1,824 research outputs found
Maintenance, Repair, and Overhaul Performance Indicators for Military Aircraft
Modern day military and commercial aircraft systems are an integration of a large number of sub-systems and components. Each of these systems has different reliability characteristics and different probability distributions governing their failure rates. Space constraints and structural layout of the aircraft govern the position of each component. The accessibility, reliability, and snag diagnostic-ability determines the maintainability of the aircraft. The peculiarities involved in aircraft maintenance are discussed and performance measurement indices for O, I and D level maintenance are presented in this paper. These performance measurement indices are intended for use by aircraft maintenance managers for instituting process improvements for achieving best flight and maintenance safety records, improve operational availability of the aircraft and reduce costs.Defence Science Journal, 2012, 62(2), pp.83-89, DOI:http://dx.doi.org/10.14429/dsj.62.88
Splitting neutrino masses and showering into Sky
Neutrino masses might be as light as a few time the atmospheric neutrino mass
splitting. High Energy ZeV cosmic neutrinos (in Z-Showering model) might hit
relic ones at each mass in different resonance energies in our nearby Universe.
This non-degenerated density and energy must split UHE Z-boson secondaries (in
Z-Burst model) leading to multi injection of UHECR nucleons within future
extreme AUGER energy. Secondaries of Z-Burst as neutral gamma, below a few tens
EeV are better surviving local GZK cut-off and they might explain recent Hires
BL-Lac UHECR correlations at small angles. A different high energy resonance
must lead to Glashow's anti-neutrino showers while hitting electrons in matter.
In air, Glashow's anti-neutrino showers lead to collimated and directional
air-showers offering a new Neutrino Astronomy. At greater energy around PeV,
Tau escaping mountains and Earth and decaying in flight are effectively
showering in air sky. These Horizontal showering is splitting by geomagnetic
field in forked shapes. Such air-showers secondaries release amplified and
beamed gamma bursts (like observed TGF), made also by muon and electron pair
bundles, with their accompanying rich Cherenkov flashes. Also planet' s largest
(Saturn, Jupiter) atmosphere limbs offer an ideal screen for UHE GZK and
Z-burst tau neutrino, because their largest sizes. Titan thick atmosphere and
small radius are optimal for discovering up-going resonant Glashow resonant
showers. Earth detection of Neutrino showering by twin Magic Telescopes on top
mountains, or by balloons and satellites arrays facing the limbs are the
simplest and cheapest way toward UHE Neutrino Astronomy .Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures; an author's name correction and Journal Referenc
Automatic Quantum Error Correction
Criteria are given by which dissipative evolution can transfer populations
and coherences between quantum subspaces, without a loss of coherence. This
results in a form of quantum error correction that is implemented by the joint
evolution of a system and a cold bath. It requires no external intervention
and, in principal, no ancilla. An example of a system that protects a qubit
against spin-flip errors is proposed. It consists of three spin 1/2 magnetic
particles and three modes of a resonator. The qubit is the triple quantum
coherence of the spins, and the photons act as ancilla.Comment: 16 pages 12 fig LaTex uses multicol, graphicx expanded version of
letter submitted to Phys Rev Let
The XMM large scale structure survey: optical vs. X-ray classifications of active galactic nuclei and the unified scheme
Our goal is to characterize AGN populations by comparing their X-ray and
optical classifications. We present a sample of 99 spectroscopically identified
X-ray point sources in the XMM-LSS survey which are significantly detected in
the [2-10] keV band, and with more than 80 counts. We performed an X-ray
spectral analysis for all of these 99 X-ray sources. Introducing the fourfold
point correlation coefficient, we find only a mild correlation between the
X-ray and the optical classifications, as up to 30% of the sources have
differing X-ray and optical classifications: on one hand, 10% of the type 1
sources present broad emission lines in their optical spectra and strong
absorption in the X-rays. These objects are highly luminous AGN lying at high
redshift and thus dilution effects are totally ruled out, their discrepant
nature being an intrinsic property. Their X-ray luminosities and redshifts
distributions are consistent with those of the unabsorbed X-ray sources with
broad emission lines. On the other hand, 25/32 are moderate luminosity AGN,
which are both unabsorbed in the X-rays and only present narrow emission lines
in their optical spectra. The majority of them have an optical spectrum which
is representative of the host galaxy. We finally infer that dilution of the AGN
by the host galaxy seems to account for their nature. 5/25 have been defined as
Seyfert 2. In conclusion, most of these 32 discrepant cases can be accounted
for by the standard AGN unified scheme, as its predictions are not met for only
12% of the 99 X-ray sources. ABRIDGEDComment: 25 pages, 19 figures, Accepted for publication in A&
Identifying the Neutrino mass Ordering with INO and NOvA
The relatively large value of established recently by the Daya
Bay reactor experiment opens the possibility to determine the neutrino mass
ordering with experiments currently under construction. We investigate
synergies between the NOvA long-baseline accelerator experiment with
atmospheric neutrino data from the India-based Neutrino Observatory (INO). We
identify the requirements on energy and direction reconstruction and detector
mass for INO necessary for a significant sensitivity. If neutrino energy and
direction reconstruction at the level of 10% and 10 degree can be achieved by
INO a determination of the neutrino mass ordering seems possible around 2020.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, minor improvements and clarifications, new panel
in fig. 7, version to appear in JHEP, typo in eq. 4 correcte
Large Non-perturbative Effects of Small \Delta m^2_{21}/\Delta m^2_{31} and \sin \theta_{13} on Neutrino Oscillation and CP Violation in Matter
In the framework of three generations, we consider the CP violation in
neutrino oscillation with matter effects. At first, we show that the
non-perturbative effects of two small parameters, \Delta m_{21}^2/\Delta
m_{31}^2 and \sin \theta_{13}, become more than 50% in certain ranges of energy
and baseline length. This means that the non-perturbative effects should be
considered in detailed analysis in the long baseline experiments. Next, we
propose a method to include these effects in approximate formulas for
oscillation probabilities. Assuming the two natural conditions,
\theta_{23}=45^\circ and the fact that the matter density is symmetric, a set
of approximate formulas, which involve the non-perturbative effects, has been
derived in all channels.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures, version to appear in JHE
Intercalation-enhanced electric polarization and chain formation of nano-layered particles
Microscopy observations show that suspensions of synthetic and natural
nano-layered smectite clay particles submitted to a strong external electric
field undergo a fast and extended structuring. This structuring results from
the interaction between induced electric dipoles, and is only possible for
particles with suitable polarization properties. Smectite clay colloids are
observed to be particularly suitable, in contrast to similar suspensions of a
non-swelling clay. Synchrotron X-ray scattering experiments provide the
orientation distributions for the particles. These distributions are understood
in terms of competing (i) homogenizing entropy and (ii) interaction between the
particles and the local electric field; they show that clay particles polarize
along their silica sheet. Furthermore, a change in the platelet separation
inside nano-layered particles occurs under application of the electric field,
indicating that intercalated ions and water molecules play a role in their
electric polarization. The resulting induced dipole is structurally attached to
the particle, and this causes particles to reorient and interact, resulting in
the observed macroscopic structuring. The macroscopic properties of these
electro-rheological smectite suspensions may be tuned by controlling the nature
and quantity of the intercalated species, at the nanoscale.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
The XMM Large Scale Structure Survey: Properties and Two-Point Angular Correlations of Point-like Sources
We analyze X-ray sources detected over 4.2 pseudo-contiguous sq. deg. in the
0.5-2 keV and 2-10 keV bands down to fluxes of 2x10^{-15} and 8x10^{-15}
erg/s/cm^2 respectively, as part of the XMM Large Scale Structure Survey. The
logN-logS in both bands shows a steep slope at bright fluxes, but agrees well
with other determinations below ~2x10^{-14} erg/s/cm^2. The detected sources
resolve close to 30 per cent of the X-ray background in the 2-10 keV band. We
study the two-point angular clustering of point sources using nearest
neighbours and correlation function statistics and find a weak, positive signal
for ~1130 sources in the 0.5-2 keV band, but no correlation for ~400 sources in
the 2-10 keV band below scales of 100 arcsec. A sub-sample of ~200 faint
sources with hard X-ray count ratios, that is likely to be dominated by
obscured AGN, does show a positive signal with the data allowing for a large
scaling of the angular correlation length, but only at the ~2 (3) sigma level,
based on re-sampling (Poisson) statistics. We discuss possible implications and
emphasize the importance of wider, complete surveys in order to fully
understand the large scale structure of the X-ray sky.Comment: A&A in press; High resolution version at
http://www-xray.ast.cam.ac.uk/~pg/publications.htm
High Energy Neutrino Signals of Four Neutrino Mixing
We evaluate the upward shower and muon event rates for two characteristic
four neutrino mixing models for extragalactic neutrinos, as well as for the
atmospheric neutrinos, with energy thresholds of 1 TeV, 10 TeV and 100 TeV. We
show that by comparing the shower to muon event rates, one can distinguish
between oscillation and no-oscillation models. By measuring shower and muon
event rates for energy thresholds of 10 TeV and 100 TeV, and by considering
their ratio, it is possible to use extragalactic neutrino sources to determine
the type of four-flavor mixing pattern. We find that one to ten years of data
taking with kilometer-size detector has a very good chance of providing
valuable information about the physics beyond the Standard Model.Comment: version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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