22,009 research outputs found
Correspondence between sound propagation in discrete and continuous random media with application to forest acoustics
Although sound propagation in a forest is important in several applications, there are currently no rigorous yet computationally tractable prediction methods. Due to the complexity of sound scattering in a forest, it is natural to formulate the problem stochastically. In this paper, it is demonstrated that the equations for the statistical moments of the sound field propagating in a forest have the same form as those for sound propagation in a turbulent atmosphere if the scattering properties of the two media are expressed in terms of the differential scattering and total cross sections. Using the existing theories for sound propagation in a turbulent atmosphere, this analogy enables the derivation of several results for predicting forest acoustics. In particular, the second-moment parabolic equation is formulated for the spatial correlation function of the sound field propagating above an impedance ground in a forest with micrometeorology. Effective numerical techniques for solving this equation have been developed in atmospheric acoustics. In another example, formulas are obtained that describe the effect of a forest on the interference between the direct and ground-reflected waves. The formulated correspondence between wave propagation in discrete and continuous random media can also be used in other fields of physics
Relics of Supersymmetry in Ordinary 1-flavor QCD: Hairpin Diagrams and Scalar-Pseudoscalar Degeneracy
The large- orientifold planar equivalence between SUSY
Yang-Mills theory and ordinary 1-flavor QCD suggests that low-energy
quark-gluon dynamics in QCD should be constrained by the supersymmetry of the
parent theory. One SUSY relic expected from orientifold equivalence is the
approximate degeneracy of the scalar and pseudoscalar mesons in 1-flavor QCD.
Here we study the role of the annihilation (hairpin) contributions
to the meson correlators. These annihilation terms induce mass shifts of
opposite sign in the scalar and pseudoscalar channels, making degeneracy
plausible. Calculations of valence and hairpin correlators in quenched lattice
QCD are consistent with approximate degeneracy, although the errors on the
scalar hairpin are large. We also study the role of annihilation in
the 1- and 2-flavor Nambu-Jona Lasinio model, where annihilation terms arise
from the chiral field determinant representing the axial U(1) anomaly.
Scalar-pseudoscalar degeneracy for the 1-flavor case reduces to a constraint on
the relative size of the anomalous and non-anomalous 4-fermion couplings.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figure
Usability evaluation of digital libraries: a tutorial
This one-day tutorial is an introduction to usability evaluation for Digital
Libraries. In particular, we will introduce Claims Analysis. This approach
focuses on the designers’ motivations and reasons for making particular
design decisions and examines the effect on the user’s interaction with
the system. The general approach, as presented by Carroll and
Rosson(1992), has been tailored specifically to the design of digital
libraries.
Digital libraries are notoriously difficult to design well in terms of their
eventual usability. In this tutorial, we will present an overview of
usability issues and techniques for digital libraries, and a more detailed
account of claims analysis, including two supporting techniques –
simple cognitive analysis based on Norman’s ‘action cycle’ and
Scenarios and personas. Through a graduated series of worked
examples, participants will get hands-on experience of applying this
approach to developing more usable digital libraries. This tutorial
assumes no prior knowledge of usability evaluation, and is aimed at all
those involved in the development and deployment of digital libraries
Molecular crystal global phase diagrams. II. Reference lattices
In the first part of this series [Keith et al. (2004). Cryst. Growth Des. 4, 1009-1012; Mettes et al. (2004). Acta Cryst. A60, 621-636], a method was developed for constructing global phase diagrams (GPDs) for molecular crystals in which crystal structure is presented as a function of intermolecular potential parameters. In that work, a face-centered-cubic center-of-mass lattice was arbitrarily adopted as a reference state. In part two of the series, experimental crystal structures composed of tetrahedral point group molecules are classified to determine what fraction of structures are amenable to inclusion in the GPDs and the number of reference lattices necessary to span the observed structures. It is found that 60% of crystal structures composed of molecules with T_d point-group symmetry are amenable and that eight reference lattices are sufficient to span the observed structures. Similar results are expected for other cubic point groups
Putting time into proof outlines
A logic for reasoning about timing of concurrent programs is presented. The logic is based on proof outlines and can handle maximal parallelism as well as resource-constrained execution environments. The correctness proof for a mutual exclusion protocol that uses execution timings in a subtle way illustrates the logic in action
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