78,527 research outputs found
Reworking the Tucson-Melbourne Three-Nucleon Potential
We introduce new values of the strength constants (i.e., , , , and
coefficients) of the Tucson-Melbourne (TM) 2 exchange three nucleon
potential. The new values come from contemporary dispersion relation analyses
of meson factory N scattering data. We make variational Monte Carlo
calculations of the triton with the original and updated three-body forces to
study the effects of this update. We remove a short-range -- -range part
of the potential due to the coefficient and discuss the effect on the
triton binding energy.Comment: 12 pages, to appear in Few-Body System
Experimental study of contact transition control incorporating joint acceleration feedback
Joint acceleration and velocity feedbacks are incorporated into a classical internal force control of a robot in contact with the environment. This is intended to achieve a robust contact transition and force tracking performance for varying unknown environments, without any need of adjusting the controller parameters, A unified control structure is proposed for free motion, contact transition, and constrained motion in view of the consumption of the initial kinetic energy generated by a nonzero impact velocity. The influence of the velocity and acceleration feedbacks, which are introduced especially for suppressing the transition oscillation, on the postcontact tracking performance is discussed. Extensive experiments are conducted on the third joint of a three-link direct-drive robot to verify the proposed scheme for environments of various stiffnesses, including elastic (sponge), less elastic (cardboard), and hard (steel plate) surfaces. Results are compared with those obtained by the transition control scheme without the acceleration feedback. The ability of the proposed control scheme in resisting the force disturbance during the postcontact period is also experimentally investigated
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