259,097 research outputs found
Advanced turboprop installation aerodynamics
The expected aerodynamic effects of a propfan installed on a thick supercritical wing are summarized qualitatively. Nacelle/wing and jet interactions, slipstream incremental velocity, nonuniform inflow, and swirl loss recovery are discussed
Survey of heat transfer to near critical fluids
Survey topics include - heat transfer boundaries of near critical region, free, natural, and forced convection experiments, oscillations, geometric effects, parameters which appear to be significant to heat transfer in critical region, and theories which have been proposed for region
Quantum Hall ferromagnetism in graphene: a SU(4) bosonization approach
We study the quantum Hall effect in graphene at filling factors \nu = 0 and
\nu = \pm, concentrating on the quantum Hall ferromagnetic regime, within a
non-perturbative bosonization formalism. We start by developing a bosonization
scheme for electrons with two discrete degrees of freedom (spin-1/2 and
pseudospin-1/2) restricted to the lowest Landau level. Three distinct phases
are considered, namely the so-called spin-pseudospin, spin, and pseudospin
phases. The first corresponds to a quarter-filled (\nu =-1) while the others to
a half-filled (\nu = 0) lowest Landau level. In each case, we show that the
elementary neutral excitations can be treated approximately as a set of
n-independent kinds of boson excitations. The boson representation of the
projected electron density, the spin, pseudospin, and mixed spin-pseudospin
density operators are derived. We then apply the developed formalism to the
effective continuous model, which includes SU(4) symmetry breaking terms,
recently proposed by Alicea and Fisher. For each quantum Hall state, an
effective interacting boson model is derived and the dispersion relations of
the elementary excitations are analytically calculated. We propose that the
charged excitations (quantum Hall skyrmions) can be described as a coherent
state of bosons. We calculate the semiclassical limit of the boson model
derived from the SU(4) invariant part of the original fermionic Hamiltonian and
show that it agrees with the results of Arovas and co-workers for SU(N) quantum
Hall skyrmions. We briefly discuss the influence of the SU(4) symmetry breaking
terms in the skyrmion energy.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, final version, extended discussion about the
boson-boson interaction and its relation with quantum Hall skyrmion
The efficiency and the demagnetization field of a general Halbach cylinder
The maximum magnetic efficiency of a general multipole Halbach cylinder of
order is found as function of . The efficiency is shown to decrease for
increasing absolute value of . The optimal ratio between the inner and outer
radius, i.e. the ratio resulting in the most efficient design, is also found as
function of and is shown to tend towards smaller and smaller magnet sizes.
Finally, the demagnetizing field in a general -Halbach cylinder is
calculated, and it is shown that demagnetization is largest either at or . For the common case of a Halbach cylinder
the maximum values of the demagnetizing field is either at at
the outer radius, where the field is always equal to the remanence, or at at the inner radius, where it is the magnitude of the field in the
bore. Thus to avoid demagnetization the coercivity of the magnets must be
larger than these values.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
The Transition Town Network: a review of current evolutions and renaissance
The Transition Network started as a movement with Transition Totnes (Devon, UK) in late 2005, with Rob Hopkins as its founder. To date it has grown to encompass 313 official Transition Network initiatives spread across the world from the UK (with roughly 50% of all initiatives) to the USA, Canada, Italy, Japan, Germany, Ireland, New Zealand, Chile, the Netherlands, Brazil and so on (Transition Network, 2010a). For any social movement, this could most certainly be described as something of a success and warrants a closer examination. Indeed, the aim of this profile is to explore the movement's aims and modus operandi, the problematics it has faced and how it is now evolving. The profile draws on my auto-ethnographic encounters with the movement in Transition Nottingham and at the recent Transition Network Conference 2010, whilst also being grounded in the material made publically available on the Transition Network and Transition Culture websites (see Transition Network, 2010b and Transition Culture, 2010a)
Recommended from our members
<i>Aloe succotrina</i> (Asphodelaceae)
Aloe succotrina has a very long and complex taxonomic and nomenclatural history with wrong synonymy that is rivalled by few other aloes. This is mostly due to early authors wrongly assuming that this plant is from the Island of Socotra (Reynolds 1950). It has been in cultivation in Europe for over three hundred years, so consequently it is rather surprising that this iconic fynbos species has not featured in this journal until now
A simplified, general-purpose deep-space ranging correlator design
A much-simplified, yet more general-purpose multi-channel deep-space ranging system correlator design that was used in past JPL spacecraft ranging systems is described. The method applies to detection of both single-component and multiple-component ranging codes, in either sequential (mu) or composite (pi) transmitted forms, and using either pseudonoise or square-wave components. Using this design, the Phobos Probe ranging system correlator computational complexity was reduced by over three orders of magnitude in multiply-and-add circuits and 45,000 bits of accumulator storage
Inflatable device for installing strain gage bridges
Methods and devices for installing in a tubular shaft multiple strain gages are disclosed with focus on a method and a device for pneumatically forcing strain gages into seated engagement with the internal surfaces of a tubular shaft in an installation of multiple strain gages in a tubular shaft. The strain gages or other electron devices are seated in a template-like component which is wrapped about a pneumatically expansible body. The component is inserted into a shaft and the body is pneumatically expanded after a suitable adhesive was applied to the surfaces
Automobile ride quality experiments correlated to iso-weighted criteria
As part of an overall study to evaluate the usefulness of ride quality criteria for the design of improved ground transportation systems an experiment was conducted involving subjective and objective measurement of ride vibrations found in an automobile riding over roadways of various roughness. Correlation of the results led to some very significant relationships between passenger rating and ride accelerations. The latter were collapsed using a frequency-weighted root mean square measure of the random vibration. The results suggest the form of a design criterion giving the relationship between ride vibration and acceptable automobile ride quality. Further the ride criterion is expressed in terms that relate to rides with which most people are familiar. The design of the experiment, the ride vibration data acquisition, the concept of frequency weighting and the correlations found between subjective and objective measurements are presented
Numerical recovery of material parameters in Euler-Bernoulli beam models
A fully Sinc-Galerkin method for recovering the spatially varying stiffness parameter in fourth-order time-dependence problems with fixed and cantilever boundary conditions is presented. The forward problems are discretized with a sinc basis in both the spatial and temporal domains. This yields an approximation solution which converges exponentially and is valid on the infinite time interval. When the forward methods are applied to parameter recovery problems, the resulting inverse problems are ill-posed. Tikhonov regularization is applied and the resulting minimization problems are solved via a quasi-Newton/trust region algorithm. The L-curve method is used to determine an appropriate value of the regularization parameter. Numerical results which highlight the method are given for problems with both fixed and cantilever boundary conditions
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