36,067 research outputs found

    Multicomponent gas sorption Joule-Thomson refrigeration

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    The present invention relates to a cryogenic Joule-Thomson refrigeration capable of pumping multicomponent gases with a single stage sorption compressor system. Alternative methods of pumping a multicomponent gas with a single stage compressor are disclosed. In a first embodiment, the sorbent geometry is such that a void is defined near the output of the sorption compressor. When the sorbent is cooled, the sorbent primarily adsorbs the higher boiling point gas such that the lower boiling point gas passes through the sorbent to occupy the void. When the sorbent is heated, the higher boiling point gas is desorbed at high temperature and pressure and thereafter propels the lower boiling point gas out of the sorption compressor. A mixing chamber is provided to remix the constituent gases prior to expansion of the gas through a Joule-Thomson valve. Other methods of pumping a multicomponent gas are disclosed. For example, where the sorbent is porous and the low boiling point gas does not adsorb very well, the pores of the sorbent will act as a void space for the lower boiling point gas. Alternatively, a mixed sorbent may be used where a first sorbent component physically adsorbs the high boiling point gas and where the second sorbent component chemically absorbs the low boiling point gas

    Flexible thermal apparatus for mounting of thermoelectric cooler

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    A flexible heat transfer apparatus used to flexibly connect and thermally couple a thermoelectric cooler to an object to be cooled is disclosed. The flexible heat transfer apparatus consists of a pair of flexible corrugated sheets made from high thermal conductivity materials such as copper, aluminum, gold, or silver. The ridges of the corrugated sheets are oriented perpendicular to one another and bonded sandwich-fashion between three plates to define an upper section and a lower section. The upper section provides X flexure, the lower section provides Y flexure, and both sections together provide Z flexure

    Fuel economy and exhaust emissions characteristics of diesel vehicles: Test results of a prototype Fiat 131 NA 2.4 liter automobile

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    The vehicle was tested on a chassis dynamometer over selected drive cycles and steady-state conditions. Two fuels were used, a U.S. no. 2 diesel and a European diesel fuel. The vehicle was tested with retarded timing and with and without an oxidation catalyst. Particulate emission rates were calculated from dilution tunnel measurements and large volume particulate samples were collected for biological and chemical analysis. It was determined that while the catalyst was generally effective in reducing hydrocarbon and carbon monoxide levels, it was also a factor in increasing particulate emissions. Increased particulate emission rates were particularly evident when the vehicle was operated on the European fuel which has a high sulfur content

    Two-loop electroweak contributions to Δr\Delta r

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    A review is given on the quantum correction Δr\Delta r in the WW--ZZ mass correlation at the electroweak two-loop level, as derived from the calculation of the muon lifetime in the Standard Model. Exact results for Δr\Delta r and the WW-mass prediction including O(α2){\mathcal{O}}(\alpha^2) corrections with fermion loops are presented and compared with previous results of a next-to-leading order expansion in the top-quark mass.Comment: 14 pages, including 4 figures. Presented at the 5th International Symposium on Radiative Corrections, (RADCOR-2000), Carmel CA, USA, 11-15 September 200

    Finite-Temperature Properties of Ba(Zr,Ti)O3_3 Relaxors From First Principles

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    A first-principles-based technique is developed to investigate properties of Ba(Zr,Ti)O3_3 relaxor ferroelectrics as a function of temperature. The use of this scheme provides answers to important, unresolved and/or controversial questions, such as: what do the different critical temperatures usually found in relaxors correspond to? Do polar nanoregions really exist in relaxors? If yes, do they only form inside chemically-ordered regions? Is it necessary that antiferroelectricity develops in order for the relaxor behavior to occur? Are random fields and random strains really the mechanisms responsible for relaxor behavior? If not, what are these mechanisms? These {\it ab-initio-based} calculations also leads to a deep microscopic insight into relaxors.Comment: 3 figures + Supplemen

    High Sensitivity Array Observations of the z=4.4z = 4.4 QSO BRI 1335-0417

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    We present sensitive phase-referenced VLBI results on the radio continuum emission from the z=4.4z=4.4 QSO BRI 1335--0417. The observations were carried out at 1.4 GHz using the High Sensitivity Array (HSA). Our sensitive VLBI image at 189×113189 \times 113 mas (1.25×0.751.25 \times 0.75 kpc) resolution shows continuum emission in BRI 1335--0417 with a total flux density of 208±46μ208 \pm 46 \muJy, consistent with the flux density measured with the VLA. The size of the source at FWHM is 255×138255 \times 138 mas (1.7×0.91.7 \times 0.9 kpc) and the derived intrinsic brightness temperature is ∼3.5×104\sim 3.5\times 10^4 K. No continuum emission is detected at the full VLBI resolution (32×732 \times 7 mas, 211×46211 \times 46 pc), with a 4σ\sigma point source upper limit of 34 μ\muJy beam−1^{-1}, or an upper limit to the intrinsic brightness temperature of 5.6×1055.6\times 10^5 K. The highest angular resolution with at least a 4.5σ\sigma detection of the radio continuum emission is 53×2753 \times 27 mas (0.35×0.180.35 \times 0.18 kpc). At this resolution, the image shows a continuum feature in BRI 1335--0417 with a size of 64×3564 \times 35 mas (0.42×0.230.42 \times 0.23 kpc) at FWHM, and intrinsic brightness temperature of ∼2×105\sim 2\times 10^5 K. The extent of the observed continuum sources at 1.4 GHz and the derived brightness temperatures show that the radio emission (and thus presumably the far-infrared emission) in BRI 1335--0417 is powered by a major starburst, with a massive star formation rate of order a few thousand M_{\odot} {\rm yr}^{-1}.Moreover,theabsenceofanycompacthigh−brightnesstemperaturesourcesuggeststhatthereisnoradio−loudAGNinthis. Moreover, the absence of any compact high-brightness temperature source suggests that there is no radio-loud AGN in this z=4.4$ QSO.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, AJ accepte

    Error bounds on block Gauss Seidel solutions of coupled\ud multiphysics problems

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    Mathematical models in many fields often consist of coupled sub–models, each of which describe a different physical process. For many applications, the quantity of interest from these models may be written as a linear functional of the solution to the governing equations. Mature numerical solution techniques for the individual sub–models often exist. Rather than derive a numerical solution technique for the full coupled model, it is therefore natural to investigate whether these techniques may be used by coupling in a block Gauss–Seidel fashion. In this study, we derive two a posteriori bounds for such linear functionals. These bounds may be used on each Gauss–Seidel iteration to estimate the error in the linear functional computed using the single physics solvers, without actually solving the full, coupled problem. We demonstrate the use of the bound first by using a model problem from linear algebra, and then a linear ordinary differential equation example. We then investigate the effectiveness of the bound using a non–linear coupled fluid–temperature problem. One of the bounds derived is very sharp for most linear functionals considered, allowing us to predict very accurately when to terminate our block Gauss–Seidel iteration.\ud \ud Copyright c 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd

    A Cosmic Variance Cookbook

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    Deep pencil beam surveys (<1 deg^2) are of fundamental importance for studying the high-redshift universe. However, inferences about galaxy population properties are in practice limited by 'cosmic variance'. This is the uncertainty in observational estimates of the number density of galaxies arising from the underlying large-scale density fluctuations. This source of uncertainty can be significant, especially for surveys which cover only small areas and for massive high-redshift galaxies. Cosmic variance for a given galaxy population can be determined using predictions from cold dark matter theory and the galaxy bias. In this paper we provide tools for experiment design and interpretation. For a given survey geometry we present the cosmic variance of dark matter as a function of mean redshift z and redshift bin size Dz. Using a halo occupation model to predict galaxy clustering, we derive the galaxy bias as a function of mean redshift for galaxy samples of a given stellar mass range. In the linear regime, the cosmic variance of these galaxy samples is the product of the galaxy bias and the dark matter cosmic variance. We present a simple recipe using a fitting function to compute cosmic variance as a function of the angular dimensions of the field, z, Dz and stellar mass m*. We also provide tabulated values and a software tool. We find that for GOODS at z=2 and with Dz=0.5 the relative cosmic variance of galaxies with m*>10^11 Msun is ~38%, while it is ~27% for GEMS and ~12% for COSMOS. For galaxies of m*~10^10 Msun the relative cosmic variance is ~19% for GOODS, ~13% for GEMS and ~6% for COSMOS. This implies that cosmic variance is a significant source of uncertainty at z=2 for small fields and massive galaxies, while for larger fields and intermediate mass galaxies cosmic variance is less serious.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables, submitted to Ap
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