26,196 research outputs found
Mass formulae and strange quark matter
We have derived the popularly used parametrization formulae for quark masses
at low densities and modified them at high densities within the
mass-density-dependent model. The results are applied to investigate the lowest
density for the possible existence of strange quark matter at zero temperature.Comment: 9 pages, LATeX with ELSART style, one table, no figures. Improvement
on the derivation of qark mass formula
Proximity and anomalous field-effect characteristics in double-wall carbon nanotubes
Proximity effect on field-effect characteristic (FEC) in double-wall carbon
nanotubes (DWCNTs) is investigated. In a semiconductor-metal (S-M) DWCNT, the
penetration of electron wavefunctions in the metallic shell to the
semiconducting shell turns the original semiconducting tube into a metal with a
non-zero local density of states at the Fermi level. By using a two-band
tight-binding model on a ladder of two legs, it is demonstrated that anomalous
FEC observed in so-called S-M type DWCNTs can be fully understood by the
proximity effect of metallic phases.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
A discussion of the scaling effect in numerical simulation of the extrusion process
The main objective of the work of this paper is to study the possibility of using a small scale geometrical model in the numerical simulation of aluminium extrusion. The advantages and shortcomings of the application of the
geometrically similar model in FEM simulation are discussed. Thermal – mechanical and metallurgical combined
simulations are performed within two tests using geometrically similar models and assessment is made in terms of mechanical and material properties. It was found that small scale simulation could not reproduce most of the
important forming parameters of the original process, although it could help to bring about significant savings in
computation time
Life cycle greenhouse gas emissions of multi-pathways natural gas vehicles in china considering methane leakage
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in this recordNatural gas has been promoted rapidly recent years to substitute traditional vehicle fuels. However, methane leakages in the natural gas supply chains make it difficult to ascertain whether it can reduce greenhouse gas emissions when used as a transport fuel. This paper characterizes the natural gas supply chains and their segments involved, estimates the venting and fugitive leakages from natural gas supply chains, decides the distribution among segments and further integrates it with life cycle analysis on natural gas fueled vehicles. Domestic natural gas supply chain turns out to be the dominant methane emitter, accounting for 67% of total methane leakages from natural gas supply chains. Transportation segments contribute 42–86% of the total methane leakages in each supply chain, which is the greatest contribution among all the segments. Life cycle analysis on private passenger vehicles, transit buses and heavy-duty trucks show that compressed natural gas and liquefied natural gas bring approximately 11–17% and 9–15% greenhouse gas emission reduction compared to traditional fossil fuels, even considering methane leaks in the natural gas supply chains. Methane leakages from natural gas supply chains account for approximately 2% of the total life cycle greenhouse gas emissions of natural gas vehicles. The results ascertain the low-carbon attribute of natural gas, and greater efforts should be exerted to promote natural gas vehicles to help reduce greenhouse gas emissions from on-road transportation.National Natural Science Foundation of ChinaInternational Science & Technology Cooperation Program of Chin
Continuity of the Solution Maps for Generalized Parametric Set-Valued Ky Fan Inequality Problems
Under new assumptions, we provide suffcient conditions for the (upper and lower) semicontinuity and continuity of the solution mappings to a class of generalized parametric set-valued Ky Fan inequality problems in linear metric space. These results extend and improve some known results in the literature (e.g., Gong, 2008; Gong and Yoa, 2008; Chen and Gong, 2010; Li and Fang, 2010). Some examples are given to illustrate our results
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