2,083 research outputs found
Event-by-Event Fluctuations of Particle Ratios in Heavy-Ion Collisions
We study event-by-event dynamical fluctuations of various particle ratios at
different energies. We assume that particle production in final state is due to
chemical equilibrium processes. We compare results from resonance gas model
with available experimental data. At SPS energies, the model can very well
reproduce the experimentally measured fluctuations. We make predictions for
dynamical fluctuations of strangeness and non-strangeness particle ratios. We
found that the energy-dependence is non-monotonic. Furthermore, we found that
fluctuations strongly depend on particle ratios.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure, 1 tabl
Experimental studies of nanofluid thermal conductivity enhancement and applications: A review
In many applications, there is a critical need for enhancing the poor thermal conductivity of conventional fluids in order to develop efficient heat transfer fluids. This requirement can be met through dispersing nanometric particles in a given base fluid such as water, ethylene glycol, oil or air. The resulting nanofluids enhanced thermal conductivity of the base fluids. In order to evaluate this enhancement, nanofluid thermal conductivity is required to be measured. Several methods and techniques are covered in the present contribution. In addition, enhancements recorded experimentally are reviewed and summarized. Different parameters affecting on such enhancement are covered, including: nanoparticle concentration, size, shape and thermal conductivity. In addition, base fluid type, nanofluid bulk temperature and dispersion techniques are also covered parameters. However, nanofluids have the potential to contribute in several practical applications including solar thermal, transportation, electronic cooling, medical, detergency and military applications. In the present work, a brief overview of evolution in the use of nanofluids in some applications has been presented. According to this contribution, there is a critical need for further fundamental and applications of nanofluids studies in order to understand the physical mechanisms of using nanofluids as well as explore different aspects of applications of nanofluids
Opportunistic Spectrum Sharing using Dumb Basis Patterns: The Line-of-Sight Interference Scenario
We investigate a spectrum-sharing system with non-severely faded mutual
interference links, where both the secondary-to-primary and
primary-to-secondary channels have a Line-of-Sight (LoS) component. Based on a
Rician model for the LoS channels, we show, analytically and numerically, that
LoS interference hinders the achievable secondary user capacity. This is caused
by the poor dynamic range of the interference channels fluctuations when a
dominant LoS component exists. In order to improve the capacity of such system,
we propose the usage of an Electronically Steerable Parasitic Array Radiator
(ESPAR) antenna at the secondary terminals. An ESPAR antenna requires a single
RF chain and has a reconfigurable radiation pattern that is controlled by
assigning arbitrary weights to M orthonormal basis radiation patterns. By
viewing these orthonormal patterns as multiple virtual dumb antennas, we
randomly vary their weights over time creating artificial channel fluctuations
that can perfectly eliminate the undesired impact of LoS interference. Because
the proposed scheme uses a single RF chain, it is well suited for compact and
low cost mobile terminals
Dissipative Processes in the Early Universe: Bulk Viscosity
In this talk, we discuss one of the dissipative processes which likely take
place in the Early Universe. We assume that the matter filling the isotropic
and homogeneous background is to be described by a relativistic viscous fluid
characterized by an ultra-relativistic equation of state and finite bulk
viscosity deduced from recent lattice QCD calculations and heavy-ion collisions
experiments. We concentrate our treatment to bulk viscosity as one of the
essential dissipative processes in the rapidly expanding Early Universe and
deduce the dependence of the scale factor and Hubble parameter on the comoving
time . We find that both scale factor and Hubble parameter are finite at
, revering to absence of singularity. We also find that their evolution
apparently differs from the one resulting in when assuming that the background
matter is an ideal and non-viscous fluid.Comment: 8 pages, 2 eps figure, Invited talk given at the 7th international
conference on "Modern Problems of Nuclear Physics", 22-25 September 2009,
Tashkent-Uzbekista
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