12,346 research outputs found
Non-equilibrium radiation nuclear reactor
An externally moderated thermal nuclear reactor is disclosed which is designed to provide output power in the form of electromagnetic radiation. The reactor is a gaseous fueled nuclear cavity reactor device which can operate over wide ranges of temperature and pressure, and which includes the capability of processing and recycling waste products such as long-lived transuranium actinides. The primary output of the device may be in the form of coherent radiation, so that the reactor may be utilized as a self-critical nuclear pumped laser
Advanced indium antimonide monolithic charge coupled infrared imaging arrays
The continued process development of SiO2 insulators for use in advanced InSb monolithic charge coupled infrared imaging arrays is described. Specific investigations into the use of plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposited (PECVD) SiO2 as a gate insulator for InSb charge coupled devices is discussed, as are investigations of other chemical vapor deposited SiO2 materials
Diagrammatic Coupled Cluster Monte Carlo
We propose a modified coupled cluster Monte Carlo algorithm that
stochastically samples connected terms within the truncated
Baker--Campbell--Hausdorff expansion of the similarity transformed Hamiltonian
by construction of coupled cluster diagrams on the fly. Our new approach --
diagCCMC -- allows propagation to be performed using only the connected
components of the similarity-transformed Hamiltonian, greatly reducing the
memory cost associated with the stochastic solution of the coupled cluster
equations. We show that for perfectly local, noninteracting systems, diagCCMC
is able to represent the coupled cluster wavefunction with a memory cost that
scales linearly with system size. The favorable memory cost is observed with
the only assumption of fixed stochastic granularity and is valid for arbitrary
levels of coupled cluster theory. Significant reduction in memory cost is also
shown to smoothly appear with dissociation of a finite chain of helium atoms.
This approach is also shown not to break down in the presence of strong
correlation through the example of a stretched nitrogen molecule. Our novel
methodology moves the theoretical basis of coupled cluster Monte Carlo closer
to deterministic approaches.Comment: 31 pages, 6 figure
InSb charge coupled infrared imaging device: The 20 element linear imager
The design and fabrication of the 8585 InSb charge coupled infrared imaging device (CCIRID) chip are reported. The InSb material characteristics are described along with mask and process modifications. Test results for the 2- and 20-element CCIRID's are discussed, including gate oxide characteristics, charge transfer efficiency, optical mode of operation, and development of the surface potential diagram
The effect of intravenous amino acids on plasma amino acid concentration during total parenteral nutrition in infants with necrotizing enterocolitis
CITATION: Thom, J. C., Victor, T. & Pichanick, A. M. E. 1981. The effect of intravenous amino acids on plasma amino acid concentration during total parenteral nutrition in infants with necrotizing enterocolitis. South African Medical Journal, 59:946-948.The original publication is available at http://www.samj.org.zaPlasma aminograms of infants receiving total parenteral nutrition as part of the treatment for necrotizing enterocolitis were studied. Their ages varied from 2 to 60 days and their mean birth mass was 1621 g (range 760-2550 g). The intravenous administration of amino acids produced changes in plasma amino acid levels corresponding to the concentration of individual amino acid levels in the solution employed: higher levels of amino acids in the infusate produced increased plasma levels, whereas low plasma levels were obtained for amino acids not present or present in small amounts according to the solution used. The infants did not appear to suffer in any way, but the long-term effects still have to be evaluated. Pending further knowledge in this regard it is suggested that plasma amino acid levels should be maintained as near to normal values as possible. This could probably be achieved by the use of amino acid solutions specially formulated according to the amino acid profile of breast milk or the plasma amino acid profile of normal infants.Publisher’s versio
Topological classification of black Hole: Generic Maxwell set and crease set of horizon
The crease set of an event horizon or a Cauchy horizon is an important object
which determines qualitative properties of the horizon. In particular, it
determines the possible topologies of the spatial sections of the horizon. By
Fermat's principle in geometric optics, we relate the crease set and the
Maxwell set of a smooth function in the context of singularity theory. We
thereby give a classification of generic topological structure of the Maxwell
sets and the generic topologies of the spatial section of the horizon.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figure
Internal structure of Skyrme black hole
We consider the internal structure of the Skyrme black hole under a static
and spherically symmetric ansatz. $@u8(Be concentrate on solutions with the
node number one and with the "winding" number zero, where there exist two
solutions for each horizon radius; one solution is stable and the other is
unstable against linear perturbation. We find that a generic solution exhibits
an oscillating behavior near the sigularity, as similar to a solution in the
Einstein-Yang-Mills (EYM) system, independently to stability of the solution.
Comparing it with that in the EYM system, this oscillation becomes mild because
of the mass term of the Skyrme field. We also find Schwarzschild-like
exceptional solutions where no oscillating behavior is seen. Contrary to the
EYM system where there is one such solution branch if the node number is fixed,
there are two branches corresponding to the stable and the unstable ones.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, some contents adde
Generation of scalar-tensor gravity effects in equilibrium state boson stars
Boson stars in zero-, one-, and two-node equilibrium states are modeled
numerically within the framework of Scalar-Tensor Gravity. The complex scalar
field is taken to be both massive and self-interacting. Configurations are
formed in the case of a linear gravitational scalar coupling (the Brans-Dicke
case) and a quadratic coupling which has been used previously in a cosmological
context. The coupling parameters and asymptotic value for the gravitational
scalar field are chosen so that the known observational constraints on
Scalar-Tensor Gravity are satisfied. It is found that the constraints are so
restrictive that the field equations of General Relativity and Scalar-Tensor
gravity yield virtually identical solutions. We then use catastrophe theory to
determine the dynamically stable configurations. It is found that the maximum
mass allowed for a stable state in Scalar-Tensor gravity in the present
cosmological era is essentially unchanged from that of General Relativity. We
also construct boson star configurations appropriate to earlier cosmological
eras and find that the maximum mass for stable states is smaller than that
predicted by General Relativity, and the more so for earlier eras. However, our
results also show that if the cosmological era is early enough then only states
with positive binding energy can be constructed.Comment: 20 pages, RevTeX, 11 figures, to appear in Class. Quantum Grav.,
comments added, refs update
Lagrangian theory of structure formation in relativistic cosmology I: Lagrangian framework and definition of a nonperturbative approximation
In this first paper we present a Lagrangian framework for the description of
structure formation in general relativity, restricting attention to
irrotational dust matter. As an application we present a self-contained
derivation of a general-relativistic analogue of Zel'dovich's approximation for
the description of structure formation in cosmology, and compare it with
previous suggestions in the literature. This approximation is then
investigated: paraphrasing the derivation in the Newtonian framework we provide
general-relativistic analogues of the basic system of equations for a single
dynamical field variable and recall the first-order perturbation solution of
these equations. We then define a general-relativistic analogue of Zel'dovich's
approximation and investigate its implications by functionally evaluating
relevant variables, and we address the singularity problem. We so obtain a
possibly powerful model that, although constructed through extrapolation of a
perturbative solution, can be used to put into practice nonperturbatively, e.g.
problems of structure formation, backreaction problems, nonlinear properties of
gravitational radiation, and light-propagation in realistic inhomogeneous
universe models. With this model we also provide the key-building blocks for
initializing a fully relativistic numerical simulation.Comment: 21 pages, content matches published version in PRD, discussion on
singularities added, some formulas added, some rewritten and some correcte
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