8,338 research outputs found
A new approach to upscaling fracture network models while preserving geostatistical and geomechanical characteristics
A new approach to upscaling two-dimensional fracture network models is proposed for preserving geostatistical and geomechanical characteristics of a smaller-scale “source” fracture pattern. First, the scaling properties of an outcrop system are examined in terms of spatial organization, lengths, connectivity, and normal/shear displacements using fractal geometry and power law relations. The fracture pattern is observed to be nonfractal with the fractal dimension D ≈ 2, while its length distribution tends to follow a power law with the exponent 2 < a < 3. To introduce a realistic distribution of fracture aperture and shear displacement, a geomechanical model using the combined finite-discrete element method captures the response of a fractured rock sample with a domain size L = 2 m under in situ stresses. Next, a novel scheme accommodating discrete-time random walks in recursive self-referencing lattices is developed to nucleate and propagate fractures together with their stress- and scale-dependent attributes into larger domains of up to 54 m × 54 m. The advantages of this approach include preserving the nonplanarity of natural cracks, capturing the existence of long fractures, retaining the realism of variable apertures, and respecting the stress dependency of displacement-length correlations. Hydraulic behavior of multiscale growth realizations is modeled by single-phase flow simulation, where distinct permeability scaling trends are observed for different geomechanical scenarios. A transition zone is identified where flow structure shifts from extremely channeled to distributed as the network scale increases. The results of this paper have implications for upscaling network characteristics for reservoir simulation
Investigation of refractory dielectric for integrated circuits Second quarterly report, Dec. 1968
Process development for chemical deposition of aluminum oxide films as refractory dielectrics for integrated circuit
Investigation of refractory dielectric for integrated circuits Third quarterly report, Feb. 1969
Research and development on refractory dielectrics for integrated circuit
Propagation of temporal entanglement
The equations that govern the temporal evolution of two photons in the
Schr{\"o}dinger picture are derived, taking into account the effects of loss,
group-velocity dispersion, temporal phase modulation, linear coupling among
different optical modes, and four-wave mixing. Inspired by the formalism, we
propose the concept of quantum temporal imaging, which uses dispersive elements
and temporal phase modulators to manipulate the temporal correlation of two
entangled photons. We also present the exact solution of a two-photon vector
soliton, in order to demonstrate the ease of use and intuitiveness of the
proposed formulation.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Effective Dielectric Tensor for Electromagnetic Wave Propagation in Random Media
We derive exact strong-contrast expansions for the effective dielectric
tensor \epeff of electromagnetic waves propagating in a two-phase composite
random medium with isotropic components explicitly in terms of certain
integrals over the -point correlation functions of the medium. Our focus is
the long-wavelength regime, i.e., when the wavelength is much larger than the
scale of inhomogeneities in the medium. Lower-order truncations of these
expansions lead to approximations for the effective dielectric constant that
depend upon whether the medium is below or above the percolation threshold. In
particular, we apply two- and three-point approximations for \epeff to a
variety of different three-dimensional model microstructures, including
dispersions of hard spheres, hard oriented spheroids and fully penetrable
spheres as well as Debye random media, the random checkerboard, and
power-law-correlated materials. We demonstrate the importance of employing
-point correlation functions of order higher than two for high
dielectric-phase-contrast ratio. We show that disorder in the microstructure
results in an imaginary component of the effective dielectric tensor that is
directly related to the {\it coarseness} of the composite, i.e., local
volume-fraction fluctuations for infinitely large windows. The source of this
imaginary component is the attenuation of the coherent homogenized wave due to
scattering. We also remark on whether there is such attenuation in the case of
a two-phase medium with a quasiperiodic structure.Comment: 40 pages, 13 figure
Finite Mirror Effects in Advanced Interferometric Gravitational Wave Detectors
Thermal noise is expected to be the dominant source of noise in the most
sensitive frequency band of second generation ground based gravitational wave
detectors. Reshaping the beam to a flatter wider profile which probes more of
the mirror surface reduces this noise. The "Mesa" beam shape has been proposed
for this purpose and was subsequently generalized to a family of hyperboloidal
beams with two parameters: twist angle alpha and beam width D. Varying alpha
allows a continuous transition from the nearly-flat to the nearly-concentric
Mesa beam configurations. We analytically prove that in the limit of infinite D
hyperboloidal beams become Gaussians. The Advanced LIGO diffraction loss design
constraint is 1 ppm per bounce. In the past the diffraction loss has often been
calculated using the clipping approximation that, in general, underestimates
the diffraction loss. We develop a code using pseudo-spectral methods to
compute the diffraction loss directly from the propagator. We find that the
diffraction loss is not a strictly monotonic function of beam width, but has
local minima that occur due to finite mirror effects and leads to natural
choices of D. For the Mesa beam a local minimum occurs at D = 10.67 cm and
leads to a diffraction loss of 1.4 ppm. We find that if one requires a
diffraction loss of strictly 1 ppm, the alpha = 0.91 pi hyperboloidal beam is
optimal, leading to the coating thermal noise being lower by about 10% than for
a Mesa beam while other types of thermal noise decrease as well. We then
develop an iterative process that reconstructs the mirror to specifically
account for finite mirror effects. This allows us to increase the D parameter
and lower the coating noise by about 30% compared to the original Mesa
configuration.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures, 4 tables. Referee input included and typos
fixed. Accepted by Phys. Rev.
Heavy Domain Wall Fermions: The RBC and UKQCD charm physics program
We review the domain wall charm physics program of the RBC and UKQCD
collaborations based on simulations including ensembles with physical pion
mass. We summarise our current set-up and present a status update on the decay
constants , , the charm quark mass, heavy-light and heavy-strange
bag parameters and the ratio .Comment: 8 pagers, 4 figures, conference proceedings for Lattice2017 submitted
to EPJ Web of Conference
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