5,412 research outputs found
Experimental and theoretical investigation of fatigue life in reusable rocket thrust chambers
During a test program to investigate low-cycle thermal fatigue, 13 rocket combustion chambers were fabricated and cyclically test fired to failure. Six oxygen-free, high-conductivity (OFHC) copper and seven Amzirc chambers were tested. The failures in the OFHC copper chambers were not typical fatigue failures but are described as creep rupture enhanced by ratcheting. The coolant channels bulged toward the chamber centerline, resulting in progressive thinning of the wall during each cycle. The failures in the Amzirc alloy chambers were caused by low-cycle thermal fatigue. The zirconium in this alloy was not evenly distributed in the chamber materials. The life that was achieved was nominally the same as would have been predicted from OFHC copper isothermal test data
Using Electronegativity and Hardness to Test Density Functional Universality
Density functional theory (DFT) is used in thousands of papers each year, yet
lack of universality reduces DFT's predictive capacity, and functionals may
produce energy-density imbalances. The absolute electronegativity (\chi) and
hardness (\eta) directly reflect the energy-density relationship via the
chemical potential dE/dN and we thus hypothesized that they probe universality.
We studied \chi and \eta for atoms Z = 1-36 using 50 diverse functionals
covering all major classes. Very few functionals describe both \chi and \eta
well. \eta benefits from error cancelation whereas \chi is marred by error
propagation from IP and EA; thus almost all standard GGA and hybrid functionals
display a plateau in the MAE at 0.2-0.3 eV for \eta. In contrast, variable
performance for \chi indicates problems in describing the chemical potential by
DFT. The accuracy and precision of a functional is far from linearly related,
yet for a universal functional we expect linearity. Popular functionals such as
B3LYP, PBE, and revPBE, perform poorly for both properties. Density sensitivity
calculations indicate large density-derived errors as occupation of degenerate
p- and d-orbitals causes "non-universality" and large dependency on exact
exchange. Thus, we argue that performance for \chi for the same systems is a
hallmark of universality by probing dE/dN. With this metric, B98, B97-1,
PW6B95D3, APFD are the most "universal" tested functionals. B98 and B97-1 are
accurate for very diverse metal-ligand bonds, supporting that a balanced
description of dE/dN and dE2/dN2, via \chi and \eta, is probably a first simple
probe of universality
Two-Loop Beta Functions Without Feynman Diagrams
Starting from a consistency requirement between T-duality symmetry and
renormalization group flows, the two-loop metric beta function is found for a
d=2 bosonic sigma model on a generic, torsionless background. The result is
obtained without Feynman diagram calculations, and represents further evidence
that duality symmetry severely constrains renormalization flows.Comment: 4 pp., REVTeX. Added discussion on scheme (in)dependence; final
version to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
High accuracy short-term PWV operational forecast at the VLT and perspectives for sky background forecast
In this paper we present the first results ever obtained by applying the
autoregressive (AR) technique to the precipitable water vapour (PWV). The study
is performed at the Very Large Telescope. The AR technique has been recently
proposed to provide forecasts of atmospheric and astroclimatic parameters at
short time scales (up to a few hours) by achieving much better performances
with respect to the 'standard forecasts' provided early afternoon for the
coming night. The AR method uses the real-time measurements of the parameter of
interest to improve the forecasts performed with atmospherical models. We used
here measurements provided by LHATPRO, a radiometer measuring continuously the
PWV at the VLT. When comparing the AR forecast at 1h to the standard forecast,
we observe a gain factor of 8 (i.e. 800 per cent) in terms of
forecast accuracy. In the PWV 1 mm range, which is extremely critical
for infrared astronomical applications, the RMSE of the predictions is of the
order of just a few hundredth of millimetres (0.04 mm). We proved therefore
that the AR technique provides an important benefit to VLT science operations
for all the instruments sensitive to the PWV. Besides, we show how such an
ability in predicting the PWV can be useful also to predict the sky background
in the infrared range (extremely appealing for METIS). We quantify such an
ability by applying this method to the NEAR project (New Earth in the Alpha Cen
region) supported by ESO and Breakthrough Initiatives
Excitation and coherent control of spin qudit modes with sub-MHz spectral resolution
Quantum bit or qubit is a two-level system, which builds the foundation for
quantum computation, simulation, communication and sensing. Quantum states of
higher dimension, i.e., qutrits (D = 3) and especially qudits (D = 4 or
higher), offer significant advantages. Particularly, they can provide
noise-resistant quantum cryptography, simplify quantum logic and improve
quantum metrology. Flying and solid-state qudits have been implemented on the
basis of photonic chips and superconducting circuits, respectively. However,
there is still a lack of room-temperature qudits with long coherence time and
high spectral resolution. The silicon vacancy centers in silicon carbide (SiC)
with spin S = 3/2 are quite promising in this respect, but until now they were
treated as a canonical qubit system. Here, we apply a two-frequency protocol to
excite and image multiple qudit modes in a SiC spin ensemble under ambient
conditions. Strikingly, their spectral width is about one order of magnitude
narrower than the inhomogeneous broadening of the corresponding spin resonance.
By applying Ramsey interferometry to these spin qudits, we achieve a spectral
selectivity of 600 kHz and a spectral resolution of 30 kHz. As a practical
consequence, we demonstrate absolute DC magnetometry insensitive to thermal
noise and strain fluctuations
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