874 research outputs found
The three-loop singlet contribution to the massless axial-vector quark form factor
We compute the three-loop corrections to the quark axial vector form factor in massless QCD, focusing on the pure-singlet contributions where the axial vector current couples to a closed quark loop. Employing the Larin prescription for , we discuss the UV renormalization of the form factor. The infrared singularity structure of the resulting singlet axial-vector form factor is explained from infrared factorization, defining a finite remainder function
Sheet metal forming optimization methodology for servo press process control improvement
In sheet metal forming manufacturing operations the use of servo presses is gaining more interest due to the opportunity to improve process performance (quality, productivity, cost reduction, etc.). It is not yet clear how to proceed in the engineering process when this type of operating machine is used to achieve the maximum possible potential of this technology. Recently, several press builders have developed gap‐ and straight‐sided metal forming presses adopting the mechanical servo‐drive technology. The mechanical servo‐drive press offers the flexibility of a hydraulic press with the speed, accuracy and reliability of a mechanical press. Servo drive presses give the opportunity to improve the productivity of process conditions and improve the quality of stamped parts. Forming simulation and numerical optimization can be useful tools to define beforehand the optimal process parameter set‐up in terms of servo press downward curve properties. This is done by carrying out a sensitivity analysis of the forming parameters having influence on said curve. The authors have developed a numerical methodology able to analyze the influence factors, for comparison with the degrees of freedom made available by the usage of a servo press, in terms of stroke profile management, to obtain an optimized process parameters combination
Optimization of Machining Fixture for Aeronautical Thin-walled Components☆
Abstract The aim of this work has been the optimization of the fixtures performance used in thin-walled workpiece machining depending on the local rigidity characteristics of the component to be machined. An extensive topology optimization activity has been performed both on fixture-workpiece systems modelled with shell elements and on fixture-workpiece systems modelled with solid elements, varying the topology design variables and/or optimization constraints for each optimization problem, in order to provide a new design of fixture. Finally, a new blended Solid-Lattice design of the fixture, starting by the design topologically optimized, has been created. In this way, it has been possible to identify void regions in the design space, where the material can be removed, regions where solid material is needed, and regions where lattice structure is required. This has allowed to generate the optimal hybrid or blended solid-lattice design based on desired functionality of the part having as natural consequence the definition of a new method for fixtures design
Banning Commercial Foresting: What are the Costs?
The Philippines' forest cover has suffered from massive denudation through the years due to uncontrolled and indiscriminate commercial logging. Because of this, calls for a total logging ban had been raised in various fora, including in the legislature where bills that consider the possibility of a ban are being studied. However, the possible economic costs of such ban as espoused in some studies has delayed the passage of these bills. This Policy Notes provides some economic costing based on computations that may help in firming up decisions regarding the proposed ban.forestry sector, environmental issues, environmental management
Scaling properties of growing noninfinitesimal perturbations in space-time chaos
We study the spatiotemporal dynamics of random spatially distributed
noninfinitesimal perturbations in one-dimensional chaotic extended systems. We
find that an initial perturbation of finite size grows in time
obeying the tangent space dynamic equations (Lyapunov vectors) up to a
characteristic time , where is the largest Lyapunov exponent and
is a constant. For times perturbations exhibit spatial
correlations up to a typical distance . For times larger than
finite perturbations are no longer described by tangent space
equations, memory of spatial correlations is progressively destroyed and
perturbations become spatiotemporal white noise. We are able to explain these
results by mapping the problem to the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang universality class of
surface growth.Comment: 4.5 pages LaTeX (RevTeX4) format, 3 eps figs included. Submitted to
Phys Rev
Karrooite green pigments doped with Co and Zn: Synthesis, color properties and stability in ceramic glazes
The solid-state synthesis and stabilization of Co doped (Mg1−xCoxTi2O5), Zn doped (Mg1−xZnxTi2O5) and Co- and Zn-codoped karrooite solid solutions (Mg0.8−xZn0.2CoxTi2O5 and (Mg0.5Zn0.5)1−xCoxTi2O5) were investigated. In addition, the optical spectra, color properties and technological performance of (Co,Zn)-karrooite compositions as new green ceramic pigments were also analyzed. XRD characterization revealed for the first time the high solid solubility of Zn2+ in MgTi2O5 karrooite at 1200 ºC (between 60 and 80 mol% per Mg or karrooite formula unit). In contrast, the reactivity and stabilization of karrooite phase decreased in the case of Co2+ doping. Interestingly, codoping with Zn2+ ions at high molar ratios (Zn:Mg ratio equal to 1:1) enhanced the reactivity and enabled the stabilization of (Co,Zn)-MgTi2O5 karrooite solid solutions, even with high Co2+ loadings (20 mol% per karrooite formula unit). The (Co,Zn)-MgTi2O5 pigments exhibited yellowish-green colors associated to Co2+ ions allocated in octahedral M1 and M2 sites of karrooite lattice, and becoming more intense and less yellow the higher the Co content. However, Zn2+ codoping produced less saturated green colors with similar green but lower yellowish hues. The obtained pigments were not stable enough within the tested ceramic glazes, giving rise to turquoise colorations due to cobalt leaching and incorporation into tetrahedral sites of the glassy phase. The stability of Co-karrooite green pigments was higher in a Ca- and Zn-enriched ceramic glaze (B) fired at a higher temperature (1050 °C)
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Equitability revisited: why the “equitable threat score” is not equitable
In the forecasting of binary events, verification measures that are “equitable” were defined by Gandin and Murphy to satisfy two requirements: 1) they award all random forecasting systems, including those that always issue the same forecast, the same expected score (typically zero), and 2) they are expressible as the linear weighted sum of the elements of the contingency table, where the weights are independent of the entries in the table, apart from the base rate. The authors demonstrate that the widely used “equitable threat score” (ETS), as well as numerous others, satisfies neither of these requirements and only satisfies the first requirement in the limit of an infinite sample size. Such measures are referred to as “asymptotically equitable.” In the case of ETS, the expected score of a random forecasting system is always positive and only falls below 0.01 when the number of samples is greater than around 30. Two other asymptotically equitable measures are the odds ratio skill score and the symmetric extreme dependency score, which are more strongly inequitable than ETS, particularly for rare events; for example, when the base rate is 2% and the sample size is 1000, random but unbiased forecasting systems yield an expected score of around −0.5, reducing in magnitude to −0.01 or smaller only for sample sizes exceeding 25 000. This presents a problem since these nonlinear measures have other desirable properties, in particular being reliable indicators of skill for rare events (provided that the sample size is large enough). A potential way to reconcile these properties with equitability is to recognize that Gandin and Murphy’s two requirements are independent, and the second can be safely discarded without losing the key advantages of equitability that are embodied in the first. This enables inequitable and asymptotically equitable measures to be scaled to make them equitable, while retaining their nonlinearity and other properties such as being reliable indicators of skill for rare events. It also opens up the possibility of designing new equitable verification measures
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