24,363 research outputs found
Design and finite element mode analysis of noncircular gear
The noncircular gear transmission is an important branch of the gear transmission, it is characterized by its compact structure, good dynamic equilibration and other advantages, and can be used in the automobile, engineering machine, ship, machine tool, aviation and spaceflight field etc. Studying on the dynamics feature of noncircular gear transmission can improve the ability to carry loads of, reduce the vibration and noise of, increase the life of the noncircular gear transmission machine, provides guidance for the design of the noncircular gear, and has significant theories and practical meanings. In this paper, the gear transmission technique is used to studied the design method of the noncircular gear, which contains distribution of teeth on the pitch curve, designs of the tooth tip curve and the tooth root curve, design of the tooth profile curve, the gear system dynamics principle is introduced to establish dynamics model for the noncircular gear; basic theory of finite element and mode analysis method are applied, finite element model for the noncircular gear is established, natural vibration characteristic of the noncircular gear is studied. And the oval gear is taken as an example, the mathematics software MathCAD, the 3D modeling software UG and the finite element software ABAQUS are used to realize precise 3D model of the oval gear. The finite element method is used, the natural vibration characteristic of the oval gear is studied, the main vibration types and natural frequencies of the oval gear and that of the equivalent cylindrical gears are analyzed and compared, the conclusions received reflect the dynamics performance of the oval gear, and solid foundation is laid for dynamics research and engineering application of the oval gear transmission
A Critical Examination to the Unitarized Scattering Chiral Amplitudes
We discuss the Pad\'e approximation to the scattering amplitudes in
1--loop chiral perturbation theory. The approximation restores unitarity and
can reproduce the correct resonance poles, but the approximation violates
crossing symmetry and produce spurious poles on the complex plane and
therefore plagues its predictions on physical quantities at quantitative level.
However we find that one virtual state in the IJ=20 channel may have physical
relevance.Comment: 13 pages + 4 eps figures submit to Commun. Theor. Phy
Two-dimensional structures of ferroelectric domain inversion in LiNbO3 by direct electron beam lithography
We report on the fabrication of domain-reversed structures in LiNbO3 by means
of direct electron beam lithography at room temperature without any static
bias. The LiNbO3 crystals were chemically etched after the exposure of electron
beam and then, the patterns of domain inversion were characterized by atomic
force microscopy (AFM). In our experiment, an interesting phenomenon occurred
when the electron beam wrote a one-dimensional (1-D) grating on the negative
c-face: a two-dimensional (2-D) dotted array was observed on the positive c-
face, which is significant for its potential to produce 2-D and
three-dimensional photonic crystals. Furthermore, we also obtained 2-D
ferroelectric domain inversion in the whole LiNbO3 crystal by writing the 2-D
square pattern on the negative c-face. Such a structure may be utilized to
fabricate 2-D nonlinear photonic crystal. AFM demonstrates that a 2-D
domain-reversed structure has been achieved not only on the negative c-face of
the crystal, but also across the whole thickness of the crystal.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figure
Radiative and Collisional Energy Loss, and Photon-Tagged Jets at RHIC
The suppression of single jets at high transverse momenta in a quark-gluon
plasma is studied at RHIC energies, and the additional information provided by
a photon tag is included. The energy loss of hard jets traversing through the
medium is evaluated in the AMY formalism, by consistently taking into account
the contributions from radiative events and from elastic collisions at leading
order in the coupling. The strongly-interacting medium in these collisions is
modelled with (3+1)-dimensional ideal relativistic hydrodynamics. Putting these
ingredients together with a complete set of photon-production processes, we
present a calculation of the nuclear modification of single jets and
photon-tagged jets at RHIC.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, contributed to the 3rd International Conference
on Hard and Electro-Magnetic Probes of High-Energy Nuclear Collisions (Hard
Probes 2008), typos corrected, published versio
Various Correlations in Anisotropic Heisenberg XYZ Model with Dzyaloshinski-Moriya Interaction
Various thermal correlations as well as the effect of intrinsic decoherence
on the correlations are studied in a two-qubit Heisenberg XYZ spin chain with
the Dzyaloshinski--Moriya (DM) interaction along the z direction, i.e. Dz. It
is found that tunable parameter Dz may play a constructive role on the
concurrence (C), classical correlation (CC) and quantum discord (QD) in thermal
equilibrium while it plays a destructive role on the correlations in the
intrinsic decoherence case. The entanglement and quantum discord exhibit
collapse and revival under the phase decoherence. With a proper combination of
the system parameters, the correlations can effectively be kept at high steady
state values despite the intrinsic decoherence.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Active treatment of acidic mine water to minimize environmental impacts in a densely populated downstream area
Field monitoring was conducted to evaluate the effects of active mine water treatment on improving the water quality of receiving river in a densely populated catchment. Microcosm experiment was also performed to assess the effects of treated mine water on the growth of the vegetable and the uptake of trace elements by the vegetable. The results show that the treatment process was very effective in terms of raising the water pH (from below 3 to above 8 at the high-flow event) and removing trace elements
(over 99% for most of the investigated trace elements) from the mine water. However, overdose of acid neutralizing materials might occur during low- and medium-flowing period, resulting in unacceptable high pH in the river reach immediately downstream of the treatment facility. To improve the treatment performance, more accurate estimation of lime requirement for treating the mine water can be done by a real-time monitoring for titratable acidity of mine water in the buffer pond to guide lime-dosing. It was
found that downstream transport of trace elements still took place, especially for elements with variable valency such as manganese and chromium. The addition of lime also caused elevated concentration of barium and strontium in the river water, which requires assessment of their potential ecotoxicity to the
downstream aquatic ecosystem. The use of treated mine water for irrigation purpose has both advantages and disadvantages; while it served as a source of irrigation water and tended to reduce the uptake of arsenic by the crop plant, the acid materials could still be introduced into the soils with the irrigation water and adversely affected the growth of the vegetable. It could increase the leaching of some trace elements especially arsenic from the soil to the shallow aquifer and cause contamination of groundwater
The PLATO Dome A Site-Testing Observatory : instrumentation and first results
The PLATeau Observatory (PLATO) is an automated self-powered astrophysical observatory that was deployed to Dome A, the highest point on the Antarctic plateau, in 2008 January. PLATO consists of a suite of site-testing instruments designed to quantify the benefits of the Dome A site for astronomy, and science instruments designed to take advantage of the unique observing conditions. Instruments include CSTAR, an array of optical telescopes for transient astronomy; Gattini, an instrument to measure the optical sky brightness and cloud cover statistics; DASLE, an experiment to measure the statistics of the meteorological conditions within the near-surface layer; Pre-HEAT, a submillimeter tipping radiometer measuring the atmospheric transmission and water vapor content and performing spectral line imaging of the Galactic plane; and Snodar, an acoustic radar designed to measure turbulence within the near-surface layer. PLATO has run completely unattended and collected data throughout the winter 2008 season. Here we present a detailed description of the PLATO instrument suite and preliminary results obtained from the first season of operation
Monolithic millimeter-wave diode array beam controllers: Theory and experiment
In the current work, multi-function beam control arrays have been fabricated and have successfully demonstrated amplitude control of transmitted beams in the W and D bands (75-170 GHz). While these arrays are designed to provide beam control under DC bias operation, new designs for high-speed electronic and optical control are under development. These arrays will fill a need for high-speed watt-level beam switches in pulsed reflectometer systems under development for magnetic fusion plasma diagnostics. A second experimental accomplishment of the current work is the demonstration in the 100-170 GHz (D band) frequency range of a new technique for the measurement of the transmission phase as well as amplitude. Transmission data can serve as a means to extract ('de-embed') the grid parameters; phase information provides more complete data to assist in this process. Additional functions of the array beam controller yet to be tested include electronically controlled steering and focusing of a reflected beam. These have application in the areas of millimeter-wave electronic scanning radar and reflectometry, respectively
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