22,628 research outputs found
A flight investigation of simulated data link communications during single-pilot IFR flight
A Flight Data Console (FDC) was developed to allow simulation of a digital communications link to replace the current voice communication system used in air traffic control (ATC). The voice system requires manipulation of radio equipment, read-back of clearances, and mental storage of critical information items, all contributing to high workload, particularly during single-pilot operations. This was an inflight study to determine how a digital communications system might reduce cockpit workload, improve flight proficiency, and be accepted by general aviation pilots. Results show that instrument flight, including approach and landing, can be accomplished quite effectively using a digital data link system for ATC communications. All pilots expressed a need for a back-up voice channel. When included, this channel was used sparingly and principally to confirm any item of information about which there might be uncertainty
A flight investigation of simulated data-link communications during single-pilot IFR flight. Volume 1: Experimental design and initial test
A Flight Data Console simulation of a digital communication link to replace the current voice communication system used in air traffic control (ATC) was developed. The study determined how a digital communications system reduces cockpit workload, improve, flight proficiency, and is acceptable to general aviation pilots. It is shown that instrument flight, including approach and landing, can be accomplished by using a digital data link system for ATC communication
On the positive eigenvalues and eigenvectors of a non-negative matrix
The paper develops the general theory for the items in the title, assuming
that the matrix is countable and cofinal.Comment: Version 2 allows the matrix to have zero row(s) and rows with
infinitely many non-zero entries. In addition the introduction has been
rewritte
White matter hyperintensities and within-person variability in community-dwelling adults aged 60–64 years
Estimates of white matter hyperintensities (WMH) derived from T2-weighted MRI were investigated in relation to cognitive performance in 469 healthy community-dwelling adults aged 60–64 years. Frontal lobe WMH but not WMH from other brain regions (temporal, parietal, and occipital lobes, anterior and posterior horn, periventricular body) were associated with elevated within-person reaction time (RT) variability (trial to trial fluctuations in RT performance) but not performance on several other cognitive tasks including psychomotor speed, memory, and global cognition. The findings are consistent with the view that elevated within-person variability is related to neurobiological disturbance, and that attentional mechanisms supported by the frontal cortex play a key role in this type of variability
Electric Polarizability of Neutral Hadrons from Lattice QCD
By simulating a uniform electric field on a lattice and measuring the change
in the rest mass, we calculate the electric polarizability of neutral mesons
and baryons using the methods of quenched lattice QCD. Specifically, we measure
the electric polarizability coefficient from the quadratic response to the
electric field for 10 particles: the vector mesons and ; the
octet baryons n, , , , and ;
and the decouplet baryons , , and .
Independent calculations using two fermion actions were done for consistency
and comparison purposes. One calculation uses Wilson fermions with a lattice
spacing of fm. The other uses tadpole improved L\"usher-Weiss gauge
fields and clover quark action with a lattice spacing fm. Our results
for neutron electric polarizability are compared to experiment.Comment: 25 pages, 20 figure
Finiteness and Dual Variables for Lorentzian Spin Foam Models
We describe here some new results concerning the Lorentzian Barrett-Crane
model, a well-known spin foam formulation of quantum gravity. Generalizing an
existing finiteness result, we provide a concise proof of finiteness of the
partition function associated to all non-degenerate triangulations of
4-manifolds and for a class of degenerate triangulations not previously shown.
This is accomplished by a suitable re-factoring and re-ordering of integration,
through which a large set of variables can be eliminated. The resulting
formulation can be interpreted as a ``dual variables'' model that uses
hyperboloid variables associated to spin foam edges in place of representation
variables associated to faces. We outline how this method may also be useful
for numerical computations, which have so far proven to be very challenging for
Lorentzian spin foam models.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figur
Stress Tensor from the Trace Anomaly in Reissner-Nordstrom Spacetimes
The effective action associated with the trace anomaly provides a general
algorithm for approximating the expectation value of the stress tensor of
conformal matter fields in arbitrary curved spacetimes. In static, spherically
symmetric spacetimes, the algorithm involves solving a fourth order linear
differential equation in the radial coordinate r for the two scalar auxiliary
fields appearing in the anomaly action, and its corresponding stress tensor. By
appropriate choice of the homogeneous solutions of the auxiliary field
equations, we show that it is possible to obtain finite stress tensors on all
Reissner-Nordstrom event horizons, including the extreme Q=M case. We compare
these finite results to previous analytic approximation methods, which yield
invariably an infinite stress-energy on charged black hole horizons, as well as
with detailed numerical calculations that indicate the contrary. The
approximation scheme based on the auxiliary field effective action reproduces
all physically allowed behaviors of the quantum stress tensor, in a variety of
quantum states, for fields of any spin, in the vicinity of the entire family (0
le Q le M) of RN horizons.Comment: 43 pages, 12 figure
Dark matter line emission constraints from NuSTAR observations of the Bullet Cluster
Line emission from dark matter is well motivated for some candidates e.g.
sterile neutrinos. We present the first search for dark matter line emission in
the 3-80keV range in a pointed observation of the Bullet Cluster with NuSTAR.
We do not detect any significant line emission and instead we derive upper
limits (95% CL) on the flux, and interpret these constraints in the context of
sterile neutrinos and more generic dark matter candidates. NuSTAR does not have
the sensitivity to constrain the recently claimed line detection at 3.5keV, but
improves on the constraints for energies of 10-25keV.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Ap
Positivity of Spin Foam Amplitudes
The amplitude for a spin foam in the Barrett-Crane model of Riemannian
quantum gravity is given as a product over its vertices, edges and faces, with
one factor of the Riemannian 10j symbols appearing for each vertex, and simpler
factors for the edges and faces. We prove that these amplitudes are always
nonnegative for closed spin foams. As a corollary, all open spin foams going
between a fixed pair of spin networks have real amplitudes of the same sign.
This means one can use the Metropolis algorithm to compute expectation values
of observables in the Riemannian Barrett-Crane model, as in statistical
mechanics, even though this theory is based on a real-time (e^{iS}) rather than
imaginary-time (e^{-S}) path integral. Our proof uses the fact that when the
Riemannian 10j symbols are nonzero, their sign is positive or negative
depending on whether the sum of the ten spins is an integer or half-integer.
For the product of 10j symbols appearing in the amplitude for a closed spin
foam, these signs cancel. We conclude with some numerical evidence suggesting
that the Lorentzian 10j symbols are always nonnegative, which would imply
similar results for the Lorentzian Barrett-Crane model.Comment: 15 pages LaTeX. v3: Final version, with updated conclusions and other
minor changes. To appear in Classical and Quantum Gravity. v4: corrects # of
samples in Lorentzian tabl
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