1,225 research outputs found
Far infrared maser communications technology
An optically pumped FIR laser was constructed and tested. Optimum operating conditions were determined with CH3OH as the lasing medium. The laser was found to operate equally well with flowing gas or in a sealed off configuration. The FIR cavity stability and pump laser stability were found to have significant problems. The absorption coefficient per unit pressure of 1-1 difluoroethylene at the P(22) and P(24) lines of the 10.4 micron CO2 band was measured. The FIR line pumped by P(22) occurs at approximately 890 microns, which may be in an atmospheric transmission window. It was found that significant Stark tuning of absorption lines of methanol and 1-1 difluoroethylene can be accomplished, even at the usual 100 to 300 mTorr operating pressures of FIR lasers. This means that the use of Stark tuning may enable more effective use of pump laser output
New techniques in television to provide research in three-dimensional real-time or near real-time imagery and reduced cost systems for teleconferencing and educational uses, part 1
The results are presented of a continuing research and development program the objective of which is to develop a reduced bandwidth television system and a technique for television transmission of holograms. The result of the former is a variable frame rate television system, the operation of which was demonstrated for both black-and-white and color signals. This system employs a novel combination of the inexpensive mass storage capacity of a magnetic disc with the reliability of a digital system for time expansion and compression. Also reported are the results of a theoretical analysis and preliminary feasibility experiment of an innovative system for television transmission of holograms using relatively conventional TV equipment along with a phase modulated reference wave for production of the original interference pattern
A particle system with explosions: law of large numbers for the density of particles and the blow-up time
Consider a system of independent random walks in the discrete torus with
creation-annihilation of particles and possible explosion of the total number
of particles in finite time. Rescaling space and rates for
diffusion/creation/annihilation of particles, we obtain a stong law of large
numbers for the density of particles in the supremum norm. The limiting object
is a classical solution to the semilinear heat equation u_t =u_{xx} + f(u). If
f(u)=u^p, 1<p \le 3, we also obtain a law of large numbers for the explosion
time
Application of Deep Learning Long Short-Term Memory in Energy Demand Forecasting
The smart metering infrastructure has changed how electricity is measured in
both residential and industrial application. The large amount of data collected
by smart meter per day provides a huge potential for analytics to support the
operation of a smart grid, an example of which is energy demand forecasting.
Short term energy forecasting can be used by utilities to assess if any
forecasted peak energy demand would have an adverse effect on the power system
transmission and distribution infrastructure. It can also help in load
scheduling and demand side management. Many techniques have been proposed to
forecast time series including Support Vector Machine, Artificial Neural
Network and Deep Learning. In this work we use Long Short Term Memory
architecture to forecast 3-day ahead energy demand across each month in the
year. The results show that 3-day ahead demand can be accurately forecasted
with a Mean Absolute Percentage Error of 3.15%. In addition to that, the paper
proposes way to quantify the time as a feature to be used in the training phase
which is shown to affect the network performance
Stability of condensate in superconductors
According to the BCS theory the superconducting condensate develops in a
single quantum mode and no Cooper pairs out of the condensate are assumed. Here
we discuss a mechanism by which the successful mode inhibits condensation in
neighboring modes and suppresses a creation of noncondensed Cooper pairs. It is
shown that condensed and noncondensed Cooper pairs are separated by an energy
gap which is smaller than the superconducting gap but large enough to prevent
nucleation in all other modes and to eliminate effects of noncondensed Cooper
pairs on properties of superconductors. Our result thus justifies basic
assumptions of the BCS theory and confirms that the BCS condensate is stable
with respect to two-particle excitations
Reduction of Tc due to Impurities in Cuprate Superconductors
In order to explain how impurities affect the unconventional
superconductivity, we study non-magnetic impurity effect on the transition
temperature using on-site U Hubbard model within a fluctuation exchange (FLEX)
approximation. We find that in appearance, the reduction of Tc roughly
coincides with the well-known Abrikosov-Gor'kov formula. This coincidence
results from the cancellation between two effects; one is the reduction of
attractive force due to randomness, and another is the reduction of the damping
rate of quasi-particle arising from electron interaction. As another problem,
we also study impurity effect on underdoped cuprate as the system showing
pseudogap phenomena. To the aim, we adopt the pairing scenario for the
pseudogap and discuss how pseudogap phenomena affect the reduction of Tc by
impurities. We find that 'pseudogap breaking' by impurities plays the essential
role in underdoped cuprate and suppresses the Tc reduction due to the
superconducting (SC) fluctuation.Comment: 14 pages, 28 figures To be published in JPS
Superconductivity and Pseudogap in Quasi-Two-Dimensional Metals around the Antiferromagnetic Quantum Critical Point
Spin fluctuations (SF) and SF-mediated superconductivity (SC) in
quasi-two-dimensional metals around the antiferrromagnetic (AF) quantum
critical point (QCP) are investigated by using the self-consistent
renormalization theory for SF and the strong coupling theory for SC. We
introduce a parameter y0 as a measure for the distance from the AFQCP which is
approximately proportional to (x-xc), x being the electron (e) or hole (h)
doping concentration to the half-filled band and xc being the value at the
AFQCP. We present phase diagrams in the T-y0 plane including contour maps of
the AF correlation length and AF and SC transition temperatures TN and Tc,
respectively. The Tc curve is dome-shaped with a maximum at around the AFQCP.
The calculated one-electron spectral density shows a pseudogap in the
high-density-of-states region near (pi,0) below around a certain temperature T*
and gives a contour map at the Fermi energy reminiscent of the Fermi arc. These
results are discussed in comparison with e- and h-doped high-Tc cuprates.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Fluctuation Exchange Analysis of Superconductivity in the Standard Three-Band CuO2 Model
The fluctuation exchange, or FLEX, approximation for interacting electrons is
applied to study instabilities in the standard three-band model for CuO2 layers
in the high-temperature superconductors. Both intra-orbital and near-neigbor
Coulomb interactions are retained. The filling dependence of the d(x2-y2)
transition temperature is studied in both the "hole-doped" and "electron-doped"
regimes using parameters derived from constrained-occupancy density-functional
theory for La2CuO4. The agreement with experiment on the overdoped hole side of
the phase diagram is remarkably good, i.e., transitions emerge in the 40 K
range with no free parameters. In addition the importance of the "orbital
antiferromagnetic," or flux phase, charge density channel is emphasized for an
understanding of the underdoped regime.Comment: REVTex and PostScript, 31 pages, 26 figures; to appear in Phys. Rev.
B (1998); only revised EPS figures 3, 4, 6a, 6b, 6c, 7 and 8 to correct
disappearance of some labels due to technical problem
Collective Excitations in High-Temperature Superconductors
Collective, low-energy excitations in quasi-two-dimensional d-wave
superconductors are analyzed. While the long-range Coulomb interaction shifts
the charge-density-wave and phase modes up to the plasma energy, the
spin-density-wave excitation that arises due to a strong local
electron-electron repulsion can propagate as a damped collective mode within
the superconducting energy gap. It is suggested that these excitations are
relevant to high-Tc superconductors, close to the antiferromagnetic phase
boundary, and may explain some of the exotic features of the experimentally
observed spectral-density and neutron-scattering data.Comment: 5 jolly page
Coefficient of normal restitution of viscous particles and cooling rate of granular gases
We investigate the cooling rate of a gas of inelastically interacting
particles. When we assume velocity dependent coefficients of restitution the
material cools down slower than with constant restitution. This behavior might
have large influence to clustering and structure formation processes.Comment: 3 figures, Phys. Rev. E (in press
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