12,999 research outputs found
Study of passive temperature and humidity control systems for advanced space suits Materials research report, 1 Jul. 1967 - 1 Sep. 1968
Study of passive temperature and humidity control systems for extravehicular space suit
Feasibility study of integral heat sink space suit concepts
Integral heat sink material space suit for body temperature contro
Optimal Agricultural Production and Trade: Implications on International Competitiveness
International Relations/Trade,
Effects of turbulence in the atmosphere of Venus on Pioneer Venus radio, phase 2
Two problems related to the effects of turbulence in the atmosphere of Venus on the Pioneer entry probe radio link were studied. In the first problem, the cross correlation between the log amplitude and phase fluctuations of the Pioneer Venus communications link is examined. Data show that for fluctuation frequencies above approximately 1 Hz there is little or no correlation. For frequencies below this region the correlation is weak and the square root of the coherence has a peak value close to 0.65. The second problem consists of interferring turbulence characteristics of the Venus atmosphere from the Mariner 5 phase fluctuations. Data show that with the data processing techniques developed and currently available, the phase error due to oscillator drift, assumed trajectory delay, and spline curve fit exceed the turbulence induced fluctuations. Results show that it is not possible to interfere with the turbulence characteristics from Mariner 5 phase fluctuations
Origin of Anomalous Water Permeation through Graphene Oxide Membrane
Water inside the low dimensional carbon structures has been considered
seriously owing to fundamental interest in its flow and structures as well as
its practical impact. Recently, the anomalous perfect penetration of water
through graphene oxide membrane was demonstrated although the membrane was
impenetrable for other liquids and even gases. The unusual auxetic behavior of
graphene oxide in the presence of water was also reported. Here, based on
first-principles calculations, we establish atomistic models for hybrid systems
composed of water and graphene oxides revealing the anomalous water behavior
inside the stacked graphene oxides. We show that formation of hexagonal ice
bilayer in between the flakes as well as melting transition of ice at the edges
of flakes are crucial to realize the perfect water permeation across the whole
stacked structures. The distance between adjacent layers that can be controlled
either by oxygen reduction process or pressure is shown to determine the water
flow thus highlighting a unique water dynamics in randomly connected
two-dimensional spaces.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Nano Letter
Ultracold Dipolar Gas of Fermionic NaK Molecules in their Absolute Ground State
We report on the creation of an ultracold dipolar gas of fermionic
NaK molecules in their absolute rovibrational and hyperfine
ground state. Starting from weakly bound Feshbach molecules, we demonstrate
hyperfine resolved two-photon transfer into the singlet ground state, coherently bridging a binding energy
difference of 0.65 eV via stimulated rapid adiabatic passage. The
spin-polarized, nearly quantum degenerate molecular gas displays a lifetime
longer than 2.5 s, highlighting NaK's stability against two-body chemical
reactions. A homogeneous electric field is applied to induce a dipole moment of
up to 0.8 Debye. With these advances, the exploration of many-body physics with
strongly dipolar Fermi gases of NaK molecules is in experimental
reach.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Two-Photon Pathway to Ultracold Ground State Molecules of NaK
We report on high-resolution spectroscopy of ultracold fermionic
\nak~Feshbach molecules, and identify a two-photon pathway to the rovibrational
singlet ground state via a resonantly mixed \Bcres intermediate state.
Photoassociation in a Na-K atomic mixture and one-photon
spectroscopy on \nak~Feshbach molecules reveal about 20 vibrational levels of
the electronically excited \ctrip state. Two of these levels are found to be
strongly perturbed by nearby \Bsing states via spin-orbit coupling, resulting
in additional lines of dominant singlet character in the perturbed complex
{}, or of
resonantly mixed character in {}. The dominantly singlet level is used to locate
the absolute rovibrational singlet ground state via Autler-Townes spectroscopy. We demonstrate coherent
two-photon coupling via dark state spectroscopy between the predominantly
triplet Feshbach molecular state and the singlet ground state. Its binding
energy is measured to be 5212.0447(1) \cm, a thousand-fold improvement in
accuracy compared to previous determinations. In their absolute singlet ground
state, \nak~molecules are chemically stable under binary collisions and possess
a large electric dipole moment of Debye. Our work thus paves the way
towards the creation of strongly dipolar Fermi gases of NaK molecules.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figure
Technology study of passive control of humidity in space suits
Water vapor condensation and adsorption techniques for passive humidity control in space suit
Quantification of Macroscopic Quantum Superpositions within Phase Space
Based on phase-space structures of quantum states, we propose a novel measure
to quantify macroscopic quantum superpositions. Our measure simultaneously
quantifies two different kinds of essential information for a given quantum
state in a harmonious manner: the degree of quantum coherence and the effective
size of the physical system that involves the superposition. It enjoys
remarkably good analytical and algebraic properties. It turns out to be the
most general and inclusive measure ever proposed that it can be applied to any
types of multipartite states and mixed states represented in phase space.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
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