2,766 research outputs found
Calculating the 3D magnetic field of ITER for European TBM studies
The magnetic perturbation due to the ferromagnetic test blanket modules
(TBMs) may deteriorate fast ion confinement in ITER. This effect must be
quantified by numerical studies in 3D. We have implemented a combined finite
element method (FEM) -- Biot-Savart law integrator method (BSLIM) to calculate
the ITER 3D magnetic field and vector potential in detail. Unavoidable geometry
simplifications changed the mass of the TBMs and ferritic inserts (FIs) up to
26%. This has been compensated for by modifying the nonlinear ferromagnetic
material properties accordingly. Despite the simplifications, the computation
geometry and the calculated fields are highly detailed. The combination of
careful FEM mesh design and using BSLIM enables the use of the fields
unsmoothed for particle orbit-following simulations. The magnetic field was
found to agree with earlier calculations and revealed finer details. The vector
potential is intended to serve as input for plasma shielding calculations.Comment: In proceedings of the 28th Symposium on Fusion Technolog
The Trail, 1961-05-02
https://soundideas.pugetsound.edu/thetrail_all/1827/thumbnail.jp
Cosmic microwave background power spectrum estimation with the destriping technique
Extraction of the CMB (Cosmic Microwave Background) angular power spectrum is
a challenging task for current and future CMB experiments due to the large data
sets involved. Here we describe an implementation of MASTER (Monte carlo
Apodised Spherical Transform EstimatoR) which exploits the destriping technique
as a map-making method. In this method a noise estimate based on destriped
noise-only MC (Monte Carlo) simulations is subtracted from the pseudo angular
power spectrum. As a working case we use realistic simulations of the PLANCK
LFI (Low Frequency Instrument). We found that the effect of destriping on a
pure sky signal is minimal and requires no correction. Instead we found an
effect related to the distribution of detector pointings, which affects the
high multipole part of the power spectrum. We correct for this by subtracting a
``signal bias'' estimated by MC simulations. We also give analytical estimates
for this signal bias. Our method is fast and accurate enough (the estimator is
un-biased and errors are close to theoretical expectations for maximal
accuracy) to estimate the CMB angular power spectra for current and future CMB
space missions. This study is related to PLANCK LFI activities.Comment: 16 pages, 23 figures, submitted to MNRA
Symmetry breaking in driven and strongly damped pendulum
We examine the conditions for appearance of symmetry breaking bifurcation in
damped and periodically driven pendulum in the case of strong damping. We show
that symmetry breaking, unlike other nonlinear phenomena, can exist at high
dissipation. We prove that symmetry breaking phases exist between phases of
symmetric normal and symmetric inverted oscillations. We find that symmetry
broken solutions occupy a sufficiently smaller region of pendulum's parameter
space in comparison to the statements made in earlier considerations [McDonald
and Plischke, Phys. Rev. B 27 (1983) 201]. Our research on symmetry breaking in
a strongly damped pendulum is relevant to an understanding of phenomena of
dynamic symmetry breaking and rectification in a pure ac driven semiconductor
superlattices.Comment: 11 pages, 4 color figures, RevTeX
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