7,328 research outputs found
Pre-design study for a modern four-bladed rotor for the Rotor System Research Aircraft (RSRA)
Various candidate rotor systems were compared in an effort to select a modern four-bladed rotor for the RSRA. The YAH-64 rotor system was chosen as the candidate rotor system for further development for the RSRA. The process used to select the rotor system, studies conducted to mate the rotor with the RSRA and provide parametric variability, and the development plan which would be used to implement these studies are presented. Drawings are included
FOCIS: A forest classification and inventory system using LANDSAT and digital terrain data
Accurate, cost-effective stratification of forest vegetation and timber inventory is the primary goal of a Forest Classification and Inventory System (FOCIS). Conventional timber stratification using photointerpretation can be time-consuming, costly, and inconsistent from analyst to analyst. FOCIS was designed to overcome these problems by using machine processing techniques to extract and process tonal, textural, and terrain information from registered LANDSAT multispectral and digital terrain data. Comparison of samples from timber strata identified by conventional procedures showed that both have about the same potential to reduce the variance of timber volume estimates over simple random sampling
A spin-dependent local moment approach to the Anderson impurity model
We present an extension of the local moment approach to the Anderson impurity
model with spin-dependent hybridization. By employing the two-self-energy
description, as originally proposed by Logan and co-workers, we applied the
symmetry restoration condition for the case with spin-dependent hybridization.
Self-consistent ground states were determined through variational minimization
of the ground state energy. The results obtained with our spin-dependent local
moment approach applied to a quantum dot system coupled to ferromagnetic leads
are in good agreement with those obtained from previous work using numerical
renormalization group calculations
Evaluating Primary Blast Effects In Vitro
Exposure to blast events can cause severe trauma to vital organs such as the lungs, ears, and brain. Understanding the mechanisms behind such blast-induced injuries is of great importance considering the recent trend towards the use of explosives in modern warfare and terrorist related incidents. To fully understand blast-induced injury, we must first be able to replicate such blast events in a controlled environment using a reproducible method. In this technique using shock tube equipment, shock waves at a range of pressures can be propagated over live cells grown in 2D, and markers of cell viability can be immediately analyzed using a redox indicator assay and the fluorescent imaging of live and dead cells. This method demonstrated that increasing the peak blast overpressure to 127 kPa can stimulate a significant drop in cell viability when compared to untreated controls. Test samples are not limited to adherent cells, but can include cell suspensions, whole-body and tissue samples, through minor modifications to the shock tube setup. Replicating the exact conditions that tissues and cells experience when exposed to a genuine blast event is difficult. Techniques such as the one presented in this article can help to define damage thresholds and identify the transcriptional and epigenetic changes within cells that arise from shock wave exposure
Dynamics of capacitively coupled double quantum dots
We consider a double dot system of equivalent, capacitively coupled
semiconducting quantum dots, each coupled to its own lead, in a regime where
there are two electrons on the double dot. Employing the numerical
renormalization group, we focus here on single-particle dynamics and the
zero-bias conductance, considering in particular the rich range of behaviour
arising as the interdot coupling is progressively increased through the strong
coupling (SC) phase, from the spin-Kondo regime, across the SU(4) point to the
charge-Kondo regime; and then towards and through the quantum phase transition
to a charge-ordered (CO) phase. We first consider the two-self-energy
description required to describe the broken symmetry CO phase, and implications
thereof for the non-Fermi liquid nature of this phase. Numerical results for
single-particle dynamics on all frequency scales are then considered, with
particular emphasis on universality and scaling of low-energy dynamics
throughout the SC phase. The role of symmetry breaking perturbations is also
briefly discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
Finite temperature dynamics of the Anderson model
The recently introduced local moment approach (LMA) is extended to encompass
single-particle dynamics and transport properties of the Anderson impurity
model at finite-temperature, T. While applicable to arbitrary interaction
strengths, primary emphasis is given to the strongly correlated Kondo regime
(characterized by the T=0 Kondo scale ). In particular the
resultant universal scaling behaviour of the single-particle spectrum
D(\omega; T) \equiv F(\frac{\w}{\omega_{\rm K}}; \frac{T}{\omega_{\rm K}})
within the LMA is obtained in closed form; leading to an analytical description
of the thermal destruction of the Kondo resonance on all energy scales.
Transport properties follow directly from a knowledge of . The -dependence of the resulting resistivity , which is
found to agree rather well with numerical renormalization group calculations,
is shown to be asymptotically exact at high temperatures; to concur well with
the Hamann approximation for the s-d model down to ,
and to cross over smoothly to the Fermi liquid form in the low-temperature limit. The underlying
approach, while naturally approximate, is moreover applicable to a broad range
of quantum impurity and related models
Single-particle dynamics of the Anderson model: a local moment approach
A non-perturbative local moment approach to single-particle dynamics of the
general asymmetric Anderson impurity model is developed. The approach
encompasses all energy scales and interaction strengths. It captures thereby
strong coupling Kondo behaviour, including the resultant universal scaling
behaviour of the single-particle spectrum; as well as the mixed valent and
essentially perturbative empty orbital regimes. The underlying approach is
physically transparent and innately simple, and as such is capable of practical
extension to lattice-based models within the framework of dynamical mean-field
theory.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figure
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