10,346 research outputs found
Dynamical Models for Sloshing Dynamics of Helium 2 Under Low-G Conditions
Coupling of sloshing dynamics within a partially filled rotating dewar of superfluid helium 2 with spacecraft dynamics are investigated in response to the realistic environmental disturbance forces and torques acting on the spacecraft during normal operation. This study investigates: (1) the rotating bubble of superfluid helium 2 reacting to combined environmental disturbances, including gravity gradient, aerodynamic, and magnetic forces and torques; (2) characteristics of slosh reaction forces and torques coupling with spacecraft dynamics; (3) the contribution of slosh dynamics to over-all spacecraft dynamics; and (4) activating of attitude and translation control system. The numerical computation of sloshing dynamics is based on the rotational frame, while the spacecraft dynamics is associated with non-rotational frame. Results show that the contributions of spacecraft dynamics are driven by the environmental disturbances coupling with slosh dynamics. Without considering the effects of environmental disturbances-driven slosh dynamics acting on spacecraft coupling with the spacecraft dynamics may lead to the wrong results for the development of spacecraft system guidance and attitude control techniques
Bubble mass center and fluid feedback force fluctuations activated by constant lateral impulse with variable thrust
Sloshing dynamics within a partially filled rotating dewar of superfluid helium 2 are investigated in response to constant lateral impulse with variable thrust. The study, including how the rotating bubble of superfluid helium 2 reacts to the constant impulse with variable time period of thrust action in microgravity, how amplitudes of bubble mass center fluctuates with growth and decay of disturbances, and how fluid feedback forces fluctuates in activating on the rotating dewar through the dynamics of sloshing waves are investigated. The numerical computation of sloshing dynamics is based on the non-inertial frame spacecraft bound coordinate with lateral impulses actuating on the rotating dewar in both inertial and non-inertial frames of thrust. Results of the simulations are illustrated
Approximate gauge symmetry of composite vector bosons
It can be shown in a solvable field theory model that the couplings of the
composite vector bosons made of a fermion pair approach the gauge couplings in
the limit of strong binding. Although this phenomenon may appear accidental and
special to the vector boson made of a fermion pair, we extend it to the case of
bosons being constituents and find that the same phenomenon occurs in more an
intriguing way. The functional formalism not only facilitates computation but
also provides us with a better insight into the generating mechanism of
approximate gauge symmetry, in particular, how the strong binding and global
current conservation conspire to generate such an approximate symmetry. Remarks
are made on its possible relevance or irrelevance to electroweak and higher
symmetries.Comment: Correction of typos. The published versio
Sloshing of Cryogenic Helium Driven by Lateral Impulse/Gravity Gradient-Dominated/or g-Jitter-Dominated Accelerations and Orbital Dynamics
The coupling of slosh dynamics within a partially filled rotating dewar of superfluid helium 11 with spacecraft orbital dynamics is investigated in response to the environmental disturbances of (a) lateral impulses, (b) gravity gradients and (c) g-jitter forces. The purpose of this study is to investigate how the coupling of helium 11 fluid slosh dynamics driven by three cases of environmental force with spacecraft dynamics can affect the bubble deformations and their associated fluid and spacecraft mass centre fluctuations. The numerical computation of slosh dynamics is based on a rotational frame, while the spacecraft dynamics is associated with a non-rotational frame. Results show that the major contribution of orbital dynamics is driven by coupling with slosh dynamics. Neglecting the effect of slosh dynamics acting on the spacecraft may lead to the wrong results for the development of orbital and attitude control techniques
Direct Observation of Valley Coupled Topological Current in MoS
The valley degree of freedom of electrons in two-dimensional transition metal
dichalcogenides has been extensively studied by theory, optical and
optoelectronic experiments. However, generation and detection of pure valley
current without relying on optical selection have not yet been demonstrated in
these materials. Here, we report that valley current can be electrically
induced and detected through the valley Hall effect and inverse valley Hall
effect, respectively, in monolayer molybdenum disulfide. Specifically,
long-range valley transport is observed over half a micron distance at room
temperature. Our findings will enable a new generation of electronic devices
utilizing the valley degree of freedom, which can be used for future novel
valleytronic applications
Rare K decays in a model of quark and lepton masses
An extension of a model of neutrino masses to the quark sector provides an
interesting link between these two sectors. A parameter which is important to
describe neutrino oscillations and masses is found to be a crucial one
appearing in various ``penguin'' operators, in particular the so-called Z
penguin. This parameter is severely constrained by the rare decay process
. This in turn has interesting implications on the
decay rates of other rare processes such as , etc..., as well
as on the masses of the neutrinos and the masses of the vector-like quarks and
leptons which appear in our model.Comment: 34 pages, 10 figures, corrected some typos in the introductio
Kaluza-Klein Structure Associated With Fat Brane
It is known that the imposition of orbifold boundary conditions on background
scalar field can give rise to a non-trivial vacuum expectation value (VEV)
along extra dimensions, which in turn generates fat branes and associated
unconventional Kaluza-Klein (KK) towers of fermions. We study the structure of
these KK towers in the limit of one large extra dimension and show that
normalizable (bound) states of massless and massive fermions can exist at both
orbifold fixed points. Closer look however indicates that orbifold boundary
conditions act to suppress at least half of bound KK modes, while periodic
boundary conditions tend to drive the high-lying modes to the conventional
structure. By investigating the scattering of fermions on branes, we
analytically compute masses and wavefunctions of KK spectra in the presence of
these boundary conditions up to one-loop level. Implication of KK-number
non-conservation couplings on the Coulomb potential is also examined.Comment: RevTex4, 29 pages, 7 ps figures, new references adde
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