5,151 research outputs found
Reflectance of Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) for Xenon Scintillation Light
Gaseous and liquid xenon particle detectors are being used in a number of
applications including dark matter search and neutrino-less double beta decay
experiments. Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) is often used in these detectors
both as electrical insulator and as a light reflector to improve the efficiency
of detection of scintillation photons. However, xenon emits in the vacuum
ultraviolet wavelength region (175 nm) where the reflecting properties of PTFE
are not sufficiently known.
In this work we report on measurements of PTFE reflectance, including its
angular distribution, for the xenon scintillation light. Various samples of
PTFE, manufactured by different processes (extruded, expanded, skived and
pressed) have been studied. The data were interpreted with a physical model
comprising both specular and diffuse reflections. The reflectance obtained for
these samples ranges from about 47% to 66% for VUV light. Fluoropolymers,
namely ETFE, FEP and PFA were also measured
V
Several methods were used to estimate Vs30 from site profiles with borehole depths of about 20âm for the strong-motion stations located in Southwest China. The methods implemented include extrapolation (constant and gradient), Geomatrix Site Classification correlation with shear-wave velocity, and remote sensing (terrain and topography). The gradient extrapolation is the preferred choice of this study for sites with shear-wave velocity profile data. However, it is noted that the coefficients derived from the California data set are not applicable to sites in Southwest China. Due to the scarcity of borehole profiles data with depth of more than 30âm in Southwest China, 73 Kiknet profiles were used to generate new coefficients for gradient extrapolation. Fortunately, these coefficients provide a reasonable estimate of Vs30 for sites in Southwest China. This study showed Vs30 could be estimated by the time-average shear-wave velocity (average slowness) of only 10 meters of depth. Furthermore, a median Vs30 estimate based upon Geomatrix Classification is derived from the results of the gradient extrapolation using a regional calibration of the Geomatrix Classification with Vs30. The results of this study can be applied to assign Vs30 to the sites without borehole data in Southwest China
A model of the reflection distribution in the vacuum ultra violet region
A reflection model with three components, a specular spike, a specular lobe
and a diffuse lobe is discussed. This model was successfully applied to
describe reflection of xenon scintillation light (175 nm) by PTFE and other
fluoropolymers and can be used for Monte Carlo simulation and analysis of
scintillation detectors. The measured data favors a Trowbridge-Reitz
distribution function of ellipsoidal micro-surfaces. The intensity of the
coherent reflection increases with increasing angle of incidence, as expected,
since the surface appears smoother at grazing angles. The total reflectance
obtained for PTFE is about 70% for VUV light at normal incidence in vacuum and
estimated to be up to 100% in contact with liquid xenon
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A methodology for the estimation of kappa (Îș) for large datasets. Example application to rock sites in the NGA-East database
This report reviews four of the main approaches (two band-limited and two broadband) currently used for estimating the site Îș0: the acceleration slope (AS) above the corner frequency, the displacement slope (DS) below the corner frequency, the broadband (BB) fit of the spectrum, and the response spectral shape (RESP) template. Using these four methods, estimates of Îș0 for rock sites in Central Eastern North America (CENA) in the shallow crustal dataset from NGAEast are computed for distances less than 100 km.
Using all of the data within 100 km, the mean Îș0 values are 8 msec for the AS approach and 27 msec for the DS approach. These mean values include negative Îș estimates for some sites. If the negative Îș values are removed, then the mean values are 25 msec and 42 msec, respectively. Stacking all spectra together led to mean Îș0 values of 7 and 29 msec, respectively. Overall, the DS approach yields 2â3 times higher values than the AS, which agrees with previous observations, but the uncertainty of the estimates in each case is large. The AS approach seems consistent for magnitudes down to M3 but not below.
There is large within-station variability of Îș that may be related to differences in distance, Q, complexity along the path, or particular source characteristics, such as higher or lower stress drop. The station-to-station differences may be due to site-related factors. Because most sites have been assigned Vs30 = 2000 m/sec, it is not possible to correlate variations in Îș0 with rock stiffness.
Based on the available profile, the individual spectra are corrected for crustal amplification and only affect results below 15 Hz. Since the AS and DS approaches are applied over different frequency ranges, we find that only the DS results are sensitive to the amplification correction. More detailed knowledge of individual near-surface profiles may have effects on AS results, too. Although Îș is considered to be caused solely by damping in the shallow crust, measurement techniques often cannot separate the effects of damping and amplification, and yield the net effect of both phenomena.
The two broadband approaches, BB and RESP, yield similar results. The mean Îș0_BB is 5±0.5 msec across all NEHRP class A sites. The Îș0_RESP for the two events examined is 5 and 6 msec. From literature, the average value of Îș0 in CENA is 6 ± 2 msec. This typical value is similar to the broadband estimates of this study and to the mean ÎșAS when all available recordings are used along with all flags. When only recordings with down-going FAS slope are selected from the dataset, the mean value of ÎșAS increases by a factor of 2â3.
To evaluate the scaling of high-frequency ground motion with Îș, we analyze residuals from ground motion prediction equations (GMPEs) versus Îș estimates. Using the Îș values from the AS approach, the average trend of the ln(PSA) residuals for hard-rock data do not show the expected strong dependence on Îș, but when using Îș values from the DS approach, there is a stronger correlation of the residuals, i.e., a Îș that is more consistent with the commonly used analytically based scaling. The ÎșDS estimates may better reflect the damping in the shallow crust, while the ÎșAS estimates may reflect a net effect of damping and amplification that has not been decoupled. The ÎșDS estimates are higher than the ÎșAS estimates, so the expected effect on the high-frequency ground motion is smaller than that expected for the ÎșAS estimates.
An empirical hard-rock site factor model is developed that represents the combined Vs-Îș0 site factor relative to a 760 m/sec reference-site condition. At low frequencies ( 10 Hz), the residuals do not show the strong increase in the site factors as seen in the analytical model results. A second hard-rock dataset from British Columbia, Canada, is also used. This BC hard-rock residuals show an increase in the 15â50 Hz range that is consistent with the analytical Îș0 scaling for a hard-rock Îș0 of about 0.015 sec.
The variability of the PSA residuals is also used to evaluate the Îș0 scaling for hard-rock sites from analytical modeling. The scatter in existing Îș0 values found in literature is disproportionately large compared to the observed variability in high-frequency ground motions. We compared the predicted ground-motion variability based on analytical modeling to the observed variability in our residuals. While the hard-rock sites are more variable at high frequencies due to the additional Îș0 variability, this additional variability is much less than the variability predicted by the analytical modeling using the variability from Îș0-Vs30 correlations. This is consistent with weaker Îș0 scaling compared to that predicted by the analytical modelling seen in the mean residuals
A Summary of Revisions Applied to a Turbulence Response Analysis Method for Flexible Aircraft Configurations
A software program and associated methodology to study gust loading on aircraft exists for a classification of geometrically simplified flexible configurations. This program consists of a simple aircraft response model with two rigid and three flexible symmetric degrees-of - freedom and allows for the calculation of various airplane responses due to a discrete one-minus- cosine gust as well as continuous turbulence. Simplifications, assumptions, and opportunities for potential improvements pertaining to the existing software program are first identified, then a revised version of the original software tool is developed with improved methodology to include more complex geometries, additional excitation cases, and additional output data so as to provide a more useful and precise tool for gust load analysis. In order to improve the original software program to enhance usefulness, a wing control surface and horizontal tail control surface is added, an extended application of the discrete one-minus-cosine gust input is employed, a supplemental continuous turbulence spectrum is implemented, and a capability to animate the total vehicle deformation response to gust inputs is included. These revisions and enhancements are implemented and an analysis of the results is used to validate the modifications
Squeezing Kappa (Îș) out of the transportable array: A strategy for using bandlimited data in regions of sparse seismicity
The Îș parameter (Anderson and Hough, 1984), and namely its site-specific component (Îș0), is important for predicting and simulating high-frequency ground motion. We develop a framework for estimating Îș0 and addressing uncertainties under the challenging conditions often imposed in practice: 1. Low seismicity (limited, poor-quality, distant records); 2. Limited-bandwidth data from the Transportable Array (maximum usable frequency 16 Hz); 3. Low magnitudes (ML1.2-3.4) and large uncertainty in stress drop (corner frequency). We cannot resolve stress drop within the bandwidth, so we propose an approach that only requires upper and lower bounds on its regional values to estimate Îș0. To address uncertainties, we combine three measurement approaches (acceleration spectrum slope, AS; displacement spectrum slope, DS; broadband spectral fit, BB). We also examine the effect of crustal amplification, and find that neglecting it can affect Îș0 by up to 35%. DS estimates greatly exceed AS estimates. We propose a reason behind this bias, related to the residual effect of the corner frequency on ÎșAS and ÎșDS. For our region, we estimate a frequency-independent mean S-wave Q of 900±300 at 9-16 Hz, and an ensemble mean Îș0 over all sites of 0.033±0.014 s. This value is similar to the native Îș0 of the NGA-West2 ground motion prediction equations, indicating that these do not need to be adjusted for Îș0 for use in Southern Arizona. We find that stress drop values in this region may be higher compared to estimates of previous studies, possibly due to trade-offs between stress drop and Îș0. For this dataset, the within-approach uncertainty is much larger than the between-approach uncertainty, and it cannot be reduced if the data quality is not improved. The challenges discussed here will be relevant in studies of Îș for other regions with band-limited data, e.g., any region where data come primarily from the TA
Applications of the Band-Limited-White Noise Source Model for Predicting Site-Specific Strong Ground Motions
Since the Band-Limited-White-Noise (BLWN) source model coupled with random vibration theory (RVT) was first developed in the early 1980\u27s, it has been used successfully to predict strong ground motions at rock sites in different tectonic regimes. The BLWN-RVT methodology is appropriate for an engineering characterization of strong ground motions at a site since the method captures the important features of these motions in terms of peak acceleration and spectral composition and requires a minimum of input parameters. Recently, the capability to estimate strong ground motions at soil sites has been incorporated into the methodology by using RVT and plane-wave propagators in an equivalent-linear formulation. Thus, non-linear soil response that may occur at high strain levels can now be directly estimated and analyzed. Four cases in which the BLWN-RVT methodology has been applied to predict strong ground motions will be discussed: (l) a moment magnitude (M) 7.9 New Madrid earthquake located 10 km beneath a rock site and a deep soil site; (2) a M 6.9 event similar to the 1983 Borah Peak, Idaho earthquake at several rock and thin soil sites at source-to-site distances of 10 to 27 km; (3) a M 8.0 Cascadia subduction zone earthquake at both a deep alluvial and hypothetical hard rock site in Seattle, Washington at a source-to-site distance of 70 km; and (4) a M 7.0 earthquake occurring along the Hayward fault in the eastern San Francisco Bay region at an 18-m-thick soil site, 15 km from the fault. The effects of soil amplification or deamplification (possibly due to either non-linear soil response or soil damping) will be emphasized in these case histories
Onsager's Inequality, the Landau-Feynman Ansatz and Superfluidity
We revisit an inequality due to Onsager, which states that the (quantum)
liquid structure factor has an upper bound of the form (const.) x |k|, for not
too large modulus of the wave vector k. This inequality implies the validity of
the Landau criterion in the theory of superfluidity with a definite, nonzero
critical velocity. We prove an auxiliary proposition for general Bose systems,
together with which we arrive at a rigorous proof of the inequality for one of
the very few soluble examples of an interacting Bose fluid, Girardeau's model.
The latter proof demonstrates the importance of the thermodynamic limit of the
structure factor, which must be taken initially at k different from 0. It also
substantiates very well the heuristic density functional arguments, which are
also shown to hold exactly in the limit of large wave-lengths. We also briefly
discuss which features of the proof may be present in higher dimensions, as
well as some open problems related to superfluidity of trapped gases.Comment: 28 pages, 2 figure, uses revtex
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PEER Arizona strong-motion database and GMPEs evaluation
This report summarizes the products and results of a study on the collection, processing, and analysis of earthquake ground-motions recorded in Arizona at several recording stations within 200 km from the Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station in central Arizona. The recorded ground motion in Arizona were compiled and processed according to the Pacific Earthquake Engineering Research Centerâs (PEER) record-processing standards. Shear wave velocity profiles at ten recording stations were measured through the spectral analysis of surface wave dispersion technique. Additionally, âkappaâ a measure of energy dissipation in the top 1 to 2 km of the crust, was estimated by three methodologies. The average Îș0 (kappa at zero-kilometer distance) was estimated from all sites as 0.033 sec. Finally, response spectra of the recorded ground motions in Arizona were compared with those predicted by the NGA-West2 ground motion prediction equations at large distances in Arizona. The comparison showed that overall the recorded 5% damped response spectral ordinates were over predicted by the NGA-West2 models by a range of 0-0.35 natural log units for events occurring in Central California, and by a range of 0.2-0.7 natural log units for events occurring in Southern California and the Gulf of California
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