61,345 research outputs found
Macroscopic Phase Coherence of Defective Vortex Lattices in Two Dimensions
The superfluid density is calculated theoretically for incompressible vortex
lattices in two dimensions that have isolated dislocations quenched in by a
random arrangement of pinned vortices. The latter are assumed to be sparse and
to be fixed to material defects. It is shown that the pinned vortices act to
confine a single dislocation of the vortex lattice along its glide plane.
Plastic creep of the two-dimensional vortex lattice is thereby impeded, and
macroscopic phase coherence results at low temperature in the limit of a dilute
concentration of quenched-in dislocations.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figure, 1 table, new title, submitted to Physical Review
Altitude calibration of an F100, S/N P680063, turbofan engine
An airflow and thrust calibration of an F100 engine was conducted in coordination with a flight test program to study airframe-propulsion system integration characteristics of turbofan-powered high-performance aircraft. The tests were conducted with and without augmentation for a variety of simulated flight conditions with emphasis on the transonic regime. Test results for all conditions are presented in terms of corrected airflow and corrected gross thrust as functions of corrected fan speed for nonaugmented power and an augmented thrust ratio as a function of fuel-air ratio for augmented power. Comparisons of measured and predicted data are presented along with the results of an uncertainty analysis for both corrected airflow and gross thrust
High–Speed Data Transmission Subsystem of the SEOSAR/PAZ Satellite
This paper analyzes a digital interface and bus system modeling and optimization of the SEOSAR/PAZ Earth Observation satellite. The important part of the satellite is an X–band Synthetic Aperture Radar instrument that integrates 384 Transmit/Receive Modules located in 12 antenna panels 7.5 m away from the central processor and controlled by a synchronous 10 Mbps bidirectional serial protocol. This type of mid–range point–to–multipoint transmission is affected by bit errors due to crosstalk, transmission line attenuation and impedance mismatches. The high–speed data communication network has been designed to optimize the transmission by using a simulation model of the data distribution system which takes into account the worst–case scenario and by developing a lab–scaled prototype which exhibits BER of 10-11 for an interfering signal of 10 Vpp. The result is a point–to–multipoint bidirectional transmission network optimized in both directions with optimal values of loads and equalization resistors. This high–speed data transmission subsystem provides a compact design through a simple solution
Layered XY-Models, Anyon Superconductors, and Spin-Liquids
The partition function of the double-layer model in the (dual) Villain
form is computed exactly in the limit of weak coupling between layers. Both
layers are found to be locked together through the
Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless transition, while they become decoupled well
inside the normal phase. These results are recovered in the general case of a
finite number of such layers. When re-interpreted in terms of the dual problems
of lattice anyon superconductivity and of spin-liquids, they also indicate that
the essential nature of the transition into the normal state found in two
dimensions persists in the case of a finite number of weakly coupled layers.Comment: 10 pgs, TeX, LA-UR-94-394
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