27 research outputs found
Vortex flow of downwind sails
This paper sets out to investigate the vortex flow of spinnaker yacht sails, which are low-aspect-ratio highly-cambered wings used to sail downwind. We tested three model-scale sails with the same sections but different twists over a range of angles of attack in a water tunnel at a Reynolds number of 21 000. We measured the forces with a balance and the velocity field with particle image velocimetry. The sails experience massively separated three-dimensional flow and leading-edge vortices convect at half of the free stream velocity in a turbulent shear layer. Despite the massive flow separation, the twist of the sail does not change the lift curve slope, in agreement with strip theory. As the angle of attack and the twist vary, flow reattachment might occur in the time-average sense, but this does not necessarily result in a higher lift to drag ratio as the vorticity field is marginally affected. Finally, we investigated the effect of secondary vorticity, vortex stretching and diffusion on the vorticity fluxes. Overall, these results provide new insights on the vortex flow and associated force generation mechanism of wings with massively separated flo
Exclusive light particle measurements for the system F + C at 96 MeV
Decay sequence of hot {31}^P nucleus has been investigated through
exclusive light charged particle measurements in coincidence with individual
evaporation residues using the reaction {19}^F (96 MeV) + {12}^C.
Information on the sequential decay chain have been extracted by confronting
the data with the predictions of the statistical model. It is observed from the
present analysis that such exclusive light charged particle data may be used as
a powerful tool to probe the decay sequence of the hot light compound systems.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, Physical Review C (in press
Age regression from soft aligned face images using low computational resources
The initial step in most facial age estimation systems consists of accurately aligning a model to the output of a face detector (e.g. an Active Appearance Model). This fitting process is very expensive in terms of computational resources and prone to get stuck in local minima. This makes it impractical for analysing faces in resource limited computing devices. In this paper we build a face age regressor that is able to work directly on faces cropped using a state-of-the-art face detector. Our procedure uses K nearest neighbours (K-NN) regression with a metric based on a properly tuned Fisher Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) projection matrix. On FG-NET we achieve a state-of-the-art Mean Absolute Error (MAE) of 5.72 years with manually aligned faces. Using face images cropped by a face detector we get a MAE of 6.87 years in the same database. Moreover, most of the algorithms presented in the literature have been evaluated on single database experiments and therefore, they report optimistically biased results. In our cross-database experiments we get a MAE of roughly 12 years, which would be the expected performance in a real world application
Cumulant to Factorial Moment Ratio and Multiplicity Data
The ratio of cumulant to factorial moments of experimental multiplicity
distributions has been calculated for and interactions in a
wide range of energies. As a function of the rank it exhibits an initial steep
decrease and a series of oscillations around zero. Those features cannot be
reproduced by the Negative Binomial Distribution. A comparable behaviour is
instead predicted in high-energy perturbative QCD. The presence of a
qualitatively similar behaviour for different processes and in wide energy
intervals suggests speaking of an approximate scaling of the cumulant to
factorial moment ratio.Comment: Submitted to Phys.Lett.B; Latex document, 11 pages, 4 PostScript
figures appended. Preprint number FIAN/TD-15/93 also FNT/AE 93-2
Measurement of the relative branching ratio BR(\Xi_c^+ \to p^+ K^-\pi^+)\BR(\Xi_c^+ \to \Xi^- \pi^+ \pi^+)
We report the observation of the Cabibbo suppressed decay \Xi_c^+ \to p
K^-\pi^+ using data collected with the FOCUS spectrometer during the 1996--97
Fermilab fixed target run. We find a \Xi_c^+ signal peak of 202\pm35 events. We
have measured the relative branching ratios BR(\Xi^+_c\to p
K^-\pi^+)/BR(\Xi^+_c\to\Xi^-\pi^+\pi^+)= 0.234 \pm 0.047 \pm 0.022 and
BR(\Xi^+_c\to p \bar{K}^*(892)^0)/BR(\Xi^+_c\to p K^-\pi^+)= 0.54 \pm 0.09 \pm
0.05 .Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
A measurement of lifetime differences in the neutral D-meson system
Using a high statistics sample of photoproduced charm particles from the
FOCUS experiment at Fermilab, we compare the lifetimes of neutral D mesons
decaying via D0 to K- pi+ and K- K+ to measure the lifetime differences between
CP even and CP odd final states. These measurements bear on the phenomenology
of D0 - D0bar mixing. If the D0 to K-pi+ is an equal mixture of CP even and CP
odd eigenstates, we measure yCP = 0.0342 \pm 0.0139 \pm 0.0074.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
Search for CP violation in D0 and D+ decays
A high statistics sample of photoproduced charm particles from the FOCUS
(E831) experiment at Fermilab has been used to search for CP violation in the
Cabibbo suppressed decay modes D+ to K-K+pi+, D0 to K-K+ and D0 to pi-pi+. We
have measured the following CP asymmetry parameters: A_CP(K-K+pi+) = +0.006 +/-
0.011 +/- 0.005, A_CP(K-K+) = -0.001 +/- 0.022 +/- 0.015 and A_CP(pi-pi+) =
+0.048 +/- 0.039 +/- 0.025 where the first error is statistical and the second
error is systematic. These asymmetries are consistent with zero with smaller
errors than previous measurements.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Measurements of the Sigma_c^0 and Sigma_c^{++} Mass Splittings
Using a high statistics sample of photoproduced charmed particles from the
FOCUS experiment at Fermilab (FNAL-E831), we measure the mass splittings of the
charmed baryons Sigma_c^0 and Sigma_c^{++}. We find M(Sigma_c^0 - Lambda_c^+) =
167.38 +/- 0.21 +/- 0.13 MeV/c^2 and M(Sigma_c^++ - Lambda_c^+) = 167.35 +/-
0.19 +/- 0.12 MeV/c^2 with samples of 362 +/- 36 and 461 +/- 39 events,
respectively. We measure the isospin mass splitting M(Sigma_c^++ - Sigma_c^0)
to be -0.03 +/- 0.28 +/- 0.11 Mev/c^2. The first errors are statistical and the
second are systematic.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Track D Social Science, Human Rights and Political Science
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/138414/1/jia218442.pd