360 research outputs found
Measuring Sulfur Isotope Ratios from Solid Samples with the Sample Analysis at Mars Instrument and the Effects of Dead Time Corrections
The Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument suite comprises the largest science payload on the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) "Curiosity" rover. SAM will perform chemical and isotopic analysis of volatile compounds from atmospheric and solid samples to address questions pertaining to habitability and geochemical processes on Mars. Sulfur is a key element of interest in this regard, as sulfur compounds have been detected on the Martian surface by both in situ and remote sensing techniques. Their chemical and isotopic composition can belp constrain environmental conditions and mechanisms at the time of formation. A previous study examined the capability of the SAM quadrupole mass spectrometer (QMS) to determine sulfur isotope ratios of SO2 gas from a statistical perspective. Here we discuss the development of a method for determining sulfur isotope ratios with the QMS by sampling SO2 generated from heating of solid sulfate samples in SAM's pyrolysis oven. This analysis, which was performed with the SAM breadboard system, also required development of a novel treatment of the QMS dead time to accommodate the characteristics of an aging detector
Exact diagonalization of the S=1/2 Heisenberg antiferromagnet on finite bcc lattices to estimate properties on the infinite lattice
Here we generate finite bipartite body-centred cubic lattices up to 32
vertices. We have studied the spin one half Heisenberg antiferromagnet by
diagonalizing its Hamiltonian on each of the finite lattices and hence
computing its ground state properties. By extrapolation of these data we obtain
estimates of the T = 0 properties on the infinite bcc lattice. Our estimate of
the T = 0 energy agrees to five parts in ten thousand with third order spin
wave and series expansion method estimates, while our estimate of the staggered
magnetization agrees with the spin wave estimate to within a quarter of one
percent.Comment: 16 pages, LaTeX, 1 ps figure, to appear in J.Phys.
Spin-1/2 J1-J2 model on the body-centered cubic lattice
Using exact diagonalization (ED) and linear spin wave theory (LSWT) we study
the influence of frustration and quantum fluctuations on the magnetic ordering
in the ground state of the spin-1/2 J1-J2 Heisenberg antiferromagnet (J1-J2
model) on the body-centered cubic (bcc) lattice. Contrary to the J1-J2 model on
the square lattice, we find for the bcc lattice that frustration and quantum
fluctuations do not lead to a quantum disordered phase for strong frustration.
The results of both approaches (ED, LSWT) suggest a first order transition at
J2/J1 0.7 from the two-sublattice Neel phase at low J2 to a collinear
phase at large J2.Comment: 6.1 pages 7 figure
Accuracy and Stability of Computing High-Order Derivatives of Analytic Functions by Cauchy Integrals
High-order derivatives of analytic functions are expressible as Cauchy
integrals over circular contours, which can very effectively be approximated,
e.g., by trapezoidal sums. Whereas analytically each radius r up to the radius
of convergence is equal, numerical stability strongly depends on r. We give a
comprehensive study of this effect; in particular we show that there is a
unique radius that minimizes the loss of accuracy caused by round-off errors.
For large classes of functions, though not for all, this radius actually gives
about full accuracy; a remarkable fact that we explain by the theory of Hardy
spaces, by the Wiman-Valiron and Levin-Pfluger theory of entire functions, and
by the saddle-point method of asymptotic analysis. Many examples and
non-trivial applications are discussed in detail.Comment: Version 4 has some references and a discussion of other quadrature
rules added; 57 pages, 7 figures, 6 tables; to appear in Found. Comput. Mat
Review of Inverse Laplace Transform Algorithms for Laplace-Space Numerical Approaches
A boundary element method (BEM) simulation is used to compare the efficiency
of numerical inverse Laplace transform strategies, considering general
requirements of Laplace-space numerical approaches. The two-dimensional BEM
solution is used to solve the Laplace-transformed diffusion equation, producing
a time-domain solution after a numerical Laplace transform inversion. Motivated
by the needs of numerical methods posed in Laplace-transformed space, we
compare five inverse Laplace transform algorithms and discuss implementation
techniques to minimize the number of Laplace-space function evaluations. We
investigate the ability to calculate a sequence of time domain values using the
fewest Laplace-space model evaluations. We find Fourier-series based inversion
algorithms work for common time behaviors, are the most robust with respect to
free parameters, and allow for straightforward image function evaluation re-use
across at least a log cycle of time
- …