4,129 research outputs found
A Convergent Iterative Solution of the Quantum Double-well Potential
We present a new convergent iterative solution for the two lowest quantum
wave functions and of the Hamiltonian with a quartic
double well potential in one dimension. By starting from a trial function,
which is by itself the exact lowest even or odd eigenstate of a different
Hamiltonian with a modified potential , we construct the Green's
function for the modified potential. The true wave functions, or
, then satisfies a linear inhomogeneous integral equation, in which
the inhomogeneous term is the trial function, and the kernel is the product of
the Green's function times the sum of , the potential difference, and
the corresponding energy shift. By iterating this equation we obtain successive
approximations to the true wave function; furthermore, the approximate energy
shift is also adjusted at each iteration so that the approximate wave function
is well behaved everywhere. We are able to prove that this iterative procedure
converges for both the energy and the wave function at all .Comment: 76 pages, Latex, no figure, 1 tabl
Thermally-Assisted Current-Driven Domain Wall Motion
Starting from the stochastic Landau-Lifschitz-Gilbert equation, we derive
Langevin equations that describe the nonzero-temperature dynamics of a rigid
domain wall. We derive an expression for the average drift velocity of the
domain wall as a function of the applied current, and find qualitative
agreement with recent magnetic semiconductor experiments. Our model implies
that at any nonzero temperature the average domain-wall velocity initially
varies linearly with current, even in the absence of non-adiabatic spin
torques.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Measurements of admittances and characteristic combustion times of reactive gaseous propellant coaxial injectors
The results of an experimental investigation that was concerned with the quantitative determination of the capabilities of combustion processes associated with coaxial injectors to amplify and sustain combustor oscillations was described. The driving provided by the combustion process was determined by employing the modified standing-wave method utilizing coaxial injectors and air-acetylene mixtures. Analyses of the measured data indicate that the investigated injectors are capable of initiating and amplifying combustion instabilities under favorable conditions of injector-combustion coupling and over certain frequency ranges. These frequency ranges and the frequency at which an injector's driving capacity is maximum are observed to depend upon the equivalence ratio, the pressure drop across the injector orifices and the number of injector elements. The characteristic combustion times of coaxial injectors were determined from steady state temperature measurements
Characteristics of response factors of coaxial gaseous rocket injectors
The results of an experimental investigation undertaken to determine the frequency dependence of the response factors of various gaseous propellant rocket injectors subject to axial instabilities are presented. The injector response factors were determined, using the modified impedance-tube technique, under cold-flow conditions simulating those observed in unstable rocket motors. The tested injectors included a gaseous-fuel injector element, a gaseous-oxidizer injector element and a coaxial injector with both fuel and oxidizer elements. Emphasis was given to the determination of the dependence of the injector response factor upon the open-area ratio of the injector, the length of the injector orifice, and the pressure drop across the injector orifices. The measured data are shown to be in reasonable agreement with the corresponding injector response factor data predicted by the Feiler and Heidmann model
The Renormalization Group and the Superconducting Susceptibility of a Fermi Liquid
A free Fermi gas has, famously, a superconducting susceptibility that
diverges logarithmically at zero temperature. In this paper we ask whether this
is still true for a Fermi liquid and find that the answer is that it does {\it
not}. From the perspective of the renormalization group for interacting
fermions, the question arises because a repulsive interaction in the Cooper
channel is a marginally irrelevant operator at the Fermi liquid fixed point and
thus is also expected to infect various physical quantities with logarithms.
Somewhat surprisingly, at least from the renormalization group viewpoint, the
result for the superconducting susceptibility is that two logarithms are not
better than one. In the course of this investigation we derive a
Callan-Symanzik equation for the repulsive Fermi liquid using the
momentum-shell renormalization group, and use it to compute the long-wavelength
behavior of the superconducting correlation function in the emergent low-energy
theory. We expect this technique to be of broader interest.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
Behavior of nozzles and acoustic liners in three-dimensional acoustic fields Quarterly report, 1 Sep. - 31 Dec. 1969
Theoretical studies and test facility installation for investigating behavior of rocket nozzles and acoustic liners in three dimensional acoustic field
Behavior of nozzles and acoustic liners in three-dimensional acoustic fields Quarterly report, 1 Dec. 1969 - 28 Feb. 1970
Frequency responses of supercritical nozzles and acoustic liner
Behavior of nozzles and acoustic liners in three-dimensional acoustic fields Quarterly report, 1 Jun. - 31 Aug. 1970
Updating computer program for determining nozzle admittances to eliminate double-root solution and to fit resultant admittance data curves by statistical mean
Behavior of nozzles and acoustic liners in three-dimensional acoustic fields Quarterly report, 1 Sep. - 31 Nov. 1970
Behavior of nozzles and acoustic liners in three dimensional acoustic field
Behavior of nozzles and acoustic liners in three-dimensional acoustic fields Quarterly report, 1 Mar. - 31 May 1969
Behavior of convergent-divergent nozzles and acoustic liners in three dimensional acoustic field
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