3,710 research outputs found
Life and reliability models for helicopter transmissions
Computer models of life and reliability are presented for planetary gear trains with a fixed ring gear, input applied to the sun gear, and output taken from the planet arm. For this transmission the input and output shafts are co-axial and the input and output torques are assumed to be coaxial with these shafts. Thrust and side loading are neglected. The reliability model is based on the Weibull distributions of the individual reliabilities of the in transmission components. The system model is also a Weibull distribution. The load versus life model for the system is a power relationship as the models for the individual components. The load-life exponent and basic dynamic capacity are developed as functions of the components capacities. The models are used to compare three and four planet, 150 kW (200 hp), 5:1 reduction transmissions with 1500 rpm input speed to illustrate their use
Real-time observation of interfering crystal electrons in high-harmonic generation
Accelerating and colliding particles has been a key strategy to explore the
texture of matter. Strong lightwaves can control and recollide electronic
wavepackets, generating high-harmonic (HH) radiation which encodes the
structure and dynamics of atoms and molecules and lays the foundations of
attosecond science. The recent discovery of HH generation in bulk solids
combines the idea of ultrafast acceleration with complex condensed matter
systems and sparks hope for compact solid-state attosecond sources and
electronics at optical frequencies. Yet the underlying quantum motion has not
been observable in real time. Here, we study HH generation in a bulk solid
directly in the time-domain, revealing a new quality of strong-field
excitations in the crystal. Unlike established atomic sources, our solid emits
HH radiation as a sequence of subcycle bursts which coincide temporally with
the field crests of one polarity of the driving terahertz waveform. We show
that these features hallmark a novel non-perturbative quantum interference
involving electrons from multiple valence bands. The results identify key
mechanisms for future solid-state attosecond sources and next-generation
lightwave electronics. The new quantum interference justifies the hope for
all-optical bandstructure reconstruction and lays the foundation for possible
quantum logic operations at optical clock rates
Exploring Outliers in Crowdsourced Ranking for QoE
Outlier detection is a crucial part of robust evaluation for crowdsourceable
assessment of Quality of Experience (QoE) and has attracted much attention in
recent years. In this paper, we propose some simple and fast algorithms for
outlier detection and robust QoE evaluation based on the nonconvex optimization
principle. Several iterative procedures are designed with or without knowing
the number of outliers in samples. Theoretical analysis is given to show that
such procedures can reach statistically good estimates under mild conditions.
Finally, experimental results with simulated and real-world crowdsourcing
datasets show that the proposed algorithms could produce similar performance to
Huber-LASSO approach in robust ranking, yet with nearly 8 or 90 times speed-up,
without or with a prior knowledge on the sparsity size of outliers,
respectively. Therefore the proposed methodology provides us a set of helpful
tools for robust QoE evaluation with crowdsourcing data.Comment: accepted by ACM Multimedia 2017 (Oral presentation). arXiv admin
note: text overlap with arXiv:1407.763
Stabilization of collapse and revival dynamics by a non-Markovian phonon bath
Semiconductor quantum dots (QDs) have been demonstrated to be versatile
candidates to study the fundamentals of light-matter interaction [1-3]. In
contrast with atom optics, dissipative processes are induced by the inherent
coupling to the environment and are typically perceived as a major obstacle
towards stable performances in experiments and applications [4].
In this paper we show that this is not necessarily the case. In fact, the
memory of the environment can enhance coherent quantum optical effects. In
particular, we demonstrate that the non-Markovian coupling to an incoherent
phonon bath has a stabilizing effect on the coherent QD cavity-quantum
electrodynamics (cQED) by inhibiting irregular oscillations and boosting
regular collapse and revival patterns. For low photon numbers we predict QD
dynamics that deviate dramatically from the well-known atomic Jaynes-Cummings
model. Our proposal opens the way to a systematic and deliberate design of
photon quantum effects via specifically engineered solid-state environments.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Phase transitions and molecular dynamics of n-hexadecanol confined in silicon nanochannels
We present a combined x-ray diffraction and infrared spectroscopy study on
the phase behavior and molecular dynamics of n-hexadecanol in its bulk state
and confined in an array of aligned nanochannels of 8 nm diameter in mesoporous
silicon. Under confinement the transition temperatures between the liquid, the
rotator RII and the crystalline C phase are lowered by approximately 20K. While
bulk n-hexadecanol exhibits at low temperatures a polycrystalline mixture of
orthorhombic beta- and monoclinic gamma-forms, geometrical confinement favors
the more simple beta-form: only crystallites are formed, where the chain axis
are parallel to the layer normal. However, the gamma-form, in which the chain
axis are tilted with respect to the layer normal, is entirely suppressed. The
beta-crystallites form bi-layers, that are not randomly orientated in the
pores. The molecules are arranged with their long axis perpendicular to the
long channel axis. With regard to the molecular dynamics, we were able to show
that confinement does not affect the inner-molecular dynamics of the CH_2
scissor vibration and to evaluate the inter-molecular force constants in the C
phase.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figure
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