25,357 research outputs found
Inexactness of the Hydro-Thermal Coordination Semidefinite Relaxation
Hydro-thermal coordination is the problem of determining the optimal economic
dispatch of hydro and thermal power plants over time. The physics of
hydroelectricity generation is commonly simplified in the literature to account
for its fundamentally nonlinear nature. Advances in convex relaxation theory
have allowed the advent of Shor's semidefinite programming (SDP) relaxations of
quadratic models of the problem. This paper shows how a recently published SDP
relaxation is only exact if a very strict condition regarding turbine
efficiency is observed, failing otherwise. It further proposes the use of a set
of convex envelopes as a strategy to successfully obtain a stricter lower bound
of the optimal solution. This strategy is combined with a standard iterative
convex-concave procedure to recover a stationary point of the original
non-convex problem.Comment: Submitted to IEEE PES General Meeting 201
Probing the gluon density of the proton in the exclusive photoproduction of vector mesons at the LHC: A phenomenological analysis
The current uncertainty on the gluon density extracted from the global parton
analysis is large in the kinematical range of small values of the Bjorken -
variable and low values of the hard scale . An alternative to reduces this
uncertainty is the analysis of the exclusive vector meson photoproduction in
photon - hadron and hadron - hadron collisions. This process offers a unique
opportunity to constrain the gluon density of the proton, since its cross
section is proportional to the gluon density squared. In this paper we consider
current parametrizations for the gluon distribution and estimate the exclusive
vector meson photoproduction cross section at HERA and LHC using the leading
logarithmic formalism. We perform a fit of the normalization of the
cross section and the value of the hard scale for the process and demonstrate
that the current LHCb experimental data are better described by models that
assume a slow increasing of the gluon distribution at small - and low
.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 1 table. Version published in European Physical
Journal
The influence of the Al stabilizer layer thickness on the normal zone propagation velocity in high current superconductors
The stability of high-current superconductors is challenging in the design of
superconducting magnets. When the stability requirements are fulfilled, the
protection against a quench must still be considered. A main factor in the
design of quench protection systems is the resistance growth rate in the magnet
following a quench. The usual method for determining the resistance growth in
impregnated coils is to calculate the longitudinal velocity with which the
normal zone propagates in the conductor along the coil windings.
Here, we present a 2D numerical model for predicting the normal zone
propagation velocity in Al stabilized Rutherford NbTi cables with large cross
section. By solving two coupled differential equations under adiabatic
conditions, the model takes into account the thermal diffusion and the current
redistribution process following a quench. Both the temperature and magnetic
field dependencies of the superconductor and the metal cladding materials
properties are included. Unlike common normal zone propagation analyses, we
study the influence of the thickness of the cladding on the propagation
velocity for varying operating current and magnetic field.
To assist in the comprehension of the numerical results, we also introduce an
analytical formula for the longitudinal normal zone propagation. The analysis
distinguishes between low-current and high-current regimes of normal zone
propagation, depending on the ratio between the characteristic times of thermal
and magnetic diffusion. We show that above a certain thickness, the cladding
acts as a heat sink with a limited contribution to the acceleration of the
propagation velocity with respect to the cladding geometry. Both numerical and
analytical results show good agreement with experimental data.Comment: To be published in Physics Procedia (ICEC 25 conference special
issue
Radiation in 1.5 GeV and 12 GeV laser wakefield acceleration stages from PIC simulations
WOS:000287176200029 (Nº de Acesso Web of Science)A massivelly parallel post-processing radiation diagnostic for PIC codes is presented, which is then used to study the main features of the radiation from single LWFA stages (1.5 GeV and 12 GeV). This diagnostic also allows to examine radiation signatures associated with the physics of self-injection
Models as arrows: the role of dialgebras
A large number of computational processes can suitably be described as a combination of construction, i.e. algebraic, and observation, i.e. coalgebraic, structures. This paper suggests dialgebras as a generic model in which such structures can be combined and proposes a small calculus of dialgebras including a wrapping combinator and se- quential composition. To take good care of invariants in software design, the paper also discusses how dialgebras can be typed by predicates and proves that invariants are preserved through composition. This lays the foundations for a full calculus of invariant proof-obligation discharge for dialgebraic models.Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT
Refinement via interpretation
Traditional notions of refinement of algebraic specifications, based on signature morphisms, are often too rigid to capture a number of relevant transformations in the context of software design, reuse and adaptation. This paper proposes an alternative notion of specification refinement, building on recent work on logic interpretation. The concept is discussed, its theory partially developed, its use illustrated through a number of examples.This research was supported by FCT (the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology) under contracts PTDC/EIA/73252/2006, at Minho University, as well as PTDC/MAT/68723/2006 and the Unidade de Investigacao Matematica e Aplicaoes of University of Aveiro
Reasoning about complex requirements in a uniform setting
The paper formulates HEQ, an institution for hybrid equational logic to provide a uniform setting to express and reasoning about different sorts of properties of complex software. It is also shown how, through the definition of a suitable comorphism to FOL, this can be integrated in Hets, providing suitable tool support for teaching and re- search. The whole exercise was motivated by the need to unify, in a single undergraduate course in a Computer Science curriculum, the specification of data and behavioural constraints of reconfigurable systems.Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT
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