5,750 research outputs found
Casimir force for cosmological domain walls
We calculate the vacuum fluctuations that may affect the evolution of
cosmological domain walls. Considering domain walls, which are classically
stable and have interaction with a scalar field, we show that explicit symmetry
violation in the interaction may cause quantum bias that can solve the
cosmological domain wall problem.Comment: 15 pages, 2figure
Exact relations for thermodynamics of heavy quarks
We derive finite-temperature sum rules for excesses in internal energy and in
(volume-integrated) pressure arising due to presence of heavy quarks in SU(N)
gluon plasma. In the limit of zero temperature our formulae reduce to the
Michael-Rothe sum rules. The excesses in energy and pressure of the gluon
plasma are related to expectation values of certain gluon condensates, and,
simultaneously, to the heavy quark potential. The sum rules lead to a known
relation between the internal energy and the potential, and to a new expression
for the excess in the pressure. The pressure appears in the free energy as a
generalized force associated with variations of the spatial size of the
heavy-quark system. We find that the excess in gluonic pressure around a heavy
quarkonium is always negative. Finally, we derive an exact equation of state
that provides a relationship between the gluonic energy and pressure of heavy
quarks.Comment: 7 page
Infogame: Final report
Management Information Systems;Management Games;management information systems
Well-balanced and asymptotic preserving schemes for kinetic models
In this paper, we propose a general framework for designing numerical schemes
that have both well-balanced (WB) and asymptotic preserving (AP) properties,
for various kinds of kinetic models. We are interested in two different
parameter regimes, 1) When the ratio between the mean free path and the
characteristic macroscopic length tends to zero, the density can be
described by (advection) diffusion type (linear or nonlinear) macroscopic
models; 2) When = O(1), the models behave like hyperbolic equations
with source terms and we are interested in their steady states. We apply the
framework to three different kinetic models: neutron transport equation and its
diffusion limit, the transport equation for chemotaxis and its Keller-Segel
limit, and grey radiative transfer equation and its nonlinear diffusion limit.
Numerical examples are given to demonstrate the properties of the schemes
Physical bounds and radiation modes for MIMO antennas
Modern antenna design for communication systems revolves around two extremes:
devices, where only a small region is dedicated to antenna design, and base
stations, where design space is not shared with other components. Both imply
different restrictions on what performance is realizable. In this paper
properties of both ends of the spectrum in terms of MIMO performance is
investigated. For electrically small antennas the size restriction dominates
the performance parameters. The regions dedicated to antenna design induce
currents on the rest of the device. Here a method for studying fundamental
bound on spectral efficiency of such configurations is presented. This bound is
also studied for -degree MIMO systems. For electrically large structures the
number of degrees of freedom available per unit area is investigated for
different shapes. Both of these are achieved by formulating a convex
optimization problem for maximum spectral efficiency in the current density on
the antenna. A computationally efficient solution for this problem is
formulated and investigated in relation to constraining parameters, such as
size and efficiency
An analytical study of the hydrogen-air reaction mechanism with application to scramjet combustion
A chemical kinetic mechanism for the combustion of hydrogen has been assembled and optimized by comparing the observed behavior as determined in shock tube and flame studies with that predicted by the mechanism. The reactions contained in the mechanism reflect the current state of knowledge of the chemistry of the hydrogen/air system, and the assigned rate coefficients are consistent with accepted values. It was determined that the mechanism is capable of satisfactorily reproducing the experimental results for a range of conditions relevant to scramjet combustion. Calculations made with the reaction mechanism for representative scramjet combustor conditions at Mach 8, 16, and 25 showed that chemical kinetic effects can be important and that combustor models which use nonequilibrium chemistry should be used in preference to models that assume equilibrium chemistry. For the conditions examined the results also showed the importance of including the HO2 chemistry in the mechanism. For Mach numbers less than 16, the studies suggest that an ignition source will most likely be required to overcome slow ignition chemistry. At Mach 25, the initial temperature and pressure was high enough that ignition was rapid and the presence of an ignition source did not significantly affect reaction rates
An analysis of combustion studies in shock expansion tunnels and reflected shock tunnels
The effect of initial nonequilibrium dissociated air constituents on the combustion of hydrogen in high-speed flows for a simulated Mach 17 flight condition was investigated by analyzing the results of comparative combustion experiments performed in a reflected shock tunnel test gas and in a shock expansion tunnel test gas. The results were analyzed and interpreted with a one-dimensional quasi-three-stream combustor code that includes finite rate combustion chemistry. The results of this study indicate that the combustion process is kinetically controlled in the experiments in both tunnels and the presence of the nonequilibrium partially dissociated oxygen in the reflected shock tunnel enhances the combustion. Methods of compensating for the effect of dissociated oxygen are discussed
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