48,161 research outputs found
Alfven solitons in the solar wind
A nonlinear Alfven soliton solution of the MHD equations is presented. This solution represents the final state of modulationally unstable Alfven waves. A model of the expected turbulent spectrum due to a collection of such solitons is briefly described
Rigidized inflatable solar energy concentrators, 1 august 1963 - 25 december 1964
Processes for fabrication in space environment of five-foot diameter inflatable rigidized solar energy concentrator
The potential impact of new power system technology on the design of a manned space station
Larger, more complex spacecraft of the future such as a manned Space Station will require electric power systems of 100 kW and more, orders of magnitude greater than the present state of the art. Power systems at this level will have a significant impact on the spacecraft design. Historically, long-lived spacecraft have relied on silicon solar cell arrays, a nickel-cadmium storage battery and operation at 28 V dc. These technologies lead to large array areas and heavy batteries for a Space Station application. This, in turn, presents orbit altitude maintenance, attitude control, energy management and launch weight and volume constraints. Size (area) and weight of such a power system can be reduced if new higher efficiency conversion and lighter weight storage technologies are used. Several promising technology options including concentrator solar photovoltaic arrays, solar thermal dynamic and ultimately nuclear dynamic systems to reduce area are discussed. Also, higher energy storage systems such as nickel-hydrogen and the regenerative fuel cell (RFC) and higher voltage power distribution which add system flexibility, simplicity and reduce weight are examined. Emphasis is placed on the attributes and development status of emerging technologies that are sufficiently developed so that they could be available for flight use in the early to mid 1990's
A Relativistic Quaternionic Wave Equation
We study a one-component quaternionic wave equation which is relativistically
covariant. Bi-linear forms include a conserved 4-current and an antisymmetric
second rank tensor. Waves propagate within the light-cone and there is a
conserved quantity which looks like helicity. The principle of superposition is
retained in a slightly altered manner. External potentials can be introduced in
a way that allows for gauge invariance. There are some results for scattering
theory and for two-particle wavefunctions as well as the beginnings of second
quantization. However, we are unable to find a suitable Lagrangian or an
energy-momentum tensor.Comment: 19 pages; minor corrections in Section 11 and Appendix
Effects of low energy electron irradiation on formation of nitrogen-vacancy centers in single-crystal diamond
Exposure to beams of low energy electrons (2 to 30 keV) in a scanning
electron microscope locally induces formation of NV-centers without thermal
annealing in diamonds that have been implanted with nitrogen ions. We find that
non-thermal, electron beam induced NV-formation is about four times less
efficient than thermal annealing. But NV-center formation in a consecutive
thermal annealing step (800C) following exposure to low energy electrons
increases by a factor of up to 1.8 compared to thermal annealing alone. These
observations point to reconstruction of nitrogen-vacancy complexes induced by
electronic excitations from low energy electrons as an NV-center formation
mechanism and identify local electronic excitations as a means for spatially
controlled room-temperature NV-center formation
Current status of one- and two-dimensional numerical models: Successes and limitations
The capabilities of one and two-dimensional numerical solar cell modeling programs (SCAP1D and SCAP2D) are described. The occasions when a two-dimensional model is required are discussed. The application of the models to design, analysis, and prediction are presented along with a discussion of problem areas for solar cell modeling
Ion kinetic energy conservation and magnetic field strength constancy in multi-fluid solar wind Alfv\'enic turbulence
We investigate properties of the plasma fluid motion in the large amplitude
low frequency fluctuations of highly Alfv\'enic fast solar wind. We show that
protons locally conserve total kinetic energy when observed from an effective
frame of reference comoving with the fluctuations. For typical properties of
the fast wind, this frame can be reasonably identified by alpha particles,
which, owing to their drift with respect to protons at about the Alfv\'en speed
along the magnetic field, do not partake in the fluid low frequency
fluctuations. Using their velocity to transform proton velocity into the frame
of Alfv\'enic turbulence, we demonstrate that the resulting plasma motion is
characterized by a constant absolute value of the velocity, zero electric
fields, and aligned velocity and magnetic field vectors as expected for
unidirectional Alfv\'enic fluctuations in equilibrium. We propose that this
constraint, via the correlation between velocity and magnetic field in
Alfv\'enic turbulence, is at the origin of the observed constancy of the
magnetic field: while the constant velocity corresponding to constant energy
can be only observed in the frame of the fluctuations, the correspondingly
constant total magnetic field, invariant for Galilean transformations, remains
the observational signature, in the spacecraft frame, of the constant total
energy in the Alfv\'en turbulence frame.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
Sneutrino as Lightest Supersymmetric Particle in B3 mSUGRA Models and Signals at the LHC
We consider B3 mSUGRA models where we have one lepton number violating LQD
operator at the GUT scale. This can alter the supersymmetric mass spectrum
leading to a sneutrino as the lightest supersymmetric particle in a large
region of parameter space. We take into account the restrictions from neutrino
masses, the muon anomalous magnetic moment, b -> s gamma and other precision
measurements. We furthermore investigate existing restrictions from direct
searches at LEP, the Tevatron and the CERN p\bar p collider. We then give
examples for characteristic signatures at the LHC.Comment: 22 pages, 11 figure
Attentional load and sensory competition in human vision: Modulation of fMRI responses by load fixation during task-irrelevant stimulation in the peripheral visual field.
Perceptual suppression of distractors may depend on both endogenous and exogenous factors, such as attentional load of the current task and sensory competition among simultaneous stimuli, respectively. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to compare these two types of attentional effects and examine how they may interact in the human brain. We varied the attentional load of a visual monitoring task performed on a rapid stream at central fixation without altering the central stimuli themselves, while measuring the impact on fMRI responses to task-irrelevant peripheral checkerboards presented either unilaterally or bilaterally. Activations in visual cortex for irrelevant peripheral stimulation decreased with increasing attentional load at fixation. This relative decrease was present even in V1, but became larger for successive visual areas through to V4. Decreases in activation for contralateral peripheral checkerboards due to higher central load were more pronounced within retinotopic cortex corresponding to 'inner' peripheral locations relatively near the central targets than for more eccentric 'outer' locations, demonstrating a predominant suppression of nearby surround rather than strict 'tunnel vision' during higher task load at central fixation. Contralateral activations for peripheral stimulation in one hemifield were reduced by competition with concurrent stimulation in the other hemifield only in inferior parietal cortex, not in retinotopic areas of occipital visual cortex. In addition, central attentional load interacted with competition due to bilateral versus unilateral peripheral stimuli specifically in posterior parietal and fusiform regions. These results reveal that task-dependent attentional load, and interhemifield stimulus-competition, can produce distinct influences on the neural responses to peripheral visual stimuli within the human visual system. These distinct mechanisms in selective visual processing may be integrated within posterior parietal areas, rather than earlier occipital cortex
Colorful Strips
Given a planar point set and an integer , we wish to color the points with
colors so that any axis-aligned strip containing enough points contains all
colors. The goal is to bound the necessary size of such a strip, as a function
of . We show that if the strip size is at least , such a coloring
can always be found. We prove that the size of the strip is also bounded in any
fixed number of dimensions. In contrast to the planar case, we show that
deciding whether a 3D point set can be 2-colored so that any strip containing
at least three points contains both colors is NP-complete.
We also consider the problem of coloring a given set of axis-aligned strips,
so that any sufficiently covered point in the plane is covered by colors.
We show that in dimensions the required coverage is at most .
Lower bounds are given for the two problems. This complements recent
impossibility results on decomposition of strip coverings with arbitrary
orientations. Finally, we study a variant where strips are replaced by wedges
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