464 research outputs found

    Rotor vibration caused by external excitation and rub

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    For turbomachinery with low natural frequencies, considerations have been recently required for rotor vibrations caused by external forces except unbalance one, such as foundation motion, seismic wave, rub and so forth. Such a forced vibration is investigated analytically and experimentally in the present paper. Vibrations in a rotor-bearing system under a harmonic excitation are analyzed by the modal technique in the case of a linear system including gyroscopic effect. For a nonlinear system a new and powerful quasi-modal technique is developed and applied to the vibration caused by rub

    Asymptotically exact mean field theory for the Anderson model including double occupancy

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    The Anderson impurity model for finite values of the Coulomb repulsion UU is studied using a slave boson representation for the empty and doubly occupied ff-level. In order to avoid well known problems with a naive mean field theory for the boson fields, we use the coherent state path integral representation to first integrate out the double occupancy slave bosons. The resulting effective action is linearized using {\bf two-time} auxiliary fields. After integration over the fermionic degrees of freedom one obtains an effective action suitable for a 1/Nf1/N_f-expansion. Concerning the constraint the same problem remains as in the infinite UU case. For T→0T \rightarrow 0 and Nf→∞N_f \rightarrow \infty exact results for the ground state properties are recovered in the saddle point approximation. Numerical solutions of the saddle point equations show that even in the spindegenerate case Nf=2N_f = 2 the results are quite good.Comment: 19, RevTeX, cond-mat/930502

    Asymmetric Hypsarrhythmia: Clinical Electroencephalographic and Radiological Findings

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    Twenty-six children (16 boys and 10 girls) with hypsarrhythmia and infantile spasms (IS) were studied at the University of Michigan EEG Laboratory in a 4-year period. Six (2 boys, 4 girls), had asymmetric hypsarrhythmia with a preponderance of both slowing and epileptic form activity over one hemisphere. All 6 had the symptomatic form of IS, 4 with dysplastic conditions, 1 with porencephaly from a cerebral infarct, and 1 with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy. Five children had focal abnormalities on either physical examination or imaging studies. Four had the highest amplitude slowing and most epileptiform activity ipsilateral to the lesion, in 1, it was contralateral. Asymmetric hypsarrhythmia constituted 23% of cases with hypsarrhythmia examined at our EEG laboratory. The significant success in surgical therapy for some children with IS indicates the importance of identifying focal hemispheric abnormalities even if they are not apparent clinically. EEG may suggest focal changes not detected clinically or radiologically.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66439/1/j.1528-1157.1995.tb01663.x.pd
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