30,865 research outputs found
An Accurate Method for Computing the Absorption of Solar Radiation by Water Vapor
The method is based upon molecular line parameters and makes use of a far wing scaling approximation and k distribution approach previously applied to the computation of the infrared cooling rate due to water vapor. Taking into account the wave number dependence of the incident solar flux, the solar heating rate is computed for the entire water vapor spectrum and for individual absorption bands. The accuracy of the method is tested against line by line calculations. The method introduces a maximum error of 0.06 C/day. The method has the additional advantage over previous methods in that it can be applied to any portion of the spectral region containing the water vapor bands. The integrated absorptances and line intensities computed from the molecular line parameters were compared with laboratory measurements. The comparison reveals that, among the three different sources, absorptance is the largest for the laboratory measurements
Computation of infrared cooling rates in the water vapor bands
A fast but accurate method for calculating the infrared radiative terms due to water vapor has been developed. It makes use of the far wing approximation to scale transmission along an inhomogeneous path to an equivalent homogeneous path. Rather than using standard conditions for scaling, the reference temperatures and pressures are chosen in this study to correspond to the regions where cooling is most significant. This greatly increased the accuracy of the new method. Compared to line by line calculations, the new method has errors up to 4% of the maximum cooling rate, while a commonly used method based upon the Goody band model (Rodgers and Walshaw, 1966) introduces errors up to 11%. The effect of temperature dependence of transmittance has also been evaluated; the cooling rate errors range up to 11% when the temperature dependence is ignored. In addition to being more accurate, the new method is much faster than those based upon the Goody band model
Behavior of the sonic boom shock wave near the sonic cutoff altitude
Behavior of sonic boom shock wave near sonic cutoff altitud
An efficient routine for infrared radiative transfer in a cloudy atmosphere
A FORTRAN program that calculates the atmospheric cooling rate and infrared fluxes for partly cloudy atmospheres is documented. The IR fluxes in the water bands and the 9.6 and 15 micron bands are calculated at 15 levels ranging from 1.39 mb to the surface. The program is generalized to accept any arbitrary atmospheric temperature and humidity profiles and clouds as input and return the cooling rate and fluxes as output. Sample calculations for various atmospheric profiles and cloud situations are demonstrated
Preparation of Dicke States in an Ion Chain
We have investigated theoretically and experimentally a method for preparing
Dicke states in trapped atomic ions. We consider a linear chain of ion
qubits that is prepared in a particular Fock state of motion, . The
phonons are removed by applying a laser pulse globally to the qubits, and
converting the motional excitation to flipped spins. The global nature of
this pulse ensures that the flipped spins are shared by all the target ions
in a state that is a close approximation to the Dicke state \D{N}{m}. We
calculate numerically the fidelity limits of the protocol and find small
deviations from the ideal state for and . We have demonstrated
the basic features of this protocol by preparing the state \D{2}{1} in two
Mg target ions trapped simultaneously with an Al
ancillary ion.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
A mean-removed variation of weighted universal vector quantization for image coding
Weighted universal vector quantization uses traditional codeword design techniques to design locally optimal multi-codebook systems. Application of this technique to a sequence of medical images produces a 10.3 dB improvement over standard full search vector quantization followed by entropy coding at the cost of increased complexity. In this proposed variation each codebook in the system is given a mean or 'prediction' value which is subtracted from all supervectors that map to the given codebook. The chosen codebook's codewords are then used to encode the resulting residuals. Application of the mean-removed system to the medical data set achieves up to 0.5 dB improvement at no rate expense
Dynamic aperture studies during collisions in the LHC
The dynamic aperture during collisions in the LHC is mainly determined by the beam-beam interactions and by multipole errors of the high gradient quadrupoles in the interaction regions. The computer code JJIP has been modified to accommodate the LHC lattice configuration and parameters and is employed in this study. Simulations over a range of machine parameters are carried out, and results of preliminary investigation are presented
Ising metamagnets in thin film geometry: equilibrium properties
Artificial antiferromagnets and synthetic metamagnets have attracted much
attention recently due to their potential for many different applications.
Under some simplifying assumptions these systems can be modeled by thin Ising
metamagnetic films. In this paper we study, using both the Wang/Landau scheme
and importance sampling Monte Carlo simulations, the equilibrium properties of
these films. On the one hand we discuss the microcanonical density of states
and its prominent features. On the other we analyze canonically various global
and layer quantities. We obtain the phase diagram of thin Ising metamagnets as
a function of temperature and external magnetic field. Whereas the phase
diagram of the bulk system only exhibits one phase transition between the
antiferromagnetic and paramagnetic phases, the phase diagram of thin Ising
metamagnets includes an additional intermediate phase where one of the surface
layers has aligned itself with the direction of the applied magnetic field.
This additional phase transition is discontinuous and ends in a critical end
point. Consequently, it is possible to gradually go from the antiferromagnetic
phase to the intermediate phase without passing through a phase transition.Comment: 8 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Exact Multiplicities in the Three-Anyon Spectrum
Using the symmetry properties of the three-anyon spectrum, we obtain exactly
the multiplicities of states with given energy and angular momentum. The
results are shown to be in agreement with the proper quantum mechanical and
semiclassical considerations, and the unexplained points are indicated.Comment: 16 pages plus 3 postscript figures, Kiev Institute for Theoretical
Physics preprint ITP-93-32
Stochastic self-assembly of incommensurate clusters
We examine the classic problem of homogeneous nucleation and growth by
deriving and analyzing a fully discrete stochastic master equation. Upon
comparison with results obtained from the corresponding mean-field
Becker-D\"{o}ring equations we find striking differences between the two
corresponding equilibrium mean cluster concentrations. These discrepancies
depend primarily on the divisibility of the total available mass by the maximum
allowed cluster size, and the remainder. When such mass incommensurability
arises, a single remainder particle can "emulsify" or "disperse" the system by
significantly broadening the mean cluster size distribution. This finite-sized
broadening effect is periodic in the total mass of the system and can arise
even when the system size is asymptotically large, provided the ratio of the
total mass to the maximum cluster size is finite. For such finite ratios we
show that homogeneous nucleation in the limit of large, closed systems is not
accurately described by classical mean-field mass-action approaches.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 1 tabl
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