1,000 research outputs found
Design and fabrication of a long-life Stirling cycle cooler for space application. Phase 3: Prototype model
A second-generation, Stirling-cycle cryocooler (cryogenic refrigerator) for space applications, with a cooling capacity of 5 watts at 65 K, was recently completed. The refrigerator, called the Prototype Model, was designed with a goal of 5 year life with no degradation in cooling performance. The free displacer and free piston of the refrigerator are driven directly by moving-magnet linear motors with the moving elements supported by active magnetic bearings. The use of clearance seals and the absence of outgassing material in the working volume of the refrigerator enable long-life operation with no deterioration in performance. Fiber-optic sensors detect the radial position of the shafts and provide a control signal for the magnetic bearings. The frequency, phase, stroke, and offset of the compressor and expander are controlled by signals from precision linear position sensors (LVDTs). The vibration generated by the compressor and expander is cancelled by an active counter balance which also uses a moving-magnet linear motor and magnetic bearings. The driving signal for the counter balance is derived from the compressor and expander position sensors which have wide bandwidth for suppression of harmonic vibrations. The efficiency of the three active members, which operate in a resonant mode, is enhanced by a magnetic spring in the expander and by gas springs in the compressor and counterbalance. The cooling was achieved with a total motor input power of 139 watts. The magnetic-bearing stiffness was significantly increased from the first-generation cooler to accommodate shuttle launch vibrations
Consistent Anisotropic Repulsions for Simple Molecules
We extract atom-atom potentials from the effective spherical potentials that
suc cessfully model Hugoniot experiments on molecular fluids, e.g., and
. In the case of the resulting potentials compare very well with the
atom-atom potentials used in studies of solid-state propertie s, while for
they are considerably softer at short distances. Ground state (T=0K) and
room temperatu re calculations performed with the new potential resolve
the previous discrepancy between experimental and theoretical results.Comment: RevTeX, 5 figure
Deep Emissions Reductions and Mainstreaming of Mitigation and Adaptation: Key Findings
Climate policy "mainstreaming", "proofing" and "integration" are concepts that are increasingly appearing in a range of EU policy discussions, including those concerning the 2014-2020 Multi-Annual Financial Framework (MFF). They reflect the view that all policy sectors need to play a part in both reducing emissions and increasing resilience to unavoidable climate impacts. Broadly defined, mainstreaming involves including climate considerations in policy processes, improving the consistency among policy objectives, and where necessary, giving priority to climate-related goals above others. Although often couched in technical language, profound political challenges, at multiple levels of governance, lie at the heart of the mainstreaming agenda. The RESPONSES project analysed how far adaptation and mitigation was being mainstreamed in EU policies, and assessed the potential opportunities and limits for the future
Geometric quantum gates in liquid-state NMR based on a cancellation of dynamical phases
A proposal for applying non-adiabatic geometric phases to quantum computing,
called the double-loop method [S.-L. Zhu and Z. D. Wang, Phys. Rev. A {\bf 67},
022319 (2003)], is demonstrated in a liquid state NMR quantum computer. Using a
spin echo technique, the original method is modified so that quantum gates are
implemented in a standard high-precision NMR system for chemical analysis. We
show that the dynamical phase is successfully eliminated and a one-qubit
quantum gate is realized, although the fidelity is not so high
NMR Techniques for Quantum Control and Computation
Fifty years of developments in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) have resulted
in an unrivaled degree of control of the dynamics of coupled two-level quantum
systems. This coherent control of nuclear spin dynamics has recently been taken
to a new level, motivated by the interest in quantum information processing.
NMR has been the workhorse for the experimental implementation of quantum
protocols, allowing exquisite control of systems up to seven qubits in size.
Here, we survey and summarize a broad variety of pulse control and tomographic
techniques which have been developed for and used in NMR quantum computation.
Many of these will be useful in other quantum systems now being considered for
implementation of quantum information processing tasks.Comment: 33 pages, accepted for publication in Rev. Mod. Phys., added
subsection on T_{1,\rho} (V.A.6) and on time-optimal pulse sequences
(III.A.6), redid some figures, made many small changes, expanded reference
A Study of Quantum Error Correction by Geometric Algebra and Liquid-State NMR Spectroscopy
Quantum error correcting codes enable the information contained in a quantum
state to be protected from decoherence due to external perturbations. Applied
to NMR, quantum coding does not alter normal relaxation, but rather converts
the state of a ``data'' spin into multiple quantum coherences involving
additional ancilla spins. These multiple quantum coherences relax at differing
rates, thus permitting the original state of the data to be approximately
reconstructed by mixing them together in an appropriate fashion. This paper
describes the operation of a simple, three-bit quantum code in the product
operator formalism, and uses geometric algebra methods to obtain the
error-corrected decay curve in the presence of arbitrary correlations in the
external random fields. These predictions are confirmed in both the totally
correlated and uncorrelated cases by liquid-state NMR experiments on
13C-labeled alanine, using gradient-diffusion methods to implement these
idealized decoherence models. Quantum error correction in weakly polarized
systems requires that the ancilla spins be prepared in a pseudo-pure state
relative to the data spin, which entails a loss of signal that exceeds any
potential gain through error correction. Nevertheless, this study shows that
quantum coding can be used to validate theoretical decoherence mechanisms, and
to provide detailed information on correlations in the underlying NMR
relaxation dynamics.Comment: 33 pages plus 6 figures, LaTeX article class with amsmath & graphicx
package
Saturation of a spin 1/2 particle by generalized Local control
We show how to apply a generalization of Local control design to the problem
of saturation of a spin 1/2 particle by magnetic fields in Nuclear Magnetic
Resonance. The generalization of local or Lyapunov control arises from the fact
that the derivative of the Lyapunov function does not depend explicitly on the
control field. The second derivative is used to determine the local control
field. We compare the efficiency of this approach with respect to the
time-optimal solution which has been recently derived using geometric methods.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, submitted to new journal of physics (2011
Adaptation in integrated assessment modeling: where do we stand?
Adaptation is an important element on the climate change policy agenda. Integrated assessment models, which are key tools to assess climate change policies, have begun to address adaptation, either by including it implicitly in damage cost estimates, or by making it an explicit control variable. We analyze how modelers have chosen to describe adaptation within an integrated framework, and suggest many ways they could improve the treatment of adaptation by considering more of its bottom-up characteristics. Until this happens, we suggest, models may be too optimistic about the net benefits adaptation can provide, and therefore may underestimate the amount of mitigation they judge to be socially optimal. Under some conditions, better modeling of adaptation costs and benefits could have important implications for defining mitigation targets. © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2009
A Seesaw Mechanism in the Higgs Sector
In this letter we revisit the seesaw Higgs mechanism. We show how a seesaw
mechanism in a two Higgs doublets model can trigger the electroweak symmetry
breaking if at least one of the eigenvalues of the squared mass matrix is
negative. We then consider two special cases of interest. In the decoupling
scenario, there is only one scalar degree of freedom in the low energy regime.
In the degenerate scenario, all five degrees of freedom are in the low energy
regime and will lead to observables effects at the LHC. Furthermore, in that
scenario, it is possible to impose a discrete symmetry between the doublets
that makes the extra neutral degrees of freedom stable. These are thus viable
dark matter candidates. We find an interesting relation between the electroweak
symmetry breaking mechanism and dark matter.Comment: 10 page
Z(2)-Singlino Dark Matter in a Portal-Like Extension of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model.
We propose a Z2-stabilized singlino () as a dark matter candidate in extended and R-parity violating versions of the supersymmetric standard model. interacts with visible matter via a heavy messenger field S, which results in a supersymmetric version of the Higgs portal interaction. The relic abundance of can account for cold dark matter if the messenger mass satisfies GeV. Our model can be implemented in many realistic supersymmetric models such as the next-to-minimal supersymmetric (SUSY) standard model and nearly minimal SUSY standard model
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