15,099 research outputs found
Impact damage of composite plates
A simple model to study low velocity transverse impact of thin plates made of fiber-reinforced composite material, in particular T300/5208 graphite-epoxy was discussed. This model predicts the coefficient of restitution, which is a measure of the energy absorbed by the target during an impact event. The model is constructed on the assumption that the plate is inextensible in the fiber direction and that the material is incompressible in the z-direction. Such a plate essentially deforms by shear, hence this model neglects bending deformations of the plate. The coefficient of restitution is predicted to increase with large interlaminar shear strength and low transverse shear modulus of the laminate. Predictions are compared with the test results of impacted circular and rectangular clamped plates. Experimentally measured values of the coefficient of restitution are found to agree with the predicted values within a reasonable error
Approaching multichannel Kondo physics using correlated bosons: Quantum phases and how to realize them
We discuss how multichannel Kondo physics can arise in the setting of a
localized level coupled to several bosonic Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid leads. We
propose one physical realization involving ultracold bosonic atoms coupled to
an atomic quantum dot, and a second, based on superconducting nanowires coupled
to a Cooper-pair box. The corresponding zero-temperature phase diagram is
determined via an interplay between Kondo-type phenomena arising from the dot
and the consequences of direct inter-lead hopping, which can suppress the Kondo
effect. We demonstrate that the multichannel Kondo state is stable over a wide
range of parameters. We establish the existence of two nontrivial phase
transitions, involving a competition between Kondo screening at the dot and
strong correlations either within or between the leads (which respectively
promote local number- and phase-pinning). These transitions coalesce at a
self-dual multicritical point.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Standard Coupling Unification in SO(10), Hybrid Seesaw Neutrino Mass and Leptogenesis, Dark Matter, and Proton Lifetime Predictions
We discuss gauge coupling unification of the SM descending directly from
SO(10) while providing solutions to the three outstanding problems: neutrino
masses, dark matter, and the baryon asymmetry of the universe. Conservation of
matter parity as gauged discrete symmetry in the model calls for high-scale
spontaneous symmetry breaking through Higgs representation. This
naturally leads to the hybrid seesaw formula for neutrino masses mediated by
heavy scalar triplet and right-handed neutrinos. The seesaw formula predicts
two distinct patterns of RH masses, one hierarchical and another not so
hierarchical (or compact) when fitted with the neutrino oscillation data.
Predictions of the baryon asymmetry via leptogenesis are investigated through
the decays of both the patterns of RH masses. A complete flavor analysis
has been carried out to compute CP-asymmetries and solutions to Boltzmann
equations have been utilized to predict the baryon asymmetry. The additional
contribution to vertex correction mediated by the heavy left-handed triplet
scalar is noted to contribute as dominantly as other Feynman diagrams. We have
found successful predictions of the baryon asymmetry for both the patterns of
RH masses. The triplet fermionic dark matter at the TeV scale carrying
even matter parity is naturally embedded into the non-standard fermionic
representation of SO(10). In addition to the triplet scalar and the
triplet fermion, the model needs a nonstandard color octet fermion of mass
GeV to achieve precision gauge coupling unification. Threshold
corrections due to superheavy components of and other representations
are estimated and found to be substantial. It is noted that the proton life
time predicted by the model is accessible to the ongoing and planned
experiments over a wide range of parameter space.Comment: 58 pages PDFLATEX, 19 Figures, Revised as suggested by JHEP Revie
Transport through constricted quantum Hall edge systems: beyond the quantum point contact
Motivated by surprises in recent experimental findings, we study transport in
a model of a quantum Hall edge system with a gate-voltage controlled
constriction. A finite backscattered current at finite edge-bias is explained
from a Landauer-Buttiker analysis as arising from the splitting of edge current
caused by the difference in the filling fractions of the bulk () and
constriction () quantum Hall fluid regions. We develop a hydrodynamic
theory for bosonic edge modes inspired by this model. The constriction region
splits the incident long-wavelength chiral edge density-wave excitations among
the transmitting and reflecting edge states encircling it. The competition
between two interedge tunneling processes taking place inside the constriction,
related by a quasiparticle-quasihole (qp-qh) symmetry, is accounted for by
computing the boundary theories of the system. This competition is found to
determine the strong coupling configuration of the system. A separatrix of
qp-qh symmetric gapless critical states is found to lie between the relevant RG
flows to a metallic and an insulating configuration of the constriction system.
This constitutes an interesting generalisation of the Kane-Fisher quantum
impurity model. The features of the RG phase diagram are also confirmed by
computing various correlators and chiral linear conductances of the system. In
this way, our results find excellent agreement with many recent puzzling
experimental results for the cases of . We also discuss and
make predictions for the case of a constriction system with .Comment: 18 pages, 9 figure
Faster Algorithms for Weighted Recursive State Machines
Pushdown systems (PDSs) and recursive state machines (RSMs), which are
linearly equivalent, are standard models for interprocedural analysis. Yet RSMs
are more convenient as they (a) explicitly model function calls and returns,
and (b) specify many natural parameters for algorithmic analysis, e.g., the
number of entries and exits. We consider a general framework where RSM
transitions are labeled from a semiring and path properties are algebraic with
semiring operations, which can model, e.g., interprocedural reachability and
dataflow analysis problems.
Our main contributions are new algorithms for several fundamental problems.
As compared to a direct translation of RSMs to PDSs and the best-known existing
bounds of PDSs, our analysis algorithm improves the complexity for
finite-height semirings (that subsumes reachability and standard dataflow
properties). We further consider the problem of extracting distance values from
the representation structures computed by our algorithm, and give efficient
algorithms that distinguish the complexity of a one-time preprocessing from the
complexity of each individual query. Another advantage of our algorithm is that
our improvements carry over to the concurrent setting, where we improve the
best-known complexity for the context-bounded analysis of concurrent RSMs.
Finally, we provide a prototype implementation that gives a significant
speed-up on several benchmarks from the SLAM/SDV project
Neutrino masses, dominant neutrinoless double beta decay, and observable lepton flavor violation in left-right models and SO(10) grand unification with low mass bosons
While the detection of -boson at the Large Hadron Collider is likely to
resolve the mystery of parity violation in weak interaction, observation of
neutrinoless double beta decay () is expected to determine
whether neutrinos are Majorana fermions. In this work we consider a class of LR
models with TeV scale bosons but having parity restoration at high
scales where they originate from well known Pati-Salam symmetry or
grand unified theory minimally extended to accommodate inverse seesaw frame
work for neutrino masses. Most dominant new contribution to neutrinoless double
beta decay is noted to occur via mediation involving lighter
sterile neutrino exchanges. The next dominant contribution is found to be
through mediation involving both light and heavy right-handed
neutrino or sterile neutrino exchanges. The quark-lepton symmetric origin of
the computed value of the Dirac neutrino mass matrix is also found to play a
crucial role in determining these and other results on lepton flavor violating
branching ratios for , , and accessible to ongoing search
experiments. The underlying non-unitarity matrix is found to manifest in
substantial CP-violating effects even when the leptonic Dirac phase
. Finally we explore a possible origin of
the model in non-supersymmetric SO(10) grand unified theory where, in addition
to low mass and bosons accessible to Large Hadron Collider, the
model is found to predict observable neutron-antineutron oscillation and
lepto-quark gauge boson mediated rare kaon decay with \mbox{Br} \left(K_{\rm
L} \rightarrow \mu\, \bar{e}\right) \simeq \left(10^{-9}- 10^{-11} \right).Comment: 46 pages latex, 13 figures, 11 Tables, JHEP version accepted for
publicatio
Restoration of SOC pools under no-till systems in subtropical and tropical regions of Brazil
- …
