16,923 research outputs found
Regeneration efficiency, shuttle heat loss and thermal conductivity in epoxy-composite annualr gap regenerators from 4K to 80K
A test apparatus designed to simulate a section of a Stirling cycle cryocooler was built. Measurements of regeneration efficiency, shuttle heat loss and thermal conductivity reported for several regenerator test sections. The test composites were epoxy glass, epoxy glass with lead particles, epoxy glass with activated charcoal and epoxy graphite. Losses measured for these materials were approximately the same. Losses are in good agreement with those calculated theoretically for an epoxy glass (C-10) composite. The implications of these results on cryocooler design are discussed
High Efficiency Large Area Polysilicon Solar Cells
Large area (100 sq cm) polysilicon solar cells having efficiencies of up to 14.1% (100 mW/sq cm, 25 C) were fabricated and a detailed analysis was performed to identify the efficiency loss mechanisms. The 1-5 characteristics of the best cell were dominated by recombination in the quasi-neutral base due to the combination of minority carrier diffusion length and base resistivity. An analysis of the microstructural defects present in the material and their effect on the electrical properties is presented
A methodology for the decomposition of discrete event models for parallel simulation
Parallel simulation has presented the possibility of performing high-speed simulation. However, when attempting to make a link between the requirements of parallel simulation and discrete event simulation used in commercial areas such as manufacturing, a major problem arises. This lies in the decomposition of the simulation into a series of concurrently executing objects. Using the activity cycle diagram simulation technique as an illustrative example, this paper suggests a solution to this decomposition problem. This is discussed within the context of providing a conceptually seamless methodology for translating simulation models into a form which can exploit the benefits of parallel computing
Effects of haloperidol and atypical neuroleptics on psychomotor performance and driving ability in schizophrenic patients - Results from an experimental study
The influence of antipsychotic treatment on the neuropsychological and psychomotor performance of schizophrenic patients is still a subject of investigation. The present study was designed to evaluate the effects of atypical neuroleptics in comparison with a conventional dopamine antagonist neuroleptic (haloperidol) on several dimensions of psychomotor performance (visual perception, attention, reaction time, and sensorimotor performance) considered to be of relevance in evaluating driving fitness. Psychomotor performance was assessed by means of the ART 90, a computerized Act and React Test which is generally used in diagnosis of psychomotor performance. The 49 participating patients were examined at discharge following psychopathological stabilisation; 20 received haloperidol, 29 received an atypical neuroleptic. Our findings demonstrate a remarkably reduced psychomotor performance in the haloperidol-treated group of schizophrenic patients compared with patients treated with atypical neuroleptics. Only 1 (5%) subject passed all subtests without major failures and could be regarded as competent to drive. Among patients with atypical neuroleptics, 7 patients (24%) passed all test parameters without major failures. Copyright (C) 2003 S. Karger AG, Basel
A small helium liquifier which provides continuous cooling based on cycled isentropic expansion
This simple cryocooler provides a small reservoir of liquid helium at a stable temperature of 4.2K. It uses a novel adaptation of the Simon expansion cryocooler to provide continuous cooling. Operation is in a four stage cycle: (1) A closed vessel of helium under high pressure is cooled to 12K using a conventional Gifford-McMahon closed-cycle cryocooler. (2) The pressure is released adiabatically providing cooling to 4.2K. (3) Liquid helium is collected in a second, well insulated, vessel. (4) The first vessel is repressurized. The cycle time is 15-30 minutes. In this manner, a pool of liquid helium is continuously maintained in the second vessel, with a temperature stability of 0.03 degrees. The continuous cooling power available is 3mW. This design provides simplicity and reliability through the absence of any orifices or moving parts at cryogenic temperatures except for the conventional Gifford-McMahon cryocooler
Compression of quantum measurement operations
We generalize recent work of Massar and Popescu dealing with the amount of
classical data that is produced by a quantum measurement on a quantum state
ensemble. In the previous work it was shown how spurious randomness generally
contained in the outcomes can be eliminated without decreasing the amount of
knowledge, to achieve an amount of data equal to the von Neumann entropy of the
ensemble. Here we extend this result by giving a more refined description of
what constitute equivalent measurements (that is measurements which provide the
same knowledge about the quantum state) and also by considering incomplete
measurements. In particular we show that one can always associate to a POVM
with elements a_j, an equivalent POVM acting on many independent copies of the
system which produces an amount of data asymptotically equal to the entropy
defect of an ensemble canonically associated to the ensemble average state and
the initial measurement (a_j). In the case where the measurement is not
maximally refined this amount of data is strictly less than the von Neumann
entropy, as obtained in the previous work. We also show that this is the best
achievable, i.e. it is impossible to devise a measurement equivalent to the
initial measurement (a_j) that produces less data. We discuss the
interpretation of these results. In particular we show how they can be used to
provide a precise and model independent measure of the amount of knowledge that
is obtained about a quantum state by a quantum measurement. We also discuss in
detail the relation between our results and Holevo's bound, at the same time
providing a new proof of this fundamental inequality.Comment: RevTeX, 13 page
Cycles of construing in radicalization and deradicalization: a study of Salafist Muslims.
© Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.This article explores radicalization and deradicalization by considering the experiences of six young Tunisian people who had become Salafist Muslims. Their responses to narrative interviews and repertory grid technique are considered from a personal construct perspective, revealing processes of construing and reconstruing, as well as relevant aspects of the structure and content of their construct systems. In two cases, their journeys involved not only radicalization but self-deradicalization, and their experiences are drawn on to consider implications for deradicalization.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
Development of systems and techniques for landing an aircraft using onboard television
A flight program was conducted to develop a landing technique with which a pilot could consistently and safely land a remotely piloted research vehicle (RPRV) without outside visual reference except through television. Otherwise, instrumentation was standard. Such factors as the selection of video parameters, the pilot's understanding of the television presentation, the pilot's ground cockpit environment, and the operational procedures for landing were considered. About 30 landings were necessary for a pilot to become sufficiently familiar and competent with the test aircraft to make powered approaches and landings with outside visual references only through television. When steep approaches and landings were made by remote control, the pilot's workload was extremely high. The test aircraft was used as a simulator for the F-15 RPRV, and as such was considered to be essential to the success of landing the F-15 RPRV
The cryptographic power of misaligned reference frames
Suppose that Alice and Bob define their coordinate axes differently, and the
change of reference frame between them is given by a probability distribution
mu over SO(3). We show that this uncertainty of reference frame is of no use
for bit commitment when mu is uniformly distributed over a (sub)group of SO(3),
but other choices of mu can give rise to a partially or even asymptotically
secure bit commitment.Comment: 4 pages Latex; v2 has a new referenc
X-ray properties of an Unbiased Hard X-ray Detected Sample of AGN
The SWIFT gamma ray observatory's Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) has detected a
sample of active galactic nuclei (AGN) based solely on their hard X-ray flux
(14-195 keV). In this paper, we present for the first time {\it XMM-Newton}
X-ray spectra for 22 BAT AGNs with no previously analyzed X-ray spectra. If our
sources are a representative sample of the BAT AGN, as we claim, our results
present for the first time global X-ray properties of an unbiased towards
absorption (n), AGN
sample. We find 9/22 low absorption (n cm), simple power
law model sources, where 4 of these sources have a statistically significant
soft component. Among these sources, we find the presence of a warm absorber
statistically significant for only one Seyfert 1 source, contrasting with the
ASCA results of \citet{rey97} and \citet{geo98}, who find signatures of warm
absorption in half or more of their Seyfert 1 samples at similar redshifts.
Additionally, the remaining sources (14/22) have more complex spectra, well-fit
by an absorbed power law at keV. Five of the complex sources are
classified as Compton-thick candidates. Further, we find four more sources with
properties consistent with the hidden/buried AGN reported by Ueda {\it et al.}
(2007). Finally, we include a comparison of the {\it XMM-Newton} EPIC spectra
with available SWIFT X-ray Telescope (XRT) observations. From these
comparisons, we find 6/16 sources with varying column densities, 6/16 sources
with varying power law indices, and 13/16 sources with varying fluxes, over
periods of hours to months. Flux and power law index are correlated for objects
where both parameters vary.Comment: 39 pages, 16 figures, accepted to Ap
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