67 research outputs found
Une chaîne d'applications intégrées
Dans leurs phases d'étude, d'installation, de maintenance et de suivi technico-financier des contrats d'appui, les activités du groupe électricité sont largement basées sur l'utilisation d'applications informatiques. Couplées à des bases de données, ces applications CERN étroitement interconnectées, sont développées autour de noyaux informatiques industriels. Toutes les phases d'un projet, tel que le LHC, bénéficient de ces bases de données enrichies par le personnel du CERN et par ses partenaires industriels. Ce document présente le maquettage virtuel des ouvrages du génie-civil et des équipements du CERN. Il traite également de la gestion de ces équipements, de leur câblage, de leur maintenance et du suivi des contrats de sous-traitance
Grid generation for time dependent problems: Criteria and methods
The problem of generating local mesh refinements when solving time dependent partial differential equations was examined. The problem of creating an appropriate grid, given a mesh function h defined over the spatial domain is discussed. A data structure which permits efficient use of the resulting grid is described. A good choice for h is an estimate of the local truncation error, and several ways to estimate it are discussed. The efficiency and implementation problems of these error estimates were compared
Gravitational perturbations of Schwarzschild spacetime at null infinity and the hyperboloidal initial value problem
We study gravitational perturbations of Schwarzschild spacetime by solving a
hyperboloidal initial value problem for the Bardeen-Press equation.
Compactification along hyperboloidal surfaces in a scri-fixing gauge allows us
to have access to the gravitational waveform at null infinity in a general
setup. We argue that this hyperboloidal approach leads to a more accurate and
efficient calculation of the radiation signal than the common approach where a
timelike outer boundary is introduced. The method can be generalized to study
perturbations of Kerr spacetime using the Teukolsky equation.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure
Implementation of standard testbeds for numerical relativity
We discuss results that have been obtained from the implementation of the
initial round of testbeds for numerical relativity which was proposed in the
first paper of the Apples with Apples Alliance. We present benchmark results
for various codes which provide templates for analyzing the testbeds and to
draw conclusions about various features of the codes. This allows us to sharpen
the initial test specifications, design a new test and add theoretical insight.Comment: Corrected versio
Numerical Relativity: A review
Computer simulations are enabling researchers to investigate systems which
are extremely difficult to handle analytically. In the particular case of
General Relativity, numerical models have proved extremely valuable for
investigations of strong field scenarios and been crucial to reveal unexpected
phenomena. Considerable efforts are being spent to simulate astrophysically
relevant simulations, understand different aspects of the theory and even
provide insights in the search for a quantum theory of gravity. In the present
article I review the present status of the field of Numerical Relativity,
describe the techniques most commonly used and discuss open problems and (some)
future prospects.Comment: 2 References added; 1 corrected. 67 pages. To appear in Classical and
Quantum Gravity. (uses iopart.cls
History of climate modeling
The history of climate modeling begins with conceptual models, followed in the 19th century by mathematical models of energy balance and radiative transfer, as well as simple analog models. Since the 1950s, the principal tools of climate science have been computer simulation models of the global general circulation. From the 1990s to the present, a trend toward increasingly comprehensive coupled models of the entire climate system has dominated the field. Climate model evaluation and intercomparison is changing modeling into a more standardized, modular process, presenting the potential for unifying research and operational aspects of climate science. WIREs Clim Change 2011 2 128–139 DOI: 10.1002/wcc.95 For further resources related to this article, please visit the WIREs websitePeer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/79438/1/95_ftp.pd
Seismic focusing by a single planar fracture
[1] A single plane fracture with an axially symmetric stress distribution behaves as a seismic lens that focuses seismic energy to a beam waist\u27\u27 at a focal plane. Both phase and amplitude effects on a seismic wave propagating across the fracture contribute to the lensing behavior. Radial gradients in the fracture specific stiffness cause wave refraction through a radially varying group time delay, while the fracture transmission amplitude approximates a Fresnel zone plate. This work demonstrates that a two-dimensional planar fracture, contrasted with three-dimensional geologic structures such as basins and domes, can focus seismic waves. Focusing of seismic waves by fractures should be considered in the interpretation of seismic data from fractured strata with heterogeneous stress distributions
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