42,101 research outputs found
Bott-Kitaev Periodic Table and the Diagonal Map
Building on the 10-way symmetry classification of disordered fermions, the
authors have recently given a homotopy-theoretic proof of Kitaev's "Periodic
Table" for topological insulators and superconductors. The present paper offers
an introduction to the physical setting and the mathematical model used. Basic
to the proof is the so-called Diagonal Map, a natural transformation akin to
the Bott map of algebraic topology, which increases by one unit both the
momentum-space dimension and the symmetry index of translation-invariant ground
states of gapped free-fermion systems. This mapping is illustrated here with a
few examples of interest.Comment: Based on a talk delivered by the senior author at the Nobel Symposium
on "New Forms of Matter: Topological Insulators and Superconductors"
(Stockholm, June 13-15, 2014
3,4-dimethylphenyl benzoate
In the title compound, C15H14O2, the terminal rings form a dihedral angle of 52.39(4)°. The mean plane of the central ester group [r.m.s. deviation = 0.0488Å] is twisted away from the benzene and phenyl rings by 60.10(4) and 8.67(9)°, respectively. In the crystal, molecules are linked by weak C - HO hydrogen bonds, forming C(6) chains which run along [100]
Report on the development of the Manned Orbital Research Laboratory /MORL/ system utilization potential. Task area IV - MORL SYSTEM improvement study, book 2
Environmental control and life support systems analyses for improved Manned Orbital Research Laborator
Emulation of multivariate simulators using thin-plate splines with application to atmospheric dispersion
It is often desirable to build a statistical emulator of a complex computer simulator in order to perform analysis which would otherwise be computationally infeasible. We propose methodology to model multivariate output from a computer simulator taking into account output structure in the responses. The utility of this approach is demonstrated by applying it to a chemical and biological hazard prediction model. Predicting the hazard area which results from an accidental or deliberate chemical or biological release is imperative in civil and military planning and also in emergency response. The hazard area resulting from such a release is highly structured in space and we therefore propose the use of a thin-plate spline to capture the spatial structure and fit a Gaussian process emulator to the coefficients of the resultant basis functions. We compare and contrast four different techniques for emulating multivariate output: dimension-reduction using (i) a fully Bayesian approach with a principal component basis, (ii) a fully Bayesian approach with a thin-plate spline basis, assuming that the basis coefficients are independent, and (iii) a “plug-in” Bayesian approach with a thin-plate spline basis and a separable covariance structure; and (iv) a functional data modeling approach using a tensor-product (separable) Gaussian process. We develop methodology for the two thin-plate spline emulators and demonstrate that these emulators significantly outperform the principal component emulator. Further, the separable thin-plate spline emulator, which accounts for the dependence between basis coefficients, provides substantially more realistic quantification of uncertainty, and is also computationally more tractable, allowing fast emulation. For high resolution output data, it also offers substantial predictive and computational ad- vantages over the tensor-product Gaussian process emulator
Mission oriented study of advanced nuclear system parameters, phase 6. Volume 1 - Summary technical report Final report
Summarized study tasks, analyses, and results of advanced nuclear propulsion parameters for Mars and Venus mission
Star - Planet - Debris Disk Alignment in the HD 82943 system: Is planetary system coplanarity actually the norm?
Recent results suggest that the two planets in the HD 82943 system are
inclined to the sky plane by 20 +/- 4deg. Here, we show that the debris disk in
this system is inclined by 27 +/- 4deg, thus adding strength to the derived
planet inclinations and suggesting that the planets and debris disk are
consistent with being aligned at a level similar to the Solar System. Further,
the stellar equator is inferred to be inclined by 28 +/- 4deg, suggesting that
the entire star - planet - disk system is aligned, the first time such
alignment has been tested for radial velocity discovered planets on ~AU wide
orbits. We show that the planet-disk alignment is primordial, and not the
result of planetary secular perturbations to the disk inclination. In addition,
we note three other systems with planets at >10AU discovered by direct imaging
that already have good evidence of alignment, and suggest that empirical
evidence of system-wide star - planet - disk alignment is therefore emerging,
with the exception of systems that host hot Jupiters. While this alignment
needs to be tested in a larger number of systems, and is perhaps unsurprising,
it is a reminder that the system should be considered as a whole when
considering the orientation of planetary orbits.Comment: Accepted to MNRA
Influence of temper condition on the nonlinear stress-strain behavior of boron-aluminum
The influence of temper condition on the tensile and compressive stress-strain behavior for six boron-aluminum laminates was investigated. In addition to monotonic tension and compression tests, tension-tension, compression-compression, and tension--compression tests were conducted to study the effects of cyclic loading. Tensile strength results are a function of the laminate configuration; unidirectional laminates were affected considerably more than other laminates with some strength values increasing and others decreasing
System configuration and executive requirements specifications for reusable shuttle and space station/base
System configuration and executive requirements specifications for reusable shuttle and space station/bas
Stripe phases in the two-dimensional Falicov-Kimball model
The observation of charge stripe order in the doped nickelate and cuprate
materials has motivated much theoretical effort to understand the underlying
mechanism of the stripe phase. Numerical studies of the Hubbard model show two
possibilities: (i) stripe order arises from a tendency toward phase separation
and its competition with the long-range Coulomb interaction or (ii) stripe
order inherently arises as a compromise between itinerancy and magnetic
interactions. Here we determine the restricted phase diagrams of the
two-dimensional Falicov-Kimball model and see that it displays rich behavior
illustrating both possibilities in different regions of the phase diagram.Comment: (5 pages, 3 figures
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