51,416 research outputs found
A statistical model for evaluating GOPEX uplink performance
This article describes a statistical model to analyze the signal intensity received at the solid-state imaging (SSI) camera of the Galileo optical communications system from an Earth-based transmitter (GOPEX) demonstration. The analytical model assumes that the optical beam possesses a Gaussian profile and the communication channel has a log-normal scattering characteristic. The atmospheric-induced jitter is modelled as two independent zero mean Gaussian random variables. By modelling the system parameters as a set of independent and identically distributed (iid) random variables, the combined impact of uncertainties due to system parameters and the turbulent atmosphere can be approximated by a log-normal distributed signal intensity at the spacecraft. A Monte-Carlo software simulation package was also developed to compute the confidence interval probabilities for general optical beam profiles. Numerical results show that the approximation is valid for a wide range of operation scenarios
Synovial joint lubrication – does nature teach more effective engineering lubrication strategies?
Nature shows numerous examples of systems which show energy efficiency, elegance in their design and optimum use of materials. Biomimetics is an emerging field of research in engineering and successes have been documented in the diverse fields of robotics, mechanics, materials engineering and many more. To date little biomimetics research has been directed towards tribology in terms of transferring technologies from biological systems into engineering applications. The potential for biomimicry has been recognised in terms of replicating natural lubricants but this system reviews the potential for mimicking the synovial joint as an efficient and durable tribological system for potential engineering systems. The use of materials and the integration of materials technology and fluid/surface interactions are central to the discussion
A two component jet model for the X-ray afterglow flat segment in short GRB 051221A
In the double neutron star merger or neutron star-black hole merger model for
short GRBs, the outflow launched might be mildly magnetized and neutron rich.
The magnetized neutron-rich outflow will be accelerated by the magnetic and
thermal pressure and may form a two component jet finally, as suggested by
Vlahakis, Peng & K\"{o}nigl (2003). We show in this work that such a two
component jet model could well reproduce the multi-wavelength afterglow
lightcurves, in particular the X-ray flat segment, of short GRB 051221A. In
this model, the central engine need not to be active much longer than the
prompt ray emission.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure; Accepted for publication by ApJ
Weak coupling d-wave BCS superconductivity and unpaired electrons in overdoped La_{2-x}Sr_{x}CuO_{4} single crystals
The low-temperature specific heat (SH) of overdoped La_{2-x}Sr_{x}CuO_{4}
single crystals (0.178=<x=<0.290) has been measured. For the superconducting
samples (0.178=<x=<0.238), the derived gap values (without any adjusting
parameters) approach closely onto the theoretical prediction
\Delta_{0}=2.14k_{B}T_{c} for the weak-coupling d-wave BCS superconductivity.
In addition, the residual term \gamma(0) of SH at H=0 increases with x
dramatically when beyond x~0.22, and finally evolves into the value of a
complete normal metallic state at higher doping levels, indicating growing
amount of unpaired electrons. We argue that this large \gamma(0) cannot be
simply attributed to the pair breaking induced by the impurity scattering,
instead the phase separation is possible.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures; Contents added; Accepted for publication in Phys.
Rev.
Sub-TeV proton beam generation by ultra-intense laser irradiation of foil-and-gas target
A two-phase proton acceleration scheme using an ultra-intense laser pulse irradiating a proton foil with a tenuous heavier-ion plasma behind it is presented. The foil electrons are compressed and pushed out as a thin dense layer by the radiation pressure and propagate in the plasma behind at near the light speed. The protons are in turn accelerated by the resulting space-charge field and also enter the backside plasma, but without the formation of a quasistationary double layer. The electron layer is rapidly weakened by the space-charge field. However, the laser pulse originally behind it now snowplows the backside-plasma electrons and creates an intense electrostatic wakefield. The latter can stably trap and accelerate the pre-accelerated proton layer there for a very long distance and thus to very high energies. The two-phase scheme is verified by particle-in-cell simulations and analytical modeling, which also suggests that a 0.54 TeV proton beam can be obtained with a 10(23) W/cm(2) laser pulse. (C) 2012 American Institute of Physics. [doi:10.1063/1.3684658]Physics, Fluids & PlasmasSCI(E)EI0ARTICLE2null1
Suppressing longitudinal double-layer oscillations by using elliptically polarized laser pulses in the hole-boring radiation pressure acceleration regime
It is shown that well collimated mono-energetic ion beams with a large
particle number can be generated in the hole-boring radiation pressure
acceleration regime by using an elliptically polarized laser pulse with
appropriate theoretically determined laser polarization ratio. Due to the
effect, the double-layer charge separation region is
imbued with hot electrons that prevent ion pileup, thus suppressing the
double-layer oscillations. The proposed mechanism is well confirmed by
Particle-in-Cell simulations, and after suppressing the longitudinal
double-layer oscillations, the ion beams driven by the elliptically polarized
lasers own much better energy spectrum than those by circularly polarized
lasers.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, Phys. Plasmas (2013) accepte
Two-Dimensional Inversion Asymmetric Topological Insulators in Functionalized III-Bi Bilayers
The search for inversion asymmetric topological insulators (IATIs) persists
as an effect for realizing new topological phenomena. However, so for only a
few IATIs have been discovered and there is no IATI exhibiting a large band gap
exceeding 0.6 eV. Using first-principles calculations, we predict a series of
new IATIs in saturated Group III-Bi bilayers. We show that all these IATIs
preserve extraordinary large bulk band gaps which are well above
room-temperature, allowing for viable applications in room-temperature
spintronic devices. More importantly, most of these systems display large bulk
band gaps that far exceed 0.6 eV and, part of them even are up to ~1 eV, which
are larger than any IATIs ever reported. The nontrivial topological situation
in these systems is confirmed by the identified band inversion of the band
structures and an explicit demonstration of the topological edge states.
Interestingly, the nontrivial band order characteristics are intrinsic to most
of these materials and are not subject to spin-orbit coupling. Owning to their
asymmetric structures, remarkable Rashba spin splitting is produced in both the
valence and conduction bands of these systems. These predictions strongly
revive these new systems as excellent candidates for IATI-based novel
applications.Comment: 17 pages,5figure
Dimerization-induced enhancement of the spin gap in the quarter-filled two-leg rectangular ladder
We report density-matrix renormalization group calculations of spin gaps in
the quarter-filled correlated two-leg rectangular ladder with bond-dimerization
along the legs of the ladder. In the small rung-coupling region, dimerization
along the leg bonds can lead to large enhancement of the spin gap.
Electron-electron interactions further enhance the spin gap, which is nonzero
for all values of the rung electron hopping and for arbitrarily small
bond-dimerization. Very large spin gaps, as are found experimentally in
quarter-filled band organic charge-transfer solids with coupled pairs of
quasi-one-dimensional stacks, however, occur within the model only for large
dimerization and rung electron hopping that are nearly equal to the hopping
along the legs. Coexistence of charge order and spin gap is also possible
within the model for not too large intersite Coulomb interaction
Lifetime Difference and Endpoint effect in the Inclusive Bottom Hadron Decays
The lifetime differences of bottom hadrons are known to be properly explained
within the framework of heavy quark effective field theory(HQEFT) of QCD via
the inverse expansion of the dressed heavy quark mass. In general, the spectrum
around the endpoint region is not well behaved due to the invalidity of
expansion near the endpoint. The curve fitting method is adopted to treat the
endpoint behavior. It turns out that the endpoint effects are truly small and
the explanation on the lifetime differences in the HQEFT of QCD is then well
justified. The inclusion of the endpoint effects makes the prediction on the
lifetime differences and the extraction on the CKM matrix element
more reliable.Comment: 11 pages, Revtex, 10 figures, 6 tables, published versio
- …