2,222 research outputs found
Bimetal sensor averages temperature of nonuniform profile
Instrument that measures an average temperature across a nonuniform temperature profile under steady-state conditions has been developed. The principle of operation is an application of the expansion of a solid material caused by a change in temperature
Experimental study of flow distribution with circumferential manifolds
Water flow test results on fluid flow distribution and pressure loss in curved manifolds with tangential or radial entry are reported. Manifolds were studied both as inlet and outlet manifolds. Manifolds can be used for boilers and/or heat exchangers for advanced space electric power plants
Tunneling And The Onset Of Chaos In A Driven Bistable System
We study the interplay between coherent transport by tunneling and diffusive
transport through classically chaotic phase-space regions, as it is reflected
in the Floquet spectrum of the periodically driven quartic double well. The
tunnel splittings in the semiclassical regime are determined with high
numerical accuracy, and the association of the corresponding doublet states to
either chaotic or regular regions of the classical phase space is quantified in
terms of the overlap of the Husimi distribution with the chaotic layer along
the separatrix. We find a strong correlation between both quantities. They show
an increase by orders of magnitude as chaotic diffusion between the wells
starts to dominate the classical dynamics. We discuss semiclassical
explanations for this correlation.Comment: 17 pages in REVTeX preprint format. A version with encapsulated
Postscript figures included (via epsf) and GIF-images of wave functions are
available from the Gopher server aix.rz.uni-augsburg (port 300) in directory
U Augsburg/Inst.f.Physik/Lst.f.Theo.PhysI/Tunneling an
A perturbative approach to Dirac observables and their space-time algebra
We introduce a general approximation scheme in order to calculate gauge
invariant observables in the canonical formulation of general relativity. Using
this scheme we will show how the observables and the dynamics of field theories
on a fixed background or equivalently the observables of the linearized theory
can be understood as an approximation to the observables in full general
relativity. Gauge invariant corrections can be calculated up to an arbitrary
high order and we will explicitly calculate the first non--trivial correction.
Furthermore we will make a first investigation into the Poisson algebra between
observables corresponding to fields at different space--time points and
consider the locality properties of the observables.Comment: 23 page
(Broken) Gauge Symmetries and Constraints in Regge Calculus
We will examine the issue of diffeomorphism symmetry in simplicial models of
(quantum) gravity, in particular for Regge calculus. We find that for a
solution with curvature there do not exist exact gauge symmetries on the
discrete level. Furthermore we derive a canonical formulation that exactly
matches the dynamics and hence symmetries of the covariant picture. In this
canonical formulation broken symmetries lead to the replacements of constraints
by so--called pseudo constraints. These considerations should be taken into
account in attempts to connect spin foam models, based on the Regge action,
with canonical loop quantum gravity, which aims at implementing proper
constraints. We will argue that the long standing problem of finding a
consistent constraint algebra for discretized gravity theories is equivalent to
the problem of finding an action with exact diffeomorphism symmetries. Finally
we will analyze different limits in which the pseudo constraints might turn
into proper constraints. This could be helpful to infer alternative
discretization schemes in which the symmetries are not broken.Comment: 32 pages, 15 figure
Improved and Perfect Actions in Discrete Gravity
We consider the notion of improved and perfect actions within Regge calculus.
These actions are constructed in such a way that they - although being defined
on a triangulation - reproduce the continuum dynamics exactly, and therefore
capture the gauge symmetries of General Relativity. We construct the perfect
action in three dimensions with cosmological constant, and in four dimensions
for one simplex. We conclude with a discussion about Regge Calculus with curved
simplices, which arises naturally in this context.Comment: 28 pages, 2 figure
Testing the Master Constraint Programme for Loop Quantum Gravity II. Finite Dimensional Systems
This is the second paper in our series of five in which we test the Master
Constraint Programme for solving the Hamiltonian constraint in Loop Quantum
Gravity. In this work we begin with the simplest examples: Finite dimensional
models with a finite number of first or second class constraints, Abelean or
non -- Abelean, with or without structure functions.Comment: 23 pages, no figure
Manifestly Gauge-Invariant General Relativistic Perturbation Theory: II. FRW Background and First Order
In our companion paper we identified a complete set of manifestly
gauge-invariant observables for general relativity. This was possible by
coupling the system of gravity and matter to pressureless dust which plays the
role of a dynamically coupled observer. The evolution of those observables is
governed by a physical Hamiltonian and we derived the corresponding equations
of motion. Linear perturbation theory of those equations of motion around a
general exact solution in terms of manifestly gauge invariant perturbations was
then developed. In this paper we specialise our previous results to an FRW
background which is also a solution of our modified equations of motion. We
then compare the resulting equations with those derived in standard
cosmological perturbation theory (SCPT). We exhibit the precise relation
between our manifestly gauge-invariant perturbations and the linearly
gauge-invariant variables in SCPT. We find that our equations of motion can be
cast into SCPT form plus corrections. These corrections are the trace that the
dust leaves on the system in terms of a conserved energy momentum current
density. It turns out that these corrections decay, in fact, in the late
universe they are negligible whatever the value of the conserved current. We
conclude that the addition of dust which serves as a test observer medium,
while implying modifications of Einstein's equations without dust, leads to
acceptable agreement with known results, while having the advantage that one
now talks about manifestly gauge-invariant, that is measurable, quantities,
which can be used even in perturbation theory at higher orders.Comment: 51 pages, no figure
Signature of Chaotic Diffusion in Band Spectra
We investigate the two-point correlations in the band spectra of spatially
periodic systems that exhibit chaotic diffusion in the classical limit. By
including level pairs pertaining to non-identical quasimomenta, we define form
factors with the winding number as a spatial argument. For times smaller than
the Heisenberg time, they are related to the full space-time dependence of the
classical diffusion propagator. They approach constant asymptotes via a regime,
reflecting quantal ballistic motion, where they decay by a factor proportional
to the number of unit cells. We derive a universal scaling function for the
long-time behaviour. Our results are substantiated by a numerical study of the
kicked rotor on a torus and a quasi-one-dimensional billiard chain.Comment: 8 pages, REVTeX, 5 figures (eps
Gauge invariant perturbations around symmetry reduced sectors of general relativity: applications to cosmology
We develop a gauge invariant canonical perturbation scheme for perturbations
around symmetry reduced sectors in generally covariant theories, such as
general relativity. The central objects of investigation are gauge invariant
observables which encode the dynamics of the system. We apply this scheme to
perturbations around a homogeneous and isotropic sector (cosmology) of general
relativity. The background variables of this homogeneous and isotropic sector
are treated fully dynamically which allows us to approximate the observables to
arbitrary high order in a self--consistent and fully gauge invariant manner.
Methods to compute these observables are given. The question of backreaction
effects of inhomogeneities onto a homogeneous and isotropic background can be
addressed in this framework. We illustrate the latter by considering
homogeneous but anisotropic Bianchi--I cosmologies as perturbations around a
homogeneous and isotropic sector.Comment: 39 pages, 1 figur
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