32,667 research outputs found
Computer aided processing using laser measurements
The challenge exists of processing the STS and its cargo through KSC facilities in the most timely and cost effective manner possible. To do this a 3-D computer graphics data base was established into which was entered the STS, payloads, and KSC facilities. The facility drawing data are enhanced by laser theodolite measurements into an as-built configuration. Elements of the data base were combined to study orbiter/facility interfaces payload/facility access problems and design/arrangement of various GSE to support processing requirements. With timely analysis/design utilizing the 3-D computer graphics system, costly delays can be avoided. Better methodology can be analyzed to determine procedures for cost avoidance
Versatile Control System for Automated Single-Molecule Optical Tweezers Investigations
We present a versatile control system to automate single-molecule biophysics experiments. This method combines low-level controls into various functional, user-configurable modules, which can be scripted in a domain-specific instruction language. The ease with which the high-level parameters can be changed accelerates the development of a durable experiment for the perishable single-molecule samples. Once the experimental parameters are tuned, the control system can be used to repeatedly manipulate other single molecules in the same way, which is necessary to accumulate the statistics needed to report results from single-molecule studies. This system has been implemented for an optical tweezers instrument for single-molecule manipulations, with real-time point-by-point feedback at a loop rate of 10-20 kHz
Hypersonic airframe structures: Technology needs and flight test requirements
Hypersonic vehicles, that may be produced by the year 2000, were identified. Candidate thermal/structural concepts that merit consideration for these vehicles were described. The current status of analytical methods, materials, manufacturing techniques, and conceptual developments pertaining to these concepts were reviewed. Guidelines establishing meaningful technology goals were defined and twenty-eight specific technology needs were identified. The extent to which these technology needs can be satisfied, using existing capabilities and facilities without the benefit of a hypersonic research aircraft, was assessed. The role that a research aircraft can fill in advancing this technology was discussed and a flight test program was outlined. Research aircraft thermal/structural design philosophy was also discussed. Programs, integrating technology advancements with the projected vehicle needs, were presented. Program options were provided to reflect various scheduling and cost possibilities
Baryon number and strangeness: signals of a deconfined antecedent
The correlation between baryon number and strangeness is used to discern the
nature of the deconfined matter produced at vanishing chemical potential in
high-energy nuclear collisions at the BNL RHIC. Comparisons of results of
various phenomenological models with correlations extracted from lattice QCD
calculations suggest that a quasi-particle picture applies. At finite baryon
densities, such as those encountered at the CERN SPS, it is demonstrated that
the presence of a first-order phase transition and the accompanying development
of spinodal decomposition would significantly enhance the number of strangeness
carriers and the associated fluctuations.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, latex, to appear in the proceedings of the
Workshop on Correlations and Fluctuations in Relativistic Nuclear collisions,
(MIT, April 21-23,2005
Highlights of the Beam Energy Scan from STAR
The first part of the beam energy scan (BES) program at RHIC was successfully
completed in the years 2010 and 2011. First STAR results from particle yield
measurements are in good agreement with previously published data from SPS and
AGS experiments whereas other results like azimuthal HBT and
event-by-event fluctuations differ at some energies. In addition, new
observations like the centrality dependence of chemical freeze-out parameters
( and ) or the smoothly increasing difference with
decreasing energy in the elliptic flow between particles and
corresponding anti-particles, are discussed.Comment: CPOD 2011 proceedings, 5 pages, 4 figure
Influence of firing mechanisms on gain modulation
We studied the impact of a dynamical threshold on the f-I curve-the
relationship between the input and the firing rate of a neuron-in the presence
of background synaptic inputs. First, we found that, while the leaky
integrate-and-fire model cannot reproduce the f-I curve of a cortical neuron,
the leaky integrate-and-fire model with dynamical threshold can reproduce it
very well. Second, we found that the dynamical threshold modulates the onset
and the asymptotic behavior of the f-I curve. These results suggest that a
cortical neuron has an adaptation mechanism and that the dynamical threshold
has some significance for the computational properties of a neuron.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, conference proceeding
Thermal Hadron Production in High Energy Heavy Ion Collisions
We provide a method to test if hadrons produced in high energy heavy ion
collisions were emitted at freeze-out from an equilibrium hadron gas. Our
considerations are based on an ideal gas at fixed temperature , baryon
number density , and vanishing total strangeness. The constituents of this
gas are all hadron resonances up to a mass of 2 GeV; they are taken to decay
according to the experimentally observed branching ratios. The ratios of the
various resulting hadron production rates are tabulated as functions of
and . These tables can be used for the equilibration analysis of any heavy
ion data; we illustrate this for some specific cases.Comment: 12 pages (not included :13 figures + tables) report CERN-TH 6523/92
and Bielefeld preprint BI-TP 92/0
Renormalization of the electron-phonon coupling in the one-band Hubbard model
We investigate the effect of electronic correlations on the coupling of
electrons to Holstein phonons in the one-band Hubbard model. We calculate the
static electron-phonon vertex within linear response of Kotliar-Ruckenstein
slave-bosons in the paramagnetic saddle-point approximation. Within this
approach the on-site Coulomb interaction U strongly suppresses the coupling to
Holstein phonons at low temperatures. Moreover the vertex function does not
show particularly strong forward scattering. Going to larger temperatures
kT\sim t we find that after an initial decrease with U, the electron-phonon
coupling starts to increase with U, confirming a recent result of Cerruti,
Cappelluti, and Pietronero. We show that this behavior is related to an unusual
reentrant behavior from a phase separated to a paramagnetic state upon
decreasing the temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
On the temperature dependence of correlation functions in the space like direction in hot QCD
We study the temperature dependence of quark antiquark correlations in the
space like direction. In particular, we predict the temperature dependence of
space like Bethe-Salpeter amplitudes using recent Lattice gauge data for the
space like string potential. We also investigate the effect of the space like
string potential on the screening mass and discuss possible corrections which
may arise when working with point sources.Comment: 15 pages 8 figures (not included, will be sent on request),
(SUNY-NTG-94-3
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