1,695 research outputs found
Closed loop operation eliminates need for auxiliary gas in high pressure pumping station
Closed loop system for a liquid nitrogen high pressure pump feeds back gaseous nitrogen generated by heat leak into the reservoir to maintain the pressure in the storage tank. This safer, more efficient system eliminates the need for auxiliary gas to maintain the tank pressure and can be used on relatively high cryogenic pumping systems
Electrostatic interactions between discrete helices of charge
We analytically examine the pair interaction for parallel, discrete helices
of charge. Symmetry arguments allow for the energy to be decomposed into a sum
of terms, each of which has an intuitive geometric interpretation. Truncated
Fourier expansions for these terms allow for accurate modeling of both the
axial and azimuthal terms in the interaction energy and these expressions are
shown to be insensitive to the form of the interaction. The energy is evaluated
numerically through application of an Ewald-like summation technique for the
particular case of unscreened Coulomb interactions between the charges of the
two helices. The mode structures and electrostatic energies of flexible helices
are also studied. Consequences of the resulting energy expressions are
considered for both F-actin and A-DNA aggregates
Approaches to Three-Dimensional Transformation Optical Media Using Quasi-Conformal Coordinate Transformations
We introduce an approach to the design of three-dimensional transformation
optical (TO) media based on a generalized quasi-conformal mapping approach. The
generalized quasi-conformal TO (QCTO) approach enables the design of media that
can, in principle, be broadband and low-loss, while controlling the propagation
of waves with arbitrary angles of incidence and polarization. We illustrate the
method in the design of a three-dimensional "carpet" ground plane cloak and of
a flattened Luneburg lens. Ray-trace studies provide a confirmation of the
performance of the QCTO media, while also revealing the limited performance of
index-only versions of these devices
Arithmetic Notation…now in 3D!
When people reason formally, they often make use of special notations—algebra and arithmetic are familiar examples. These notations are often treated as mere shorthand—a concise way of referring to meaningful mathematical concepts. Other authors have argued that people treat notations as pictures—literal diagrams of an imagined set of objects (Dörfler, 2003; Landy Goldstone, 2009). If notations depict objects that exist in space, then it makes sense to wonder how they are arranged not just in the two visible dimensions, but in depth. In four experiments, we find a consistent pattern: properties that increase mathematical precedence also tend to make objects appear closer in space. This alignment of formal pressures and informal pressures suggests that perceived depth may play a role in supporting computational reasoning processes. Although our primary focus is documenting the existence of depth illusions in notations, we also evaluate several sources of information that might guide depth judgments: availability of an object for computational actions, formal syntactic structure, relative symbol salience and voluntary attention shifts. We consider relationships between these nonexclusive possible sources of information in guiding how people judge depth in mathematics
Isotropic-medium three-dimensional cloaks for acoustic and electromagnetic waves
We propose a generalization of the two-dimensional eikonal-limit cloak
derived from a conformal transformation to three dimensions. The proposed cloak
is a spherical shell composed of only isotropic media; it operates in the
transmission mode and requires no mirror or ground plane. Unlike the well-known
omnidirectional spherical cloaks, it may reduce visibility of an arbitrary
object only for a very limited range of observation angles. In the
short-wavelength limit, this cloaking structure restores not only the
trajectories of incident rays, but also their phase, which is a necessary
ingredient to complete invisibility. Both scalar-wave (acoustic) and transverse
vector-wave (electromagnetic) versions are presented.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figure
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