3,345 research outputs found
Static and Dynamic Response of Silty Toyoura Sand with PVA Fibre and Cement Additives
After the Great East Japan Earthquake of 2011, nearly 24 million tons of disaster debris such as concrete products, natural and polymeric fibres, and tsunami deposits remained on the coast of Japan. Much of this debris was recycled and repurposed in engineering projects such as embankments, park restoration, and agricultural field restoration around Tokyo Bay, one of the hardest hit regions of the country. Such a major disaster developed a need for the stabilization of the liquefaction susceptible regions of the reclaimed Tokyo Bay coastline. This thesis specifically focuses on the stabilization against liquefaction of Toyoura sand with the typical silt contents found in the Tokyo Bay region using polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) fibres and Ordinary Portland Cement (OPC). A link between the large strain static and dynamic behavior of the silty sand and the microstructural elements controlling the mechanical response of the amended soil was developed.
On a macro scale (Rowe cell, bender element, & cyclic triaxial tests), trends based on cement content, fibre content, silica flour content, and cyclic stress ratio were developed to aid the prediction of the mechanical response of the soil mixture. On a micro scale (SEM and CT scans, mercury intrusion porosimetry), the pore structure, soil structure and soil fabric were visualized to understand the mechanisms underlying these trends. Results from the many tests performed confirmed that the addition of polymer fibres and cement improve the liquefaction resistance, undrained shear strength, and stiffness of silty and clean Toyoura sand. In general, the results suggest that the addition of silica flour is beneficial until a threshold percentage of 28-35% is reached, after which the soil becomes mechanically unstable and more susceptible to static and cyclic liquefaction. The addition of 0-2% fibres provides minimal improvement in all tests. Cement, as expected, improves the soils stiffness and liquefaction resistance proportional to the addition percentage
The effect of infrastructure changes on railway operations.
This paper makes use of standard simulation programs in combination with the tools of applied statistics to simulate railway operations. The purpose of the use of this tool is to evaluate and compare different possible kinds of railway infrastructure, like different types of signaling procedures, different network configuration or operational procedures. A railway system is a logistic network and because of the demand for improved railway operation, much work has been undertaken lately in this scientific field. However the author postulates the hypothesis based on a literature review that in a lot of these works there is a lack of full application of statistics. With this paper the author makes use of standard simulation programs for detailed simulation of railway operation especially with respect to the signaling and operation procedures. Additionally the influence of delays, which occur during real life railway operation is taken into account for a first time. This allows statistical evaluation of the results based on statistical significance. Also sensitivity analysis could be performed. It is demonstrated, that the results of such simulation runs show superior results when compared to other techniques not taking into account the variability. Additionally, procedures were developed to find the capacity of a railway network with the help of additional software tools. In this work the software package ARENA is used to simulate the operation of trains in railway networks. For this approach two major obstacles have to be solved: the simulation of train travelling times and the simulation of block rules used in railway operation. By introduction of visualization the confidence in the results of simulation, even for stakeholders not familiar with this technique, is increased. In this paper it is shown that with ARENA it is possible to calculate the capacity of different railway networks (scenarios). The results, which are calculated using quasi steady state simulation without variation, are similar to those obtained with other calculation methods. Additionally in one scenario the rule of thumb for the quotient between theoretical capacity and practical capacity in a railway network is confirmed by simulation including random variation. It is also demonstrated that OptQuest, an additional software package available for ARENA, is a suitable tool to find near optimal timetables in a scenario including delays. The results of this work may be not only of interest for railway operators, but also for operators of other automated transport systems. Such systems may be unmanned transport vehicles in a factory, transporting goods between different manufacturing stations. But also for automation of road traffic the results may be of interest
First experiences with Personal Networks as an enabling platform for service providers
By developing demonstrators and performing small-scale user trials, we found various opportunities and pitfalls for deploying personal networks (PNs) on a commercial basis. The demonstrators were created using as many as possible legacy devices and proven technologies. They deal with applications in the health sector, home services, tourism, and the transportation sector. This paper describes the various architectures and our experiences with the end users and the technology. We conclude that context awareness, service discovery, and content management are very important in PNs and that a personal network provider role is necessary to realize these functions under the assumptions we made. The PNPay Travel demonstrator suggests that PN service platforms provide an opportunity to develop true trans-sector services
Phase Diagram of the BCC S=1/2 Heisenberg Antiferromagnet with First and Second Neighbor Exchange
We use linked-cluster series expansions, both at T=0 and high temperature, to
analyse the phase structure of the spin-\half Heisenberg antiferromagnet with
competing first and second-neighbor interactions on the 3-dimensional
body-centred-cubic lattice. At zero temperature we find a first-order quantum
phase transition at between AF (Ne\'el)
and AF ordered phases. The high temperature series yield quite accurate
estimates of the bounding critical line for the AF phase, and an apparent
critical line for the AF phase, with a bicritical point at , . The possibility that this latter transition is
first-order cannot be excluded.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
CP--odd Correlation in the Decay of Neutral Higgs Boson into , , or
We investigate the possibility of detecting CP--odd angular correlations in
the various decay modes of the neutral Higgs boson including the modes of a
pair, a pair, or a heavy quark pair. It is a natural way to probe
the CP character of the Higgs boson once it is identified. Final state
interactions (i.e. the absorptive decay amplitude) is not required in such
correlations. As an illustrative example we take the fundamental source of the
CP nonconservation to be in the Yukawa couplings of the Higgs boson to the
heavy fermions. A similar correlation in the process is
also proposed. Our analysis of these correlations will be useful for
experiments in future colliders such as LEP II, SSC, LHC or NLC.Comment: 16 pages, plus 8 postscript graphs not posted befor
Geometrical locus of massive test particle orbits in the space of physical parameters in Kerr space-time
Gravitational radiation of binary systems can be studied by using the
adiabatic approximation in General Relativity. In this approach a small
astrophysical object follows a trajectory consisting of a chained series of
bounded geodesics (orbits) in the outer region of a Kerr Black Hole,
representing the space time created by a bigger object. In our paper we study
the entire class of orbits, both of constant radius (spherical orbits), as well
as non-null eccentricity orbits, showing a number of properties on the physical
parameters and trajectories. The main result is the determination of the
geometrical locus of all the orbits in the space of physical parameters in Kerr
space-time. This becomes a powerful tool to know if different orbits can be
connected by a continuous change of their physical parameters. A discussion on
the influence of different values of the angular momentum of the hole is given.
Main results have been obtained by analytical methods.Comment: 26 pages, 12 figure
Relativistic ponderomotive force, uphill acceleration, and transition to chaos
Starting from a covariant cycle-averaged Lagrangian the relativistic
oscillation center equation of motion of a point charge is deduced and
analytical formulae for the ponderomotive force in a travelling wave of
arbitrary strength are presented. It is further shown that the ponderomotive
forces for transverse and longitudinal waves are different; in the latter,
uphill acceleration can occur. In a standing wave there exists a threshold
intensity above which, owing to transition to chaos, the secular motion can no
longer be described by a regular ponderomotive force.
PACS number(s): 52.20.Dq,05.45.+b,52.35.Mw,52.60.+hComment: 8 pages, RevTeX, 3 figures in PostScript, see also
http://www.physik.th-darmstadt.de/tqe
Josephson vortices and solitons inside pancake vortex lattice in layered superconductors
In very anisotropic layered superconductors a tilted magnetic field generates
crossing vortex lattices of pancake and Josephson vortices (JVs). We study the
properties of an isolated JV in the lattice of pancake vortices. JV induces
deformations in the pancake vortex crystal, which, in turn, substantially
modify the JV structure. The phase field of the JV is composed of two types of
phase deformations: the regular phase and vortex phase. The phase deformations
with smaller stiffness dominate. The contribution from the vortex phase
smoothly takes over with increasing magnetic field. We find that the structure
of the cores experiences a smooth yet qualitative evolution with decrease of
the anisotropy. At large anisotropies pancakes have only small deformations
with respect to position of the ideal crystal while at smaller anisotropies the
pancake stacks in the central row smoothly transfer between the neighboring
lattice positions forming a solitonlike structure. We also find that even at
high anisotropies pancake vortices strongly pin JVs and strongly increase their
viscous friction.Comment: 22 pages, 11 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Neutron stars in generalized f(R) gravity
Quartic gravity theory is considered with the Einstein-Hilbert Lagrangean
being Ricci\'s tensor and R
the curvature scalar. The parameters and are taken of order 1 km
Arguments are given which suggest that the effective theory so obtained may be
a plausible approximation of a viable theory. A numerical integration is
performed of the field equations for a free neutron gas. As in the standard
Oppenheimer-Volkoff calculation the star mass increases with increasing central
density until about 1 solar mass and then decreases. However a dramatic
difference exists in the behaviour of the baryon number, which increases
monotonically. The calculation suggests that the theory allows stars in
equilibrium with arbitrary baryon number, no matter how large.Comment: Keywords: stars, neutron stars; gravity; modified gravity Accepted in
Astrophysics and Space Scienc
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