1,200 research outputs found
Improved circularly polarized planar-array antenna
Slots sitting astride the virtual wall in a multimode wave guide can be used for generation of one component of a circularly polarized beam. There is a high degree of efficiency without the use of a slow-wave structure
Energy-storage of a prescribed impedance
Reflector antenna of the parabolic type offers complete control of its aperature illumination function. The antennas beam width can be changed easily by excitation of various amounts of the line-source feed. The conical reflector collimates a beam when the feed complies with certain geometric constraints
Advanced microwave radiometer antenna system study
The practicability of a multi-frequency antenna for spaceborne microwave radiometers was considered in detail. The program consisted of a comparative study of various antenna systems, both mechanically and electronically scanned, in relation to specified design goals and desired system performance. The study involved several distinct tasks: definition of candidate antennas that are lightweight and that, at the specified frequencies of 5, 10, 18, 22, and 36 GHz, can provide conical scanning, dual linear polarization, and simultaneous multiple frequency operation; examination of various feed systems and phase-shifting techniques; detailed analysis of several key performance parameters such as beam efficiency, sidelobe level, and antenna beam footprint size; and conception of an antenna/feed system that could meet the design goals. Candidate antennas examined include phased arrays, lenses, and optical reflector systems. Mechanical, electrical, and performance characteristics of the various systems were tabulated for ease of comparison
Early stages of phase selection in MOF formation observed in molecular Monte Carlo simulations
Metal-organic frameworks (MOF) comprising metal nodes bridged by organic linkers show great promise because of their guest-specific gas sorption, separation, drug-delivery, and catalytic properties. The selection of metal node, organic linker, and synthesis conditions in principle offers engineered control over both structure and function. For MOFs to realise their potential and to become more than just promising materials, a degree of predictability in the synthesis and a better understanding of the self-assembly or initial growth processes is of paramount importance. Using cobalt succinate, a MOF that exhibits a variety of phases depending on synthesis temperature and ligand to metal ratio, as proof of concept, we present a molecular Monte Carlo approach that allows us to simulate the early stage of MOF assembly. We introduce a new Contact Cluster Monte Carlo (CCMC) algorithm which uses a system of overlapping "virtual sites" to represent the coordination environment of the cobalt and both metal-metal and metal-ligand associations. Our simulations capture the experimentally observed synthesis phase distinction in cobalt succinate at 348 K. To the best of our knowledge this is the first case in which the formation of different MOF phases as a function of composition is captured by unbiased molecular simulations. The CCMC algorithm is equally applicable to any system in which short-range attractive interactions are a dominant feature, including hydrogen-bonding networks, metal-ligand coordination networks, or the assembly of particles with "sticky" patches, such as colloidal systems or the formation of protein complexes.</p
Integrating process and factor understanding of environmental innovation by water utilities
Innovations in technology and organisations are central to enabling the water sector to adapt to major environmental changes such as climate change, land degradation or drinking water pollution. While there are literatures on innovation as a process and on the factors that influence it, there is little research that integrates these. Development of such an integrated understanding of innovation is central to understanding how policy makers and organisations can stimulate and direct environmental innovation. In the research reported here a framework is developed that enables such an integrated analysis of innovation process and factors. From research interviews and the literature twenty factors were identified that affect the five stages of the environmental innovation process in English and Welsh water utilities. The environmental innovations investigated are measures taken by water utilities to reduce or prevent pollution in drinking water catchments rather than technical measures to treat water. These Source Control Interventions are similar to other environmental innovations, such as ecosystem and species conservation, in that they emphasise the mix of technology, management and engagement with multiple actors. Results show that in water utilities direct performance regulation and regulation that raises awareness of a ‘performance’ gap as a ‘problem’ can stimulate innovation, but only under particular organisational, natural physical and regulatory conditions. The integrated framework also suggests that while flexible or framework legislation (e.g. Water Framework Directive) does not stimulate innovation in itself, it has shaped the option spaces and characteristics of innovations selected towards source control instead of technical end-of-pipe solutions
OPserver: interactive online-computations of opacities and radiative accelerations
Codes to compute mean opacities and radiative accelerations for arbitrary
chemical mixtures using the Opacity Project recently revised data have been
restructured in a client--server architecture and transcribed as a subroutine
library. This implementation increases efficiency in stellar modelling where
element stratification due to diffusion processes is depth dependent, and thus
requires repeated fast opacity reestimates. Three user modes are provided to
fit different computing environments, namely a web browser, a local workstation
and a distributed grid.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Ising tricriticality and the dilute A model
Some universal amplitude ratios appropriate to the peturbation
of the c=7/10 minimal field theory, the subleading magnetic perturbation of the
tricritical Ising model, are explicitly demonstrated in the dilute A model,
in regime 1.Comment: 8 pages, LaTeX using iop macro
Ultraviolet Spectra of CV Accretion Disks with Non-Steady T(r) Laws
An extensive grid of synthetic mid- and far-ultraviolet spectra for accretion
disks in cataclysmic variables has been presented by Wade and Hubeny (1998). In
those models, the disk was assumed to be in steady-state, that is T_eff(r) is
specified completely by the mass M_WD and radius R_WD of the accreting white
dwarf star and the mass transfer rate M_dot which is constant throughout the
disk. In these models, T_eff(r) is proportional to r^{-3/4} except as modified
by a cutoff term near the white dwarf.
Actual disks may vary from the steady-state prescription for T_eff(r),
however, e.g. owing to outburst cycles in dwarf novae M_dot not constant with
radius) or irradiation (in which case T_eff in the outer disk is raised above
T_steady). To show how the spectra of such disks might differ from the steady
case, we present a study of the ultraviolet (UV) spectra of models in which
power-law temperature profiles T_eff(r) is proportional to r^{-gamma} with
gamma < 3/4 are specified. Otherwise, the construction of the models is the
same as in the Wade & Hubeny grid, to allow comparison. We discuss both the UV
spectral energy distributions and the appearance of the UV line spectra. We
also briefly discuss the eclipse light curves of the non-standard models.
Comparison of these models with UV observations of novalike variables suggests
that better agreement may be possible with such modified T_eff(r) profiles.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures (one reduced quality), ApJ in pres
Driving and damping mechanisms in hybrid pressure-gravity modes pulsators
We study the energetic aspects of hybrid pressure-gravity modes pulsations.
The case of hybrid beta Cephei-SPB pulsators is considered with special
attention. In addition to the already known sensitivity of the driving
mechanism to the heavy elements mixture (mainly the iron abundance), we show
that the characteristics of the propagation and evanescent regions play also a
major role, determining the extension of the stable gap in the frequency domain
between the unstable low order pressure and high order gravity modes. Finally,
we consider the case of hybrid delta Sct-gamma Dor pulsators.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figures, in the proceedings of the Helas II Conference:
"Helioseismology, Asteroseismology and MHD Connections", Goettingen, August
200
Scottish theme towns: have new identities enhanced development?
Three small towns in southwest Scotland have recently been branded as distinct theme towns, based on books, artists and food. This is an attempt to make them more attractive to visitors and thereby improve their economy. The objective of this research is to establish whether the new identities possessed by the towns have enhanced their development. It is argued, using data reviewing the past decade, that they have all developed, albeit at different rates, in terms of the economy and culture. Moreover, it is maintained that social capital has been enhanced and is a factor whose importance has been under-appreciated by planners and observers of this type of process. The relevance of the new identity to the pre-branding identity is also seen as a factor in successful development and ideas of authenticity and heritage are brought to bear on the relationship
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