846 research outputs found
Muon bundles from the Universe
Recently the CERN ALICE experiment, in its dedicated cosmic ray run, observed
muon bundles of very high multiplicities, thereby confirming similar findings
from the LEP era at CERN (in the CosmoLEP project). Significant evidence for
anisotropy of arrival directions of the observed high multiplicity muonic
bundles is found. Estimated directionality suggests their possible
extragalactic provenance. We argue that muonic bundles of highest multiplicity
are produced by strangelets, hypothetical stable lumps of strange quark matter
infiltrating our Universe.Comment: 4 pages, Proceedings for 17th International Conference on Strangeness
in Quark Matter, Utrecht, the Netherland
Laser spot welding of laser textured steel to aluminium
Laser welding of dissimilar metals (steel and aluminium) was investigated with the aim to increase the maximum tensile shear load of the Fe-Al joints. The increase was achieved by texturing the surface of steel prior to the laser spot welding process which was performed in a lap-joint configuration with the steel positioned on top of the aluminium and with a texture faced down to the aluminium surface. This configuration enabled an increase of the bonding area of the joints, because the molten aluminium filled in the gaps of the texture, without the need of increasing the process energy which typically leads to the growth of the intermetallic compounds. Different textures (containing hexagonally arranged craters, parallel lines, grid and spiral patterns) were tested with different laser welding parameters. The Fe-Al joints obtained with the textured steel were found to have up to 25% higher maximum tensile-shear load than the joints obtained with the untextured steel
Nanosecond laser texturing for high friction applications
AbstractA nanosecond pulsed Nd:YAG fibre laser with wavelength of 1064nm was used to texture several different steels, including grade 304 stainless steel, grade 316 stainless steel, Cr–Mo–Al ‘nitriding’ steel and low alloy carbon steel, in order to generate surfaces with a high static friction coefficient. Such surfaces have applications, for example, in large engines to reduce the tightening forces required for a joint or to secure precision fittings easily. For the generation of high friction textures, a hexagonal arrangement of laser pulses was used with various pulse overlaps and pulse energies. Friction testing of the samples suggests that the pulse energy should be high (around 0.8mJ) and the laser pulse overlap should be higher than 50% in order to achieve a static friction coefficient of more than 0.5. It was also noted that laser processing increases the surface hardness of samples which appears to correlate with the increase in friction. Energy-Dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX) measurements indicate that this hardness is caused by the formation of hard metal-oxides at the material surface
Extending the Breakthrough Listen nearby star survey to other stellar objects in the field
We extend the source sample recently observed by the Breakthrough Listen
Initiative by including additional stars (with parallaxes measured by Gaia)
that also reside within the FWHM of the GBT and Parkes radio telescope target
fields. These stars have estimated distances as listed in the extensions of the
Gaia DR2 catalogue. Enlarging the sample from 1327 to 288315 stellar objects
permits us to achieve substantially better Continuous Waveform Transmitter Rate
Figures of Merit (CWTFM) than any previous analysis, and allows us to place the
tightest limits yet on the prevalence of nearby high-duty-cycle
extraterrestrial transmitters. The results suggest % of stellar systems within 50 pc host such
transmitters (assuming an EIRP W) and % within 200 pc (assuming an EIRP W). We further extend our analysis to much greater distances, though
we caution that the detection of narrow-band signals beyond a few hundred pc
may be affected by interstellar scintillation. The extended sample also permits
us to place new constraints on the prevalence of extraterrestrial transmitters
by stellar type and spectral class. Our results suggest targeted analyses of
SETI radio data can benefit from taking into account the fact that in addition
to the target at the field centre, many other cosmic objects reside within the
primary beam response of a parabolic radio telescope. These include foreground
and background galactic stars, but also extragalactic systems. With distances
measured by Gaia, these additional sources can be used to place improved limits
on the prevalence of extraterrestrial transmitters, and extend the analysis to
a wide range of cosmic objects.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables. Accepted by MNRA
5-Approximation for -Treewidth Essentially as Fast as -Deletion Parameterized by Solution Size
The notion of -treewidth, where is a hereditary
graph class, was recently introduced as a generalization of the treewidth of an
undirected graph. Roughly speaking, a graph of -treewidth at most
can be decomposed into (arbitrarily large) -subgraphs which
interact only through vertex sets of size which can be organized in a
tree-like fashion. -treewidth can be used as a hybrid
parameterization to develop fixed-parameter tractable algorithms for
-deletion problems, which ask to find a minimum vertex set whose
removal from a given graph turns it into a member of . The
bottleneck in the current parameterized algorithms lies in the computation of
suitable tree -decompositions.
We present FPT approximation algorithms to compute tree
-decompositions for hereditary and union-closed graph classes
. Given a graph of -treewidth , we can compute a
5-approximate tree -decomposition in time
whenever -deletion parameterized by solution size can be solved in
time for some function . The current-best
algorithms either achieve an approximation factor of or construct
optimal decompositions while suffering from non-uniformity with unknown
parameter dependence. Using these decompositions, we obtain algorithms solving
Odd Cycle Transversal in time parameterized by
-treewidth and Vertex Planarization in time parameterized by -treewidth, showing that
these can be as fast as the solution-size parameterizations and giving the
first ETH-tight algorithms for parameterizations by hybrid width measures.Comment: Conference version to appear at the European Symposium on Algorithms
(ESA 2023
The Fractal Properties of the Source and BEC
Using simple space-time implementation of the random cascade model we
investigate numerically influence of the possible fractal structure of the
emitting source on Bose-Einstein correlations between identical particles. The
results are then discussed in terms of the non-extensive Tsallis statistics.Comment: LaTeX file and 2 PS files with figures, 8 pages altogether. Talk
presented at the 12th Indian Summer School "Relativistic Heavy Ion Physics,
Prague, Czech Republic, 30 August-3 Sept. 1999; to be published in Czech J.
Phys. (1999). Some typos correcte
Non equilibrium anisotropic excitons in atomically thin ReS
We present a systematic investigation of the electronic properties of bulk
and few layer ReS van der Waals crystals using low temperature optical
spectroscopy. Weak photoluminescence emission is observed from two
non-degenerate band edge excitonic transitions separated by 20 meV. The
comparable emission intensity of both excitonic transitions is incompatible
with a fully thermalized (Boltzmann) distribution of excitons, indicating the
hot nature of the emission. While DFT calculations predict bilayer ReS to
have a direct fundamental band gap, our optical data suggests that the
fundamental gap is indirect in all cases
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