18,586 research outputs found
A Code Phase Division Multiple Access (CPDMA) technique for VSAT satellite communications
A reference concept and implementation relevant to the application of Code Phase Division Multiple Access (CPDMA) to a high capacity satellite communication system providing 16 Kbps single hop channels between Very Small Aperture Terminals (VSAT's) is described. The description includes a potential implementation of an onboard CPDMA bulk demodulator/converter utilizing programmable charge coupled device (CCD) technology projected to be available in the early 1990's. A high level description of the system architecture and operations, identification of key functional and performance requirements of the system elements, and analysis results of end-to-end system performance relative to key figures of merit such as spectral efficiency are also provided
TDRSS S-shuttle unique receiver equipment
Beginning with STS-9, the Tracking and Date Relay Satellite system (TDRSS) will start providing S- and Ku-band communications and tracking support to the Space Shuttle and its payloads. The most significant element of this support takes place at the TDRSS White Sands Ground Terminal, which processes the Shuttle return link S- and Ku-band signals. While Ku-band hardware available to other TDRSS users is also applied to Ku-Shuttle, stringent S-Shuttle link margins have precluded the application of the standard TDRSS S-band processing equipment to S-Shuttle. It was therfore found necessary to develop a unique S-Shuttle Receiver that embodies state-of-the-art digital technology and processing techniques. This receiver, developed by Motorola, Inc., enhances link margins by 1.5 dB relative to the standard S-band equipment and its bit error rate performance is within a few tenths of a dB of theory. An overview description of the Space Shuttle Receiver Equipment (SSRE) is presented which includes the presentation of block diagrams and salient design features. Selected, measured performance results are also presented
Nonmetallic impurities improve mechanical properties of vapor-deposited tungsten
Mechanical properties of vapor deposited tungsten are improved by selective incorporation of various nonmetallic impurities. Addition of trace quantities of carbon, nitrogen, or oxygen can significantly increase both low and high temperature yield strength without greatly affecting ductile-to-brittle transition temperature
On the Creation of the Universe out of Nothing
We explain how the Universe was created with no expenditure of energy or
initial mass.Comment: To be presented at IWARA 2009 (4th International Workshop on
Astronomy and Relativistic Astrophysics), to be held in Brazil, October 200
Numerical computation of the beta function of large N SU(N) gauge theory coupled to an adjoint Dirac fermion
We use a single site lattice in four dimensions to study the scaling of large
N Yang-Mills field coupled to a single massless Dirac fermion in the adjoint
representation. We use the location of the strong to weak coupling transition
defined through the eigenvalues of the folded Wilson loop operator to set a
scale. We do not observe perturbative scaling in the region studied in this
paper. Instead, we observe that the scale changes very slowly with the bare
coupling. The lowest eigenvalue of the overlap Dirac operator is another scale
that shows similar behavior as a function of the lattice coupling. We speculate
that this behavior is due to the beta function appoaching close to a zero.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, revised version DOES NOT match the published
version in Physical Review
Vapor Deposited Tungsten for Application as a Thermionic Emitter Material
Purity and resistance to grain growth of vapor deposited tungsten tubing for use as thermionic emitte
Comment on "Classical interventions in quantum systems II. Relativistic invariance"
In a recent paper [Phys. Rev. A 61, 022117 (2000)], quant-ph/9906034, A.
Peres argued that quantum mechanics is consistent with special relativity by
proposing that the operators that describe time evolution do not need to
transform covariantly, although the measurable quantities need to transform
covariantly. We discuss the weaknesses of this proposal.Comment: 4 pages, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Neutrino Models of Dark Energy
I consider a scenario proposed by Fardon, Nelson and Weiner where dark energy
and neutrinos are connected. As a result, neutrino masses are not constant but
depend on the neutrino number density. By examining the full equation of state
for the dark sector, I show that in this scenario the dark energy is equivalent
to having a cosmological constant, but one that "runs" as the neutrino mass
changes with temperature. Two examples are examined that illustrate the
principal feautures of the dark sector of this scenario. In particular, the
cosmological constant is seen to be negligible for most of the evolution of the
Universe, becoming inportant only when neutrinos become non-relativistic. Some
speculations on features of this scenario which might be present in a more
realistic theory are also presented.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures. Added comments on why FNW scenario always leads
to a running cosmological constant and a few references. To be published in
Phys. Rev.
Effects of additions of nonmetallics on the properties of vapor-deposited tungsten
Nonmetallic additive effects on properties of vapor deposited tungste
Papapetrou Energy-Momentum Tensor for Chern-Simons Modified Gravity
We construct a conserved, symmetric energy-momentum (pseudo-)tensor for
Chern-Simons modified gravity, thus demonstrating that the theory is Lorentz
invariant. The tensor is discussed in relation to other gravitational
energy-momentum tensors and analyzed for the Schwarzschild, Reissner-Nordstrom,
and FRW solutions. To our knowledge this is the first confirmation that the
Reissner-Nordstrom and FRW metrics are solutions of the modified theory.Comment: 8 pages; typos corrected, references fixed, some calculations
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