, we further propose two
error-aware adaptive filtering algorithms. Moreover, we use graphical
evolutionary game theory to analyze the information diffusion process over the
adaptive networks and evolutionarily stable strategy of the system. Finally,
simulation results are shown to verify the effectiveness of our analysis and
proposed methods.Comment: Accepted by IEEE Transactions on Signal Processin
The evolution-dominated hydrodynamic model and the pseudorapidity distributions in high energy physics
By taking into account the effects of leading particles, we discuss the
pseudorapidity distributions of the charged particles produced in high energy
heavy ion collisions in the context of evolution-dominated hydrodynamic model.
The leading particles are supposed to have a Gaussian rapidity distribution
normalized to the number of participants. A comparison is made between the
theoretical results and the experimental measurements performed by BRAHMS and
PHOBOS Collaboration at BNL-RHIC in Au-Au and Cu-Cu collisions at sqrt(s_NN)
=200 GeV and by ALICE Collaboration at CERN-LHC in Pb-Pb collisions at
sqrt(s_NN) =2.76 TeV.Comment: 17 pages,4 figures, 2 table
Possible TeV Source Candidates In The Unidentified EGRET Sources
We study the -ray emission from the pulsar magnetosphere based on
outer gap models, and the TeV radiation from pulsar wind nebulae (PWNe) through
inverse Compton scattering using a one-zone model. We showed previously that
GeV radiation from the magnetosphere of mature pulsars with ages of years old can contribute to the high latitude unidentified EGRET
sources. We carry out Monte Carlo simulations of -ray pulsars in the
Galaxy and the Gould Belt, assuming the pulsar birth rate, initial position,
proper motion velocity, period, and magnetic field distribution and evolution
based on observational statistics. We select from the simulation a sample of
mature pulsars in the Galactic plane () and in the high
latitude () which could be detected by EGRET. The TeV flux from
the pulsar wind nebulae of our simulated sample through the inverse Compton
scattering by relativistic electrons on the microwave cosmic background and
synchrotron seed photons are calculated. The predicted fluxes are consistent
with the present observational constraints. We suggest that strong EGRET
sources can be potential TeV source candidates for present and future
ground-based TeV telescopes.Comment: Minor changes, MNRAS in pres
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