12,788 research outputs found
Spectator Behavior in a Quantum Hall Antidot with Multiple Bound Modes
We theoretically study Aharonov-Bohm resonances in an antidot system with
multiple bound modes in the integer quantum Hall regime, taking capacitive
interactions between the modes into account. We find the spectator behavior
that the resonances of some modes disappear and instead are replaced by those
of other modes, due to internal charge relaxation between the modes. This
behavior is a possible origin of the features of previous experimental data
which remain unexplained, spectator behavior in an antidot molecule and
resonances in a single antidot with three modes.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to be published in Physical Review Letter
In-flight total forces, moments and static aeroelastic characteristics of an oblique-wing research airplane
A low-speed flight investigation has provided total force and moment coefficients and aeroelastic effects for the AD-1 oblique-wing research airplane. The results were interpreted and compared with predictions that were based on wind tunnel data. An assessment has been made of the aeroelastic wing bending design criteria. Lateral-directional trim requirements caused by asymmetry were determined. At angles of attack near stall, flow visualization indicated viscous flow separation and spanwise vortex flow. These effects were also apparent in the force and moment data
Expert Finding by Capturing Organisational Knowledge from Legacy Documents
Organisations capitalise on their best knowledge through the improvement of shared expertise which leads to a higher level of productivity and competency. The recognition of the need to foster the sharing of expertise has led to the development of expert finder systems that hold pointers to experts who posses specific knowledge in organisations. This paper discusses an approach to locating an expert through the application of information retrieval and analysis processes to an organization’s existing information resources, with specific reference to the engineering design domain. The approach taken was realised through an expert finder system framework. It enables the relationships of heterogeneous information sources with experts to be factored in modelling individuals’ expertise. These valuable relationships are typically ignored by existing expert finder systems, which only focus on how documents relate to their content. The developed framework also provides an architecture that can be easily adapted to different organisational environments. In addition, it also allows users to access the expertise recognition logic, giving them greater trust in the systems implemented using this framework. The framework were applied to real world application and evaluated within a major engineering company
Propfan noise propagation
The unconventional supersonic tip speed of advanced propellers has led to uncertainties about Propfan's noise acceptability and compliance with Federal Aviation Noise Regulation (FAR 36). Overhead flight testing of the Propfan with an SR-7L blade during 1989's Propfan Test Assessment (PTA) Program have shown unexpectedly high far-field sound pressure levels. This study here attempts to provide insights into the acoustics of a single-rotating propeller (SRP) with supersonic tip speed. At the same time, the role of the atmosphere in shaping the far-field noise characteristics is investigated
Capacitive interaction model for Aharonov-Bohm effects of a quantum Hall antidot
We derive a general capacitive interaction model for an antidot-based
interferometer in the integer quantum Hall regime, and study Aharonov-Bohm
resonances in a single antidot with multiple bound modes, as a function of the
external magnetic field or the gate voltage applied to the antidot. The pattern
of Aharonov-Bohm resonances is significantly different from the case of
noninteracting electrons. The origin of the difference includes charging
effects of excess charges, charge relaxation between the bound modes, the
capacitive interaction between the bound modes and the extended edge channels
nearby the antidot, and the competition between the single-particle level
spacing and the charging energy of the antidot. We analyze the patterns for the
case that the number of the bound modes is 2, 3, or 4. The results agree with
recent experimental data.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Investigation in haemodynamic stability during intermittent haemodialysis in the critically ill
No abstract available
An investigation into the effects of commencing haemodialysis in the critically ill
<b>Introduction:</b>
We have aimed to describe haemodynamic changes when haemodialysis is instituted in the critically ill. 3
hypotheses are tested: 1)The initial session is associated with cardiovascular instability, 2)The initial session is
associated with more cardiovascular instability compared to subsequent sessions, and 3)Looking at unstable
sessions alone, there will be a greater proportion of potentially harmful changes in the initial sessions compared
to subsequent ones.
<b>Methods:</b>
Data was collected for 209 patients, identifying 1605 dialysis sessions. Analysis was performed on hourly
records, classifying sessions as stable/unstable by a cutoff of >+/-20% change in baseline physiology
(HR/MAP). Data from 3 hours prior, and 4 hours after dialysis was included, and average and minimum values
derived. 3 time comparisons were made (pre-HD:during, during HD:post, pre-HD:post). Initial sessions were
analysed separately from subsequent sessions to derive 2 groups. If a session was identified as being unstable,
then the nature of instability was examined by recording whether changes crossed defined physiological ranges.
The changes seen in unstable sessions could be described as to their effects: being harmful/potentially harmful,
or beneficial/potentially beneficial.
<b>Results:</b>
Discarding incomplete data, 181 initial and 1382 subsequent sessions were analysed. A session was deemed to
be stable if there was no significant change (>+/-20%) in the time-averaged or minimum MAP/HR across time
comparisons. By this definition 85/181 initial sessions were unstable (47%, 95% CI SEM 39.8-54.2). Therefore
Hypothesis 1 is accepted. This compares to 44% of subsequent sessions (95% CI 41.1-46.3). Comparing these
proportions and their respective CI gives a 95% CI for the standard error of the difference of -4% to 10%.
Therefore Hypothesis 2 is rejected. In initial sessions there were 92/1020 harmful changes. This gives a
proportion of 9.0% (95% CI SEM 7.4-10.9). In the subsequent sessions there were 712/7248 harmful changes.
This gives a proportion of 9.8% (95% CI SEM 9.1-10.5). Comparing the two unpaired proportions gives a
difference of -0.08% with a 95% CI of the SE of the difference of -2.5 to +1.2. Hypothesis 3 is rejected. Fisher’s
exact test gives a result of p=0.68, reinforcing the lack of significant variance.
<b>Conclusions:</b>
Our results reject the claims that using haemodialysis is an inherently unstable choice of therapy. Although
proportionally more of the initial sessions are classed as unstable, the majority of MAP and HR changes are
beneficial in nature
Multiparticle Interference, GHZ Entanglement, and Full Counting Statistics
We investigate the quantum transport in a generalized N-particle Hanbury
Brown--Twiss setup enclosing magnetic flux, and demonstrate that the Nth-order
cumulant of current cross correlations exhibits Aharonov-Bohm oscillations,
while there is no such oscillation in all the lower-order cumulants. The
multiparticle interference results from the orbital Greenberger-Horne-Zeilinger
entanglement of N indistinguishable particles. For sufficiently strong
Aharonov-Bohm oscillations the generalized Bell inequalities may be violated,
proving the N-particle quantum nonlocality.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, published versio
Hole maximum density droplets of an antidot in strong magnetic fields
We investigate a quantum antidot in the integer quantum Hall regime (the
filling factor is two) by using a Hartree-Fock approach and by transforming the
electron antidot into a system which confines holes via an electron-hole
transformation. We find that its ground state is the maximum density droplet of
holes in certain parameter ranges. The competition between electron-electron
interactions and the confinement potential governs the properties of the hole
droplet such as its spin configuration. The ground-state transitions between
the droplets with different spin configurations occur as magnetic field varies.
For a bell-shape antidot containing about 300 holes, the features of the
transitions are in good agreement with the predictions of a recently proposed
capacitive interaction model for antidots as well as recent experimental
observations. We show this agreement by obtaining the parameters of the
capacitive interaction model from the Hartree-Fock results. An inverse
parabolic antidot is also studied. Its ground-state transitions, however,
display different magnetic-field dependence from that of a bell-shape antidot.
Our study demonstrates that the shape of antidot potential affects its physical
properties significantly.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure
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