2,692 research outputs found
On a generalised bootstrap principle
The S-matrices for non-simply-laced affine Toda field theories are considered
in the context of a generalised bootstrap principle. The S-matrices, and in
particular their poles, depend on a parameter whose range lies between the
Coxeter numbers of dual pairs of the corresponding non-simply-laced algebras.
It is proposed that only odd order poles in the physical strip with positive
coefficients throughout this range should participate in the bootstrap. All
other singularities have an explanation in principle in terms of a generalised
Coleman-Thun mechanism. Besides the S-matrices introduced by Delius, Grisaru
and Zanon, the missing case (), is also considered and
provides many interesting examples of pole generation.Comment: 23 pages including two figures, harvma
Laser velocimeter applications to high-lift research
The application of the Lockheed-Georgia 2-D laser velocimeter (LV) burst-counter system to the flow field around a 2- and 3-element high-lift airfoil is discussed. The characteristic behavior of the confluent boundary layer (that is, the boundary layer existing downstream of a slot as it approaches and undergoes separation is evaluated. In this application, the LV represents all ideal instruments for nonintrusively probing into the narrow slots and cove areas characterizing mechanical high-lift systems. The work is being performed in the Lockheed-Georgia 10 x 30-inch low-speed test facility using a 9-inch (basic) chord section of the general aviation GAW-1 airfoil. The LV system employs a 4-W argon laser and operates in an off-axis, backscatter mode with a focus length of about 30 inches. Smoke is used as the seeding medium and is injected downstream of the model such that particle uniformity and size are constant upon completion of the tunnel circuit into the test area. The LV system is fully automated by utilizing a MAC-16 minicomputer for positioning, data acquisition, and preliminary data reduction
Affine Toda field theory on a half line
The question of the integrability of real-coupling affine toda field theory
on a half-line is addressed. It is found, by examining low-spin conserved
charges, that the boundary conditions preserving integrability are strongly
constrained. In particular, for the series of models there can be
no free parameters introduced by the boundary condition; indeed the only
remaining freedom (apart from choosing the simple condition ), resides in a choice of signs. For a special case of the boundary
condition, it is argued that the classical boundary bound state spectrum is
closely related to a consistent set of reflection factors in the quantum field
theory.Comment: 16 pages, TEX (harvmac), DTP-94/7, YITP/U-94-1
Phenomenology of a light scalar: the dilaton
We make use of the language of non-linear realizations to analyze
electro-weak symmetry breaking scenarios in which a light dilaton emerges from
the breaking of a nearly conformal strong dynamics, and compare the
phenomenology of the dilaton to that of the well motivated light composite
Higgs scenario. We argue that -- in addition to departures in the
decay/production rates into massless gauge bosons mediated by the conformal
anomaly -- characterizing features of the light dilaton scenario (as well as
other scenarios admitting a light CP-even scalar not directly related to the
breaking of the electro-weak symmetry) are off-shell events at high invariant
mass involving two longitudinally polarized vector bosons and a dilaton, and
tree-level flavor violating processes. Accommodating both electro-weak
precision measurements and flavor constraints appears especially challenging in
the ambiguous scenario in which the Higgs and the dilaton fields strongly mix.
We show that warped higgsless models of electro-weak symmetry breaking are
explicit and tractable realizations of this limiting case.
The relation between the naive radion profile often adopted in the study of
holographic realizations of the light dilaton scenario and the actual dynamical
dilaton field is clarified in the Appendix.Comment: 21 page
A New Methodology for the Quality Control Review Process for Roadway-Engineering Plans: A Case Study
This field project report provides an analysis and evaluation of an alternative quality control method to the traditional quality control methods for the conformation of engineered roadway plans against the various standards of design. The new method will shift the timing and method of quality control review of engineered roadway plans in such a way that overall effort is decreased, checking process duplication is eliminated, and comment resolution is well documented and tracked for closeout. The report finds that when the quality control process is completed in synchronization with design, and not at the end of design, major design flaws will be found sooner, and the likelihood of project delay is decreased. It is recommended that the new method of quality control be applied to all future roadway design projects. This report also makes note of some of the limitations of the project. Some of these limitations include the unique nature of the project being an intersection improvement project without structural design components, the small footprint of the design, and general improvement of an existing condition vs. a brand new design from scratch. Another limitation of the project is that there are no true metrics to record the traditional quality control methods to compare to the updated method. It does not make economic sense to budget a project to be reviewed two times, with one based on the original method, and the other based on the proposed new method
Experimental study of the separating confluent boundary-layer. Volume 2: Experimental data
An experimental low speed study of the separating confluent boundary layer on a NASA GAW-1 high lift airfoil is described. The airfoil was tested in a variety of high lift configurations comprised of leading edge slat and trailing edge flap combinations. The primary test instrumentation was a two dimensional laser velocimeter (LV) system operating in a backscatter mode. Surface pressures and corresponding LV derived boundary layer profiles are given in terms of velocity components, turbulence intensities and Reynolds shear stresses as characterizing confluent boundary layer behavior up to and beyond stall. LV derived profiles and associated boundary layer parameters and those obtained from more conventional instrumentation such as pitot static transverse, Preston tube measurements and hot-wire surveys are compared
A case of mucocutaneous leishmaniasis.
Leishmaniasis is prevalent in most warm-climate areas of the world. We describe a long-undiagnosed case of mucocutaneous leishmaniasis in Italy that might have been contracted in Costa Rica. The patient's signs and symptoms included granulomatous-like lesions on the forehead and legs, nasal obstruction accompanied by serous and crusted rhinorrhea, and diffuse granulomatous-like lesions in the septum and turbinates. The patient was treated with three on-off cycles of itraconazole. At the 1-year follow-up, all his lesions had nearly disappeared
Simulation as a Method for Determining Inventory Classifications for allocation
Thesis (M.B.A.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management; and, (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Engineering Systems Division; in conjunction with the Leaders for Global Operations Program at MIT, 2012.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (p. 54-55).Companies that utilize multiple facilities to satisfy customer demand are faced with the same basic question - where should inventory be held? This thesis presents a method for answering this question, specifically for a company that allocates multiple units across multiple facilities, where any facility can fulfill an order to any customer, though with differing shipping costs. The model presented is a simulation of the shipping costs of various allocation strategies across a range of allocated inventory quantities, where the strategies simulated include consolidating all inventory in a central facility, constraining inventory to regional hubs, and spreading inventory throughout the network. The simulated results are then compared to find the low cost allocation strategy at a given level of allocated inventory. With this comparison, product groupings with the same low cost allocation strategy are identified, and are defined as "Slow", "Medium-A", "Medium-B", and "Fast" products. These groups can then be used to manage the allocation process, where "Slow" inventory is held centrally, "Medium-A" inventory held regionally, and "Fast" inventory spread throughout the network. "Medium-B" items serve as a costmitigating flexible option, where they are spread throughout the network when possible but consolidated when necessary to avoid changing the allocation for "Fast" items. At a broad level, the model presented is applicable to any company that can fulfill demand to a single customer from multiple facilities.by Braden Ball.S.M.M.B.A
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