44,359 research outputs found
A Class of Free Boundary Problems with Onset of a new Phase
A class of diffusion driven Free Boundary Problems is considered which is
characterized by the initial onset of a phase and by an explicit kinematic
condition for the evolution of the free boundary. By a domain fixing change of
variables it naturally leads to coupled systems comprised of a singular
parabolic initial boundary value problem and a Hamilton-Jacobi equation. Even
though the one dimensional case has been thoroughly investigated, results as
basic as well-posedness and regularity have so far not been obtained for its
higher dimensional counterpart. In this paper a recently developed regularity
theory for abstract singular parabolic Cauchy problems is utilized to obtain
the first well-posedness results for the Free Boundary Problems under
consideration. The derivation of elliptic regularity results for the underlying
static singular problems will play an important role
LOX/hydrocarbon auxiliary propulsion system study
Liquid oxygen (LOX)/hydrocarbon propulsion concepts for a "second generation' orbiter auxiliary propulsion system was evaluated. The most attractive fuel and system design approach identified, and the technology advancements that are needed to provide high confidence for a subsequent system development were determined. The fuel candidates were ethanol, methane, propane, and ammonia. Even though ammonia is not a hydrocarbon, it was included for evaluation because it is clean burning and has a good technology base. The major system design options were pump versus pressure feed, cryogenic versus ambient temperature RCS propellant feed, and the degree of OMS-RCS integration. Ethanol was determined to be the best fuel candidate. It is an earth-storable fuel with a vapor pressure slightly higher than monomethyl hydrazine. A pump-fed OMS was recommended because of its high specific impulse, enabling greater velocity change and greater payload capability than a pressure fed system
Volumetric measurement of tank volume
A method is disclosed for determining the volume of compressible gas in a system including incompressible substances in a zero-gravity environment consisting of measuring the change in pressure (delta P) for a known volume change rate (delta V/delta t) in the polytrophic region between isothermal and adiabatic conditions. The measurements are utilized in an idealized formula for determining the change in isothermal pressure (delta P sub iso) for the gas. From the isothermal pressure change (delta iso) the gas volume is obtained. The method is also applicable to determination of gas volume by utilizing work (W) in the compression process. In a passive system, the relationship of specific densities can be obtained
Gluon-Induced Weak Boson Fusion
The gluon-gluon induced terms for Higgs production through weak boson fusion
(WBF) are computed. Formally, these are of NNLO in the strong coupling
constant. This is the lowest order at which non-zero color exchange occurs
between the scattering quarks, leading to a color field and thus additional
hadronic activity between the outgoing jets. Using a minimal set of cuts, the
numerical impact of these terms is at the percent level with respect to the NLO
rate for weak boson fusion. Applying the so-called WBF cuts leads to an even
stronger suppression, so that we do not expect a significant deterioration of
the WFB signal by these color exchange effects.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures (21 included ps- and eps-files
Full O(alpha) corrections to e+e- -> sf_i sf_j
We present a complete precision analysis of the sfermion pair production
process e+e- -> sf_i sf_j (f = t, b, tau, nu_tau) in the Minimal Supersymmetric
Standard Model. Our results extend the previously calculated weak corrections
by including all one-loop corrections together with higher order QED
corrections. We present the details of the analytical calculation and discuss
the renormalization scheme. The numerical analysis shows the results for total
cross-sections, forward-backward and left-right asymmetries. It is based on the
SPS1a' point from the SPA project. The complete corrections are about 10% and
have to be taken into account in a high precision analysis.Comment: 32 pages, 24 figures, RevTeX
Cooling of Sr to high phase-space density by laser and sympathetic cooling in isotopic mixtures
Based on an experimental study of two-body and three-body collisions in
ultracold strontium samples, a novel optical-sympathetic cooling method in
isotopic mixtures is demonstrated. Without evaporative cooling, a phase-space
density of is obtained with a high spatial density that should
allow to overcome the difficulties encountered so far to reach quantum
degeneracy for Sr atoms.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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Full-field and anomaly initialization using a low-order climate model: a comparison and proposals for advanced formulations
Initialization techniques for seasonal-to-decadal climate predictions fall into two main categories; namely full-field initialization (FFI) and anomaly initialization (AI). In the FFI case the initial model state is replaced by the best possible available estimate of the real state. By doing so the initial error is efficiently reduced but, due to the unavoidable presence of model deficiencies, once the model is let free to run a prediction, its trajectory drifts away from the observations no matter how small the initial error is. This problem is partly overcome with AI where the aim is to forecast future anomalies by assimilating observed anomalies on an estimate of the model climate.
The large variety of experimental setups, models and observational networks adopted worldwide make it difficult to draw firm conclusions on the respective advantages and drawbacks of FFI and AI, or to identify distinctive lines for improvement. The lack of a unified mathematical framework adds an additional difficulty toward the design of adequate initialization strategies that fit the desired forecast horizon, observational network and model at hand.
Here we compare FFI and AI using a low-order climate model of nine ordinary differential equations and use the notation and concepts of data assimilation theory to highlight their error scaling properties. This analysis suggests better performances using FFI when a good observational network is available and reveals the direct relation of its skill with the observational accuracy. The skill of AI appears, however, mostly related to the model quality and clear increases of skill can only be expected in coincidence with model upgrades.
We have compared FFI and AI in experiments in which either the full system or the atmosphere and ocean were independently initialized. In the former case FFI shows better and longer-lasting improvements, with skillful predictions until month 30. In the initialization of single compartments, the best performance is obtained when the stabler component of the model (the ocean) is initialized, but with FFI it is possible to have some predictive skill even when the most unstable compartment (the extratropical atmosphere) is observed.
Two advanced formulations, least-square initialization (LSI) and exploring parameter uncertainty (EPU), are introduced. Using LSI the initialization makes use of model statistics to propagate information from observation locations to the entire model domain. Numerical results show that LSI improves the performance of FFI in all the situations when only a portion of the system's state is observed. EPU is an online drift correction method in which the drift caused by the parametric error is estimated using a short-time evolution law and is then removed during the forecast run. Its implementation in conjunction with FFI allows us to improve the prediction skill within the first forecast year.
Finally, the application of these results in the context of realistic climate models is discussed
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