1,369 research outputs found
Force measurement on coupled flapping flags in uniform flow
An experimental study on the coupled flapping of two identical flags arranged in parallel, tandem, and staggered positions in uniform flow was conducted in a wind tunnel. The dynamic characteristics of each flag were measured using an in-house designed balance and the flapping modes were analyzed through a high-speed video recording technique and a "Spatio-Temporal Evolution" software. For the side-by-side arrangement, the dependences of the kinematic and dynamic parameters on the flow speed and on the mutual distance were observed. The results indicated that the coupling motion and dynamics of two parallel flags in uniform flow were mainly affected by their mutual position. Significant drag reductions were observed when the flags flapped in the in-phase mode for a relatively small separation. For two flags in tandem arrangement, both the upstream and downstream flags experienced a drag reduction compared to the scenario of a single flag in the same flow. Especially, for relatively large separation the upstream flag had a smaller drag coefficient than that of the downstream one. For very small separation, the drag coefficient of the upstream flag was larger than that of the downstream one. Finally, for two flags arranged in a staggered configuration, an anomalous drag distribution was found. This work provides valuable experimental data and casts insight into the coupling mechanism of multiple flexible structures in an air flow
Predicting Neutron Production from Cosmic-ray Muons
Fast neutrons from cosmic-ray muons are an important background to
underground low energy experiments. The estimate of such background is often
hampered by the difficulty of measuring and calculating neutron production with
sufficient accuracy. Indeed substantial disagreement exists between the
different analytical calculations performed so far, while data reported by
different experiments is not always consistent. We discuss a new unified
approach to estimate the neutron yield, the energy spectrum, the multiplicity
and the angular distribution from cosmic muons using the Monte Carlo simulation
package FLUKA and show that it gives a good description of most of the existing
measurements once the appropriate corrections have been applied.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Possible Existence of an Extraordinary Phase in the Driven Lattice Gas
We report recent simulation results which might indicate the existence of a
new low-temperature "phase" in an Ising lattice gas, driven into a
non-equilibrium steady state by an external field. It appears that this
"phase", characterized by multiple-strip configurations, is selected when
square systems are used to approach the thermodynamic limit. We propose a
quantitative criterion for the existence of such a "phase". If confirmed, its
observation may resolve a long-standing controversy over the critical
properties of the driven Ising lattice gas.Comment: 10 pages; 4 figure
Simulation of changes in some soil properties as affected by water level fluctuation in an inland salt marsh
AbstractAn 87-day simulation experiment was conducted to test the effects of water level fluctuation on soil properties of an inland salt marsh. The simulated wetland was periodically flooded for 15 days with consistent water levels of 10cm above the wetland surface soil and then drained to 0cm for 9 days. Soil samples were collected from the 0 to 30cm depth with 10cm intervals at days of 0, 39 and 72 after a 15-day pre-incubation. Total nitrogen (TN), total phosphorus (TP), soil organic matter (SOM) and pH were determined during the experimental period. Results showed that TN content was much higher in surface soils than other soil layers during the whole incubation period, especially at the second inundation period (54 days), and TN greatly increased in the soil layers above 20cm with increasing incubation time. However, the SOM content in each soil layer showed a consistent tendency of “decreasing followed increasing” with increasing incubation time. Compared to other soil layers, SOM content in surface soils were generally higher during the simulation periods. TP content in upper soils (0-20cm) consistently increased over the course of incubation time, while those in deeper soils (20-30cm) decreased. Soil pH values showed similar changing tendencies to SOM content over the incubation experiment, while they generally increased with depth
New early Eocene tapiromorph perissodactyls from the Ghazij Formation of Pakistan, with implications for mammalian biochronology in Asia
Early Eocene mammals from Indo-Pakistan have only recently come under study. Here we describe the first tapiromorph perissodactyls from the subcontinent. Gandheralophus minor n. gen. and n. sp. and G. robustus n. sp. are two species of Isectolophidae differing in size and in reduction of the anterior dentition. Gandheralophus is probably derived from a primitive isectolophid such as Orientolophus hengdongensis from the earliest Eocene of China, and may be part of a South Asian lineage that also contains Karagalax from the middle Eocene of Pakistan. Two specimens are referred to a new, unnamed species of Lophialetidae. Finally, a highly diagnostic M3 and a molar fragment are described as the new eomoropid chalicothere Litolophus ghazijensis sp. nov. The perissodactyls described here, in contrast to most other mammalian groups published from the early Eocene of Indo-Pakistan, are most closely related to forms known from East and Central Asia. Tapiromorpha are diverse and biochronologically important in the Eocene there and our results allow the first biochronological correlation between early Eocene mammal faunas in Indo-Pakistan and the rest of Asia. We suggest that the upper Ghazij Formation of Pakistan is best correlated with the middle or late part of the Bumbanian Asian Land-Mammal Age, while the Kuldana and Subathu Formations of Pakistan and India are best correlated with the Arshantan Asian Land-Mammal Age
Electromagnetically induced transparency in multi-level cascade scheme of cold rubidium atoms
We report an experimental investigation of electromagnetically induced
transparency in a multi-level cascade system of cold atoms. The absorption
spectral profiles of the probe light in the multi-level cascade system were
observed in cold Rb-85 atoms confined in a magneto-optical trap, and the
dependence of the spectral profile on the intensity of the coupling laser was
investigated. The experimental measurements agree with the theoretical
calculations based on the density matrix equations of the rubidium cascade
system.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
ADTH: Bounded Nodal Delay for Better Performance in Wireless Ad-hoc Networks
© 2018 Delay is an unavoidable factor that occurs within networks and may be exacerbated by the nature of wireless ad-hoc networks. Maintaining a manageable level of delay may be required to provide satisfactory performance for each of the nodes that form the network. The variability of IoT devices, topologies and network conditions demand that a standalone and scalable scheme be used. ADTH is first shown to accomplish this through simulations with the NS-2 network simulator. The scheme was then used with testbed implementation with Gumstix devices and real-time traffic provided by an STC Traffic Generator. These demonstrated its effectiveness in managing flows of delay sensitive traffic, in addition to delivering superior bandwidth utilisation than standard policies
D-wave superconductivity in doped Mott insulators
The effect of proximity to a Mott insulating phase on the charge transport
properties of a superconductor is determined. An action describing the low
energy physics is formulated and different scenarios for the approach to the
Mott phase are distinguished by different variation with doping of the
parameters in the action. A crucial issue is found to be the doping dependence
of the quasiparticle charge which is defined here and which controls the
temperature and field dependence of the electromagnetic response functions.
Presently available data on high-T superconductors are analysed. The
data, while neither complete nor entirely consistent, suggest that neither the
quasiparticle velocity nor the quasiparticle charge vanish as the Mott phase is
approached, in contradiction to the predictions of several widely studied
theories of lightly doped Mott insulators. Implications of the results for the
structure of vortices in high-T superconductors are determined. The
numerical coefficients in the field-dependent specific heat are given for
square and triangular vortex lattices.Comment: 12 pages. No figures. Submitted to JPCS (Proceedings of Chicago SNS
conference
Quasi-local Energy for Spherically Symmetric Spacetimes
We present two complementary approaches for determining the reference for the
covariant Hamiltonian boundary term quasi-local energy and test them on
spherically symmetric spacetimes. On the one hand, we isometrically match the
2-surface and extremize the energy. This can be done in two ways, which we call
programs I (without constraint) and II (with additional constraints). On the
other hand, we match the orthonormal 4-frames of the dynamic and the reference
spacetimes. Then, if we further specify the observer by requiring the reference
displacement to be the timelike Killing vector of the reference, the result is
the same as program I, and the energy can be positive, zero, or even negative.
If, instead, we require that the Lie derivatives of the two-area along the
displacement vector in both the dynamic and reference spacetimes to be the
same, the result is the same as program II, and it satisfies the usual
criteria: the energies are non-negative and vanish only for Minkowski (or
anti-de Sitter) spacetime.Comment: 16 pages, no figure
Spin-filtering and charge- and spin-switching effects in a quantum wire with periodically attached stubs
Spin-dependent electron transport in a periodically stubbed quantum wire in
the presence of Rashba spin-orbit interaction (SOI) is studied via the
nonequilibrium Green's function method combined with the Landauer-Buttiker
formalism. The coexistence of spin filtering, charge and spin switching are
found in the considered system. The mechanism of these transport properties is
revealed by analyzing the total charge density and spin-polarized density
distributions in the stubbed quantum wire. Furthermore, periodic spin-density
islands with high polarization are also found inside the stubs, owing to the
interaction between the charge density islands and the Rashba SOI-induced
effective magnetic field. The proposed nanostructure may be utilized to devise
an all-electrical multifunctional spintronic device.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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