427 research outputs found
Image stabilization performance optimization using an optical reference gyroscope
Thesis (M.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 1992.Includes bibliographical references (p. 75-76).Jefferey T. Hammann.M.S
The relative influences of disorder and of frustration on the glassy dynamics in magnetic systems
The magnetisation relaxations of three different types of geometrically
frustrated magnetic systems have been studied with the same experimental
procedures as previously used in spin glasses. The materials investigated are
YMoO (pyrochlore system), SrCrGaO (piled
pairs of Kagom\'e layers) and (HO)Fe(SO)(OH) (jarosite
compound). Despite a very small amount of disorder, all the samples exhibit
many characteristic features of spin glass dynamics below a freezing
temperature , much smaller than their Curie-Weiss temperature .
The ageing properties of their thermoremanent magnetization can be well
accounted for by the same scaling law as in spin glasses, and the values of the
scaling exponents are very close. The effects of temperature variations during
ageing have been specifically investigated. In the pyrochlore and the
bi-Kagom\'e compounds, a decrease of temperature after some waiting period at a
certain temperature re-initializes ageing and the evolution at the new
temperature is the same as if the system were just quenched from above .
However, as the temperature is raised back to , the sample recovers the
state it had previously reached at that temperature. These features are known
in spin glasses as rejuvenation and memory effects. They are clear signatures
of the spin glass dynamics. In the Kagom\'e compound, there is also some
rejuvenation and memory, but much larger temperature changes are needed to
observe the effects. In that sense, the behaviour of this compound is
quantitatively different from that of spin glasses.Comment: latex VersionCorrigee4.tex, 4 files, 3 figures, 5 pages (Proceedings
of the International Conference on Highly Frustrated Magnetism (HFM2003),
August 26-30, 2003, Institut Laue Langevin (ILL), Grenoble, France
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Atmospheric drivers of Greenland surface melt revealed by self-organizing maps
Recent acceleration in surface melt on the Greenland ice sheet (GrIS) has occurred concurrently with a rapidly warming Arctic and has been connected to persistent, anomalous atmospheric circulation patterns over Greenland. To identify synoptic setups favoring enhanced GrIS surface melt and their decadal changes, we develop a summer Arctic synoptic climatology by employing self-organizing maps. These are applied to daily 500 hPa geopotential height fields obtained from the Modern Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications reanalysis, 1979–2014. Particular circulation regimes are related to meteorological conditions and GrIS surface melt estimated with outputs from the Modèle Atmosphérique Régional. Our results demonstrate that the largest positive melt anomalies occur in concert with positive height anomalies near Greenland associated with wind, temperature, and humidity patterns indicative of strong meridional transport of heat and moisture. We find an increased frequency in a 500 hPa ridge over Greenland coinciding with a 63% increase in GrIS melt between the 1979–1988 and 2005–2014 periods, with 75.0% of surface melt changes attributed to thermodynamics, 17% to dynamics, and 8.0% to a combination. We also confirm that the 2007–2012 time period has the largest dynamic forcing relative of any period but also demonstrate that increased surface energy fluxes, temperature, and moisture separate from dynamic changes contributed more to melt even during this period. This implies that GrIS surface melt is likely to continue to increase in response to an ever warmer future Arctic, regardless of future atmospheric circulation patterns
Quasi-stationary trajectories of the HMF model: a topological perspective
We employ a topological approach to investigate the nature of
quasi-stationary states of the Mean Field XY Hamiltonian model that arise when
the system is initially prepared in a fully magnetized configuration. By means
of numerical simulations and analytical considerations, we show that, along the
quasi-stationary trajectories, the system evolves in a manifold of critical
points of the potential energy function. Although these critical points are
maxima, the large number of directions with marginal stability may be
responsible for the slow relaxation dynamics and the trapping of the system in
such trajectories.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Biomolecular characterization of 3500-year-old ancient Egyptian mummification balms from the Valley of the Kings
Ancient Egyptian mummification was practiced for nearly 4000 years as a key feature of some of the most complex mortuary practices documented in the archaeological record. Embalming, the preservation of the body and organs of the deceased for the afterlife, was a central component of the Egyptian mummification process. Here, we combine GC-MS, HT-GC-MS, and LC-MS/MS analyses to examine mummification balms excavated more than a century ago by Howard Carter from Tomb KV42 in the Valley of the Kings. Balm residues were scraped from now empty canopic jars that once contained the mummified organs of the noble lady Senetnay, dating to the 18th dynasty, ca. 1450 BCE. Our analysis revealed balms consisting of beeswax, plant oil, fats, bitumen, Pinaceae resins, a balsamic substance, and dammar or Pistacia tree resin. These are the richest, most complex balms yet identified for this early time period and they shed light on balm ingredients for which there is limited information in Egyptian textual sources. They highlight both the exceptional status of Senetnay and the myriad trade connections of the Egyptians in the 2nd millennium BCE. They further illustrate the excellent preservation possible even for organic remains long removed from their original archaeological context
A Crash Course on Aging
In these lecture notes I describe some of the main theoretical ideas emerged
to explain the aging dynamics. This is meant to be a very short introduction to
aging dynamics and no previous knowledge is assumed. I will go through simple
examples that allow one to grasp the main results and predictions.Comment: Lecture Notes (22 pages) given at "Unifying Concepts in Glass Physics
III", Bangalore (2004); to be published in JSTA
Aging, rejuvenation and memory effects in Ising and Heisenberg spin glasses
We have compared aging phenomena in the Fe_{0.5}Mn_{0.5}TiO_3 Ising spin
glass and in the CdCr_{1.7}In_{0.3}S_4 Heisenberg-like spin glass by means of
low-frequency ac susceptibility measurements. At constant temperature, aging
obeys the same ` scaling' in both samples as in other systems.
Investigating the effect of temperature variations, we find that the Ising
sample exhibits rejuvenation and memory effects which are qualitatively similar
to those found in other spin glasses, indicating that the existence of these
phenomena does not depend on the dimensionality of the spins. However,
systematic temperature cycling experiments on both samples show important
quantitative differences. In the Ising sample, the contribution of aging at low
temperature to aging at a slightly higher temperature is much larger than
expected from thermal slowing down. This is at variance with the behaviour
observed until now in other spin glasses, which show the opposite trend of a
free-energy barrier growth as the temperature is decreased. We discuss these
results in terms of a strongly renormalized microscopic attempt time for
thermal activation, and estimate the corresponding values of the barrier
exponent introduced in the scaling theories.Comment: 8 pages, including 6 figure
Experimental constraints on the -nucleus real potential
In a search for mesic states, the production of -mesons in
coincidence with forward going protons has been studied in photon induced
reactions on C for incident photon energies of 1250 - 3100 MeV. The
pairs from decays of bound or quasi-free -mesons have
been measured with the CBELSA/TAPS detector system in coincidence with protons
registered in the MiniTAPS forward array. Structures in the total energy
distribution of the pairs, which would indicate the population
and decay of bound B states, are not observed. The
cross section of 0.3 nb/MeV/sr observed in the bound state energy regime
between -100 and 0 MeV may be accounted for by yield leaking into the bound
state regime because of the large in-medium width of the -meson. A
comparison of the measured total energy distribution with calculations suggests
the real part of the B potential to be small and only
weakly attractive with 35(stat) 20(syst) MeV
in contrast to some theoretical predictions of attractive potentials with a
depth of 100 - 150 MeV.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
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