4,428 research outputs found
Programmed schedule holds for improving launch vehicle holds
Baseline definition and system optimization are used for the analysis of programmed holds developed through prelaunch system analysis. Identification of design specifications for ground support equipment and maintenance concepts, and design specifications are used to describe the functional utilization of the overall flow process
The Ground State Energy of Dilute Bose Gas in Potentials with Positive Scattering Length
The leading term of the ground state energy/particle of a dilute gas of
bosons with mass in the thermodynamic limit is when
the density of the gas is , the interaction potential is non-negative and
the scattering length is positive. In this paper, we generalize the upper
bound part of this result to any interaction potential with positive scattering
length, i.e, and the lower bound part to some interaction potentials with
shallow and/or narrow negative parts.Comment: Latex 28 page
Spin-dependent electrical transport in ion-beam sputter deposited Fe-Cr multilayers
The temperature dependence of the electrical resistivity and
magnetoresistance of Xe-ion beam sputtered Fe-Cr multilayers has been
investigated. The electrical resistivity between 5 and 300 K in the fully
ferromagnetic state, obtained by applying a field beyond the saturation field
(H_sat) necessary for the antiferromagnetic(AF)-ferromagnetic(FM) field-induced
transition, shows evidence of spin-disorder resistivity as in crystalline Fe
and an s-d scattering contribution (as in 3d metals and alloys). The sublattice
magnetization m(T) in these multilayers has been calculated in terms of the
planar and interlayer exchange energies. The additional spin-dependent
scattering \Delta \rho (T) = \rho(T,H=0)_AF - \rho(T,H=H_sat)_FM in the AF
state over a wide range of temperature is found to be proportional to the
sublattice magnetization, both \Delta \rho(T) and m(T) reducing along with the
antiferromagnetic fraction. At intermediate fields, the spin-dependent part of
the electrical resistivity (\rho_s (T)) fits well to the power law \rho_s (T) =
b - cT^\alpha where c is a constant and b and \alpha are functions of H. At low
fields \alpha \approx 2 and the intercept b decreases with H much the same way
as the decrease of \Delta \rho (T) with T. A phase diagram (T vs. H_sat) is
obtained for the field- induced AF to FM transition. Comparisons are made
between the present investigation and similar studies using dc magnetron
sputtered and molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) grown Fe-Cr multilayers.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Generation of many-particle entanglement in an ion trap by adiabatic ground-state transitions
We discuss the creation of many-particle entanglement in an ion trap where
all ions are simultaneously coupled to bichromatic laser fields. It is shown
that in a time-averaged, coarse-grained picture the system can be mapped onto a
spin ensemble with controllable collective interactions. An adiabatic change of
laser parameters allows a transfer from separable to entangled eigenstates of
the many-particle Hamiltonian. Of particular interest is a transition in the
ground state which in some cases corresponds to a quantum phase transition. The
influence of decoherence mechanisms can be substantially reduced if at all
times a sufficiently large energy gap between the ground state and the first
excited state is maintained.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Effects of Backflow Correlation in the Three-Dimensional Electron Gas: Quantum Monte Carlo Study
The correlation energy of the homogeneous three-dimensional interacting
electron gas is calculated using the variational and fixed-node diffusion Monte
Carlo methods, with trial functions that include backflow and three-body
correlations. In the high density regime the effects of backflow dominate over
those due to three-body correlations, but the relative importance of the latter
increases as the density decreases. Since the backflow correlations vary the
nodes of the trial function, this leads to improved energies in the fixed-node
diffusion Monte Carlo calculations. The effects are comparable to those found
for the two-dimensional electron gas, leading to much improved variational
energies and fixed-node diffusion energies equal to the release-node energies
of Ceperley and Alder within statistical and systematic errors.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Physical Review
WASP-189b: an ultra-hot Jupiter transiting the bright A star HR 5599 in a polar orbit
We report the discovery of WASP-189b: an ultra-hot Jupiter in a 2.72-d
transiting orbit around the A star WASP-189 (HR 5599). We detected
periodic dimmings in the star's lightcurve, first with the WASP-South survey
facility then with the TRAPPIST-South telescope. We confirmed that a planet is
the cause of those dimmings via line-profile tomography and radial-velocity
measurements using the HARPS and CORALIE spectrographs. Those reveal WASP-189b
to be an ultra-hot Jupiter ( = 2.13 0.28 ;
= 1.374 0.082 ) in a polar orbit (; ) around a rapidly rotating
A6IV-V star ( = 8000 100 K; 100
km\, s). We calculate a predicted equilibrium temperature of = 2641 34 K, assuming zero albedo and efficient redistribution,
which is the third hottest for the known exoplanets. WASP-189 is the brightest
known host of a transiting hot Jupiter and the third-brightest known host of
any transiting exoplanet. We note that of the eight hot-Jupiter systems with
7000 K, seven have strongly misaligned orbits, and two of the
three systems with 8000 K have polar orbits (the third is
aligned).Comment: Submitted to MNRAS. 10 pages, 9 figures, 3 table
A low-density hot Jupiter in a near-aligned, 4.5-day orbit around a = 10.8, F5V star
We report the independent discovery and characterisation of a hot Jupiter in
a 4.5-d, transiting orbit around the star TYC 7282-1298-1 ( = 10.8, F5V).
The planet has been pursued by the NGTS team as NGTS-2b and by ourselves as
WASP-179b. We characterised the system using a combination of photometry from
WASP-South and TRAPPIST-South, and spectra from CORALIE (around the orbit) and
HARPS (through the transit). We find the planet's orbit to be nearly aligned
with its star's spin. From a detection of the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect, we
measure a projected stellar obliquity of . From
line-profile tomography of the same spectra, we measure . We find the planet to have a low density ( = 0.67
0.09 , = 1.54 0.06 ), which, along
with its moderately bright host star, makes it a good target for transmission
spectroscopy. We find a lower stellar mass ( = )
than reported by the NGTS team ( = ), though the
difference is only .Comment: Submitted to AJ. 9 pages, 6 figures, 5 table
Siren songs or path to salvation? Interpreting the visions of web technology at a UK regional newspaper in crisis, 2006-11
A 5-year case study of an established regional newspaper in Britain investigates journalists about their perceptions of convergence in digital technologies. This research is the first ethnographic longitudinal case study of a UK regional newspaper. Although conforming to some trends observed in the wider field of scholarship, the analysis adds to skepticism about any linear or directional views of innovation and adoption: the Northern Echo newspaper journalists were observed to have revised their opinions of optimum Web practices, and sometimes radically reversed policies. Technology is seen in the period as a fluid, amorphous entity. Central corporate authority appeared to diminish in the period as part of a wider reduction in formalism. Questioning functionalist notions of the market, the study suggests cause and effect models of change are often subverted by contradictory perceptions of particular actions. Meanwhile, during technological evolution, the ‘professional imagination’ can be understood as strongly reflecting the parent print culture and its routines, despite pioneering a new convergence partnership with an independent television company
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