3,216 research outputs found

    A new look at decomposition of turbulence forcing field and the structural response

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    Measured cross-spectrum of a turbulence field usually shows some decay in the statistical correlation in addition to convection at a characteristic velocity. It is shown that a decaying turbulence can be decomposed into frozen-pattern components thus permitting a simpler way to calculate the structural response. This procedure also provides a relationship whereby the measured input spectra can be incorporated. The theory is applied to an infinite beam which is backed on one side by a fluid filled cavity and is exposed on the other side by the turbulence excitation. The effect of the free stream velocity is also taken into consideration

    Vibroacoustic response of structures and perturbation Reynolds stress near structure-turbulence interface

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    The interaction between a turbulent flow and certain types of structures which respond to its excitation is investigated. One-dimensional models were used to develop the basic ideas applied to a second model resembling the fuselage construction of an aircraft. In the two-dimensional case a simple membrane, with a small random variation in the membrane tension, was used. A decaying turbulence was constructed by superposing infinitely many components, each of which is convected as a frozen pattern at a different velocity. Structure-turbulence interaction results are presented in terms of the spectral densities of the structural response and the perturbation Reynolds stress in the fluid at the vicinity of the interface

    Horizontal symmetry in Higgs sector of GUT with U(1)_A symmetry

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    In a series of papers, we pointed out that an anomalous U(1)AU(1)_A gauge symmetry naturally solves various problems in grand unified theories (GUTs) and that a horizontal gauge symmetry, SU(2)HSU(2)_H or SU(3)HSU(3)_H, not only realizes the unification of three generation quarks and leptons in fewer multiplets but also solves the supersymmetric flavor problem. In this paper, we examine the possibility that the Higgs sectors of the GUT symmetry and of the horizontal symmetry are unified, that is, there are some Higgs fields whose vacuum expectation values (VEVs) break both the GUT gauge symmetry and the horizontal symmetry at the same time. Although the scale of the VEVs become too large to suppress the flavor changing neutral current processes sufficiently, the unification is possible. In addition, for the SU(3)HSU(3)_H models, the SU(3)HSU(3)_H gauge anomaly is cancelled in the unified models without introducing additional fields in contrast with the previous models in which the Higgs sectors are not unified.Comment: 35 page

    Gauge Coupling Unification in GUT with Anomalous U(1) Symmetry

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    We show that in the framework of grand unified theory (GUT) with anomalous U(1)AU(1)_A gauge symmetry, the success of the gauge coupling unification in the minimal SU(5) GUT is naturally explained, even if the mass spectrum of superheavy fields does not respect SU(5) symmetry. Because the unification scale for most realizations of the theory becomes smaller than the usual GUT scale, it suggests that the present level of experiments is close to that sufficient to observe proton decay via dimension 6 operators, p→e+πp\to e+\pi.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX, to appear in Phys.Rev.Let

    Stability of Spinmotive Force in Perpendicularly Magnetized Nanowires under High Magnetic Fields

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    Spinmotive force induced by domain wall motion in perpendicularly magnetized nanowires is numerically demonstrated. We show that using nanowires with large magnetic anisotropy can lead to a high stability of spinmotive force under strong magnetic fields. We observe spinmotive force in the order of tens of microvolt in a multilayered Co/Ni nanowire and in the order of several hundred microvolt in a FePt nanowire; the latter is two orders of magnitude greater than that in permalloy nanowires reported previously. The narrow structure and low mobility of a domain wall under magnetic fields in perpendicularly magnetized nanowires permits downsizing of spinmotive force devices.Comment: submitted to Applied Physics Letter
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