3,434 research outputs found
Transportation Workforce
Connected autonomous vehicles (CAVs) present new opportunities and challenges for the transportation and logistics workforce. In this session we will present viewpoints from both the logistics industry and FHWA
Seattle Dinner Church Movement: Participatory Motives of Nonfounding Members
This research project explores the reasons people choose to participate in the Seattle Dinner Church Movement. Dinner churches are a relatively new and unique form of ecclesiology in the United States, and this model may harbor potential for bolstering the health of evangelical Protestantism across the nation. Discerning the participatory motives of nonfounding members in the Seattle Dinner Church Movement will help illuminate the connection between this ecclesial modality and overall missiological and ecclesiological health. Qualitative data were collected through surveys, interviews, and focus groups within a grounded theory framework of research. Theories generated from the data include emphases on inclusion and relationship(s), and all findings from the project will be offered to leaders within the Seattle-based movement to encourage transparency of perspective(s) and practical application of ecclesial convictions
Arcjet cathode phenomena
Cathode tips made from a number of different materials were tested in a modular arcjet thruster in order to examine cathode phenomena. Periodic disassembly and examination, along with the data collected during testing, indicated that all of the tungsten-based materials behaved similarly despite the fact that in one of these samples the percentage of thorium oxide was doubled and another was 25 percent rhenium. The mass loss rate from a 2 percent thoriated rhenium cathode was found to be an order of magnitude greater than that observed using 2 percent thoriated tungsten. Detailed analysis of one of these cathode tips showed that the molten crater contained pure tungsten to a depth of about 150 microns. Problems with thermal stress cracking were encountered in the testing of a hafnium carbide tip. Post test analysis showed that the active area of the tip had chemically reacted with the propellant. A 100 hour continuous test was run at about 1 kW. Post test analysis revealed no dendrite formation, such as observed in a 30 kW arcjet lifetest, near the cathode crater. The cathodes from both this test and a previously run 1000 hour cycled test displayed nearly identical arc craters. Data and calculations indicate that the mass losses observed in testing can be explained by evaporation
Effective Constraints and Physical Coherent States in Quantum Cosmology: A Numerical Comparison
A cosmological model with a cyclic interpretation is introduced, which is
subject to quantum back-reaction and yet can be treated rather completely by
physical coherent state as well as effective constraint techniques. By this
comparison, the role of quantum back-reaction in quantum cosmology is
unambiguously demonstrated. Also the complementary nature of strengths and
weaknesses of the two procedures is illustrated. Finally, effective constraint
techniques are applied to a more realistic model filled with radiation, where
physical coherent states are not available.Comment: 32 pages, 25 figure
Vacuum Structures in Hamiltonian Light-Front Dynamics
Hamiltonian light-front dynamics of quantum fields may provide a useful
approach to systematic non-perturbative approximations to quantum field
theories. We investigate inequivalent Hilbert-space representations of the
light-front field algebra in which the stability group of the light-front is
implemented by unitary transformations. The Hilbert space representation of
states is generated by the operator algebra from the vacuum state. There is a
large class of vacuum states besides the Fock vacuum which meet all the
invariance requirements. The light-front Hamiltonian must annihilate the vacuum
and have a positive spectrum. We exhibit relations of the Hamiltonian to the
nontrivial vacuum structure.Comment: 16 pages, report \# ANL-PHY-7524-TH-93, (Latex
Topological Protection and Quantum Noiseless Subsystems
Encoding and manipulation of quantum information by means of topological
degrees of freedom provides a promising way to achieve natural fault-tolerance
that is built-in at the physical level. We show that this topological approach
to quantum information processing is a particular instance of the notion of
computation in a noiseless quantum subsystem. The latter then provide the most
general conceptual framework for stabilizing quantum information and for
preserving quantum coherence in topological and geometric systems.Comment: 4 Pages LaTeX. Published versio
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