635 research outputs found
Effectiveness evaluation of STOL transport operations (phase 2)
A computer simulation program which models a commercial short-haul aircraft operating in the civil air system was developed. The purpose of the program is to evaluate the effect of a given aircraft avionics capability on the ability of the aircraft to perform on-time carrier operations. The program outputs consist primarily of those quantities which can be used to determine direct operating costs. These include: (1) schedule reliability or delays, (2) repairs/replacements, (3) fuel consumption, and (4) cancellations. More comprehensive models of the terminal area environment were added and a simulation of an existing airline operation was conducted to obtain a form of model verification. The capability of the program to provide comparative results (sensitivity analysis) was then demonstrated by modifying the aircraft avionics capability for additional computer simulations
An increase in under hydrostatic pressure in the superconducting doped topological insulator NbBiSe
We report an unexpected positive hydrostatic pressure derivative of the
superconducting transition temperature in the doped topological insulator \NBS
via SQUID magnetometry in pressures up to 0.6 GPa. This result is contrary
to reports on the homologues \CBS and \SBS where smooth suppression of is
observed. Our results are consistent with recent Ginzburg-Landau theory
predictions of a pressure-induced enhancement of in the nematic
multicomponent state proposed to explain observations of rotational
symmetry breaking in doped BiSe superconductors.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Vortex fluctuations in superconducting La-Sr-Cu-O
Vortex fluctuations in the system have been
studied as a function of magnetic field, temperature and carrier concentration
in order to determine the dimensionality of the fluctuations. For a
sample, there is a unique crossing-temperature on the magnetization vs.
temperature plots for all magnetic fields up to 7 T, and the data scale very
well with 2D fluctuation theory. At lower x-values where is much
smaller, there are two well defined crossing points, one at low fields
(typically less than 1 T) and another at high fields (typically 3-7 T). A fit
of the data to fluctuation theory shows that the low field crossing data scale
as 2D fluctuations and the high field crossing data scale as 3D fluctuations.
It would appear that as the magnetic field approaches , there is a 2D
to 3D cross-over where the low field 2D pancake vortex structure transforms
into a 3D vortex structure
Scaling of the Equilibrium Magnetization in the Mixed State of Type-II Superconductors
We discuss the analysis of mixed-state magnetization data of type-II
superconductors using a recently developed scaling procedure. It is based on
the fact that, if the Ginzburg-Landau parameter kappa does not depend on
temperature, the magnetic susceptibility is a universal function of H/H_c2(T),
leading to a simple relation between magnetizations at different temperatures.
Although this scaling procedure does not provide absolute values of the upper
critical fieldH_c2(T), its temperature variation can be established rather
accurately. This provides an opportunity to validate theoretical models that
are usually employed for the evaluation of H_c2(T) from equilibrium
magnetization data. In the second part of the paper we apply this scaling
procedure for a discussion of the notorious first order phase transition in the
mixed state of high temperature superconductors. Our analysis, based on
experimental magnetization data available in the literature, shows that the
shift of the magnetization accross the transition may adopt either sign,
depending on the particular chosen sample. We argue that this observation is
inconsistent with the interpretation that this transition always represents the
melting transition of the vortex lattice.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figure
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