20,924 research outputs found

    Stress analyses of B-52 pylon hooks

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    The NASTRAN finite element computer program was used in the two dimensional stress analysis of B-52 carrier aircraft pylon hooks: (1) old rear hook (which failed), (2) new rear hook (improved geometry), (3) new DAST rear hook (derated geometry), and (4) front hook. NASTRAN model meshes were generated by the aid of PATRAN-G computer program. Brittle limit loads for all the four hooks were established. The critical stress level calculated from NASTRAN agrees reasonably well with the values predicted from the fracture mechanics for the failed old rear hook

    Preflight transient dynamic analyses of B-52 aircraft carrying Space Shuttle solid rocket booster drop-test vehicle

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    This paper concerns the transient dynamic analysis of the B-52 aircraft carrying the Space Shuttle solid rocket booster drop test vehicle (SRB/DTV). The NASA structural analysis (NASTRAN) finite element computer program was used in the analysis. The B-52 operating conditions considered for analysis were (1) landing and (2) braking on aborted takeoff runs. The transient loads for the B-52 pylon front and rear hooks were calculated. The results can be used to establish the safe maneuver envelopes for the B-52 carrying the SRB/DTV in landings and brakings

    Partonic Effects in Heavy Ion Collisions at RHIC

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    Effects of partonic interactions in heavy ion collisions at RHIC are studied in a multiphase transport model (AMPT) that includes both initial partonic and final hadronic interactions.It is found that a large parton scattering cross section is needed to understand the measured elliptic flow of pions and two-pion correlation function.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, Workshop on Quark and Hadron Dynamics, Budapest, Hungary, March 3-7, 200

    Neutral scalar Higgs bosons in the USSM at the LHC

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    We study the possibility of discovering neutral scalar Higgs bosons in the U(1)U(1)'-extended supersymmetric standard model (USSM) at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC), by examining their productions via the exotic quark loop in the gluon fusion process at leading order. It is possible in some parameter region that the neutral scalar Higgs bosons may have stronger couplings with the exotic quarks than with top quark. In this case, the exotic quarks may contribute more significantly than top quark in productions of the neutral scalar Higgs bosons in the gluon fusion process. We find that there is indeed some parameter region in the USSM that supports our speculations.Comment: 18 pages; changed content; JPhys

    Stabilization in the braid groups II: Transversal simplicity of knots

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    The main result of this paper is a negative answer to the question: are all transversal knot types transversally simple? An explicit infinite family of examples is given of closed 3-braids that define transversal knot types that are not transversally simple. The method of proof is topological and indirect.Comment: This is the version published by Geometry & Topology on 4 October 2006. Part I (arXiv:math/0310279) is also published in this volum

    Identified Hadrons and Jet Chemistry for p+p and Au+Au Collisions at RHIC

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    The study of hadron spectra at high pTp_{T} in p+p collisions provides a good test of perturbative quantum chromo-dynamic calculations (pQCD) and baseline for measurements of nuclear modification factors in Au+Au collisions. Using events triggered by the Barrel Electro-Magnetic Calorimeter, identified charged hadron transverse momentum (pTp_T) spectra are measured up to 15 GeV/cc at mid-rapidity (y\mid y\mid << 0.5) and neutral kaon pTp_T spectra up to 12 GeV/cc in p + p collisions at sNN\sqrt{s_{NN}} = 200 GeV. The particle ratios of p/π+p/\pi^{+}, pˉ/π\bar{p}/\pi^{-} and K±,0K^{\pm,0} / π±\pi^{\pm} in p + p collisions are shown and compared with next-to-leading order pQCD calculations. In central Au+Au collisions, we report nuclear modification factors (RAAR_{AA}) for pion, kaon, proton and ρ\rho and discuss several model calculations: color-charge dependence of jet quenching and jet conversion. Finally, centrality dependence of RAAR_{AA} at high pTp_T (>> 5.5 GeV/c) for kaon are compared with that of pion in Au + Au collisions at 200 GeV.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, SQM 2009 contributio

    The influence of ion energy, ion flux, and etch temperature on the electrical and material quality of GaAs etched with an electron cyclotron resonance source

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    The residual damage incurred to GaAs via etching with a Cl2/Ar plasma generated by an electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) source was investigated as a function of variations in ion energy, ion flux, and etching temperature. The residual damage and electrical properties of GaAs were strongly influenced by changes in these etching parameters. Lattice damage was incurred in all processing situations in the form of small dislocation loops. GaAs etched at high ion energies with 200 W rf power, exhibited a defect density five times higher than GaAs etched at lower ion energies with 20 W rf power. This enhanced residual damage at the higher rf powers was paralleled by a degradation in the unannealed contact resistance. Higher etch rates, which accompany the higher rf power levels, caused the width of the disordered region to contract as the rf power was elevated. Therefore, the residual etch damage is influenced by both the generation and removal of defects. Increasing the microwave power or ion flux resulted in elevating the residual defect density, surface roughness, and unannealed contact resistance. GaAs etched at high temperatures, ∼350 °C, resulted in a lower contact resistance than GaAs etched at 25 °C. The high temperature etching augmented the defect diffusion which in turn lowered the near surface defect density. This decrease in residual damage was deemed responsible for improving the electrical performance at 350 °C. The electrical measurements were found to be more sensitive to the density of defects than the vertical extent of disorder beneath the etched surface. Results of this investigation demonstrate that in order to minimize material damage and improve electrical performance, etching with an ECR source should be performed at low rf and microwave powers with a high substrate temperature. © 1995 American Institute of Physics.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/70988/2/JAPIAU-78-4-2712-1.pd

    Particle acceleration and the origin of gamma-ray emission from Fermi Bubbles

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    Fermi LAT has discovered two extended gamma-ray bubbles above and below the galactic plane. We propose that their origin is due to the energy release in the Galactic center (GC) as a result of quasi-periodic star accretion onto the central black hole. Shocks generated by these processes propagate into the Galactic halo and accelerate particles there. We show that electrons accelerated up to ~10 TeV may be responsible for the observed gamma-ray emission of the bubbles as a result of inverse Compton (IC) scattering on the relic photons. We also suggest that the Bubble could generate the flux of CR protons at energies > 10^15 eV because the shocks in the Bubble have much larger length scales and longer lifetimes in comparison with those in SNRs. This may explain the the CR spectrum above the knee.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. Expanded version of the contribution to the 32nd ICRC, Beijing, #0589. To appear in the proceeding
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