6,797 research outputs found
Kinetic equilibration in heavy ion collisions: The role of elastic processes
We study the kinetic equilibration of gluons produced in the very early
stages of a high energy heavy ion collision in a ``self-consistent'' relaxation
time approximation. We compare two scenarios describing the initial state of
the gluon system, namely the saturation and the minijet scenarios, both at RHIC
and LHC energies. We argue that, in order to characterize kinetic
equilibration, it is relevant to test the isotropy of various observables. As a
consequence, we find in particular that in both scenarios elastic processes are
not sufficient for the system to reach kinetic equilibrium at RHIC energies.
More generally, we show that, contrary to what is often assumed in the
literature, elastic collisions alone are not sufficient to rapidly achieve
kinetic equilibration. Because of longitudinal expansion at early times, the
actual equilibration time is at least of the order of a few fermis.Comment: 10 pages, 2 tables, 5 figures, references added, submitted to JHE
Investigation of the utility of mean square approximation systems and in system response predictions
A method is presented for estimating the variability of a system's natural frequencies arising from the variability of the system's parameters. The only information required to obtain the estimates is the member variability, in the form of second order properties, and the natural frequencies and mode shapes of the mean system. Several examples are worked out in detail to illustrate how the method is applied
Application of CFD techniques toward the validation of nonlinear aerodynamic models
Applications of Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) methods to determine the regimes of applicability of nonlinear models describing the unsteady aerodynamic responses to aircraft flight motions are described. The potential advantages of computational methods over experimental methods are discussed and the concepts underlying mathematical modeling are reviewed. The economic and conceptual advantages of the modeling procedure over coupled, simultaneous solutions of the gasdynamic equations and the vehicle's kinematic equations of motion are discussed. The modeling approach, when valid, eliminates the need for costly repetitive computation of flow field solutions. For the test cases considered, the aerodynamic modeling approach is shown to be valid
Unified derivation of Bohmian methods and the incorporation of interference effects
We present a unified derivation of Bohmian methods that serves as a common
starting point for the derivative propagation method (DPM), Bohmian mechanics
with complex action (BOMCA) and the zero-velocity complex action method
(ZEVCA). The unified derivation begins with the ansatz
where the action, , is taken to be complex and
the quantum force is obtained by writing a hierarchy of equations of motion for
the phase partial derivatives. We demonstrate how different choices of the
trajectory velocity field yield different formulations such as DPM, BOMCA and
ZEVCA. The new derivation is used for two purposes. First, it serves as a
common basis for comparing the role of the quantum force in the DPM and BOMCA
formulations. Second, we use the new derivation to show that superposing the
contributions of real, crossing trajectories yields a nodal pattern essentially
identical to that of the exact quantum wavefunction. The latter result suggests
a promising new approach to deal with the challenging problem of nodes in
Bohmian mechanics
Numerical simulation of steady supersonic flow
A noniterative, implicit, space-marching, finite-difference algorithm was developed for the steady thin-layer Navier-Stokes equations in conservation-law form. The numerical algorithm is applicable to steady supersonic viscous flow over bodies of arbitrary shape. In addition, the same code can be used to compute supersonic inviscid flow or three-dimensional boundary layers. Computed results from two-dimensional and three-dimensional versions of the numerical algorithm are in good agreement with those obtained from more costly time-marching techniques
Narratives and Expert Information in Agenda-Setting: Experimental Evidence on State Legislator Engagement with Artificial Intelligence Policy
Are narratives as influential in gaining the attention of policymakers as expert information, including for complex, technical policy domains such as artificial intelligence (AI) policy? This pre-registered study uses a field experiment to evaluate legislator responsiveness to policy entrepreneur outreach. In partnership with a leading AI think tank, we send more than 7300 U.S. state legislative offices emails about AI policy containing an influence strategy (providing a narrative, expert information, or the organization\u27s background), along with a prominent issue frame about AI (emphasizing technological competition or ethical implications). To assess engagement, we measure link clicks to further resources and webinar registration and attendance. Although AI policy is a highly technical domain, we find that narratives are just as effective as expert information in engaging legislators. Compared to control, expert information and narratives led to 28 and 34 percent increases in policymaker engagement, respectively. Furthermore, higher legislature professionalism and lower state-level prior AI experience are associated with greater engagement with both narratives and expert information. Finally, we find that policymakers are equally engaged by an ethical framing of AI policy as they are with an economic one. The findings advance efforts to bridge scholarship on policy narratives, policy entrepreneurship, and agenda-setting
Journal Staff
Half of the world's forest is in boreal and sub-boreal ecozones, containing large carbon stores and fluxes. Carbon lost from headwater streams in these forests is underestimated. We apply a simple stable carbon isotope idea for quantifying the CO2 loss from these small streams; it is based only on in-stream samples and integrates over a significant distance upstream. We demonstrate that conventional methods of determining CO2 loss from streams necessarily underestimate the CO2 loss with results from two catchments. Dissolved carbon export from headwater catchments is similar to CO2 loss from stream surfaces. Most of the CO2 originating in high CO2 groundwaters has been lost before typical in-stream sampling occurs. In the Harp Lake catchment in Canada, headwater streams account for 10% of catchment net CO2 uptake. In the Krycklan catchment in Sweden, this more than doubles the CO2 loss from the catchment. Thus, even when corrected for aquatic CO2 loss measured by conventional methods, boreal and sub-boreal forest carbon budgets currently overestimate carbon sequestration on the landscape
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