1,501 research outputs found
Approximation of the acoustic radiation impedance of a cylindrical pipe
Useful approximation formulae for radiation impedance are given for the
reflection coefficients of both infinitely flanged and unflanged rigid-walled
cylindrical ducts. The expressions guarantee that simple but necessary physical
and mathematical principles are met, like hermitian symmetry for the reflection
coefficient (identical behaviour of positive and negative frequencies) and
causality for the impulse response. A non causal but more accurate expression
is also proposed that is suitable for frequency-domain applications. The
formulae are obtained by analytical and numerical fitting to reference results
from Levine & Schwinger for the unflanged case and extracted from the radiation
impedance matrix given by Zorumski for the infinite flanged case.Comment: Journal of Sound and Vibration (2008) accepte
Combinatorial Conflicting Homozygosity (CCH) analysis enables the rapid identification of shared genomic regions in the presence of multiple phenocopies.
The ability to identify regions of the genome inherited with a dominant trait in one or more families has become increasingly valuable with the wide availability of high throughput sequencing technology. While a number of methods exist for mapping of homozygous variants segregating with recessive traits in consanguineous families, dominant conditions are conventionally analysed by linkage analysis, which requires computationally demanding haplotype reconstruction from marker genotypes and, even using advanced parallel approximation implementations, can take substantial time, particularly for large pedigrees. In addition, linkage analysis lacks sensitivity in the presence of phenocopies (individuals sharing the trait but not the genetic variant responsible). Combinatorial Conflicting Homozygosity (CCH) analysis uses high density biallelic single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) marker genotypes to identify genetic loci within which consecutive markers are not homozygous for different alleles. This allows inference of identical by descent (IBD) inheritance of a haplotype among a set or subsets of related or unrelated individuals
Density-Polarization Functional Theory of the response of a periodic insulating solid to an electric field.
The response of an infinite, periodic, insulating, solid to an
infinitesimally small electric field is investigated in the framework of
Density Functional Theory. We find that the applied perturbing potential is not
a unique functional of the periodic density change~: it depends also on the
change in the macroscopic {\em polarization}. Moreover, the dependence of the
exchange-correlation energy on polarization induces an exchange-correlation
electric field. These effects are exhibited for a model semiconductor. We also
show that the scissor-operator technique is an approximate way of bypassing
this polarization dependence.Comment: 11 pages, 1 Fig
Stellar Mass Black Hole Binaries as ULXs
Ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) with Lx > 10^{39} ergs/s have been
discovered in great numbers in external galaxies with ROSAT, Chandra, and XMM.
The central question regarding this important class of sources is whether they
represent an extension in the luminosity function of binary X-ray sources
containing neutron stars and stellar-mass black holes (BHs), or a new class of
objects, e.g., systems containing intermediate-mass black holes (100-1000
Msun). We have carried out a theoretical study to test whether a large fraction
of the ULXs, especially those in galaxies with recent star formation activity,
can be explained with binary systems containing stellar-mass black holes. To
this end, we have applied a unique set of binary evolution models for
black-hole X-ray binaries, coupled to a binary population synthesis code, to
model the ULXs observed in external galaxies. We find that for donor stars with
initial masses >10 Msun the mass transfer driven by the normal nuclear
evolution of the donor star is sufficient to potentially power most ULXs. This
is the case during core hydrogen burning and, to an even more pronounced
degree, while the donor star ascends the giant branch, though the latter phases
lasts only ~5% of the main sequence phase. We show that with only a modest
violation of the Eddington limit, e.g., a factor of ~10, both the numbers and
properties of the majority of the ULXs can be reproduced. One of our
conclusions is that if stellar-mass black-hole binaries account for a
significant fraction of ULXs in star-forming galaxies, then the rate of
formation of such systems is ~3 x 10^{-7} per year normalized to a
core-collapse supernova rate of 0.01 per year.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figure
Information-rich path planning under general constraints using Rapidly-exploring Random Trees
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 2010.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 99-104).This thesis introduces the Information-rich Rapidly-exploring Random Tree (IRRT), an extension of the RRT algorithm that embeds information collection as predicted using Fisher information matrices. The primary contribution of this trajectory generation algorithm is target-based information maximization in general (possibly heavily constrained) environments, with complex vehicle dynamic constraints and sensor limitations, including limited resolution and narrow field-of-view. Extensions of IRRT both for decentralized, multiagent missions and for information-rich planning with multimodal distributions are presented. IRRT is distinguished from previous solution strategies by its computational tractability and general constraint characterization. A progression of simulation results demonstrates that this implementation can generate complex target-tracking behaviors from a simple model of the trade-off between information gathering and goal arrival.by Daniel S. Levine.S.M
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