2,837 research outputs found
Insertion device for pressure testing
Test device which introduces either pressure or vacuum into a test pipe or tube, is insertable into the tested item where it secures itself into position and requires no external support. The unit has an operating range from zero to 25,000 psig and to any vacuum level that available equipment can reach
Estimates on Green functions of second order differential operators with singular coefficients
We investigate the Green functions G(x,x^{\prime}) of some second order
differential operators on R^{d+1} with singular coefficients depending only on
one coordinate x_{0}. We express the Green functions by means of the Brownian
motion. Applying probabilistic methods we prove that when x=(0,{\bf x}) and
x^{\prime}=(0,{\bf x}^{\prime}) (here x_{0}=0) lie on the singular hyperplanes
then G(0,{\bf x};0,{\bf x}^{\prime}) is more regular than the Green function of
operators with regular coefficients.Comment: 16 page
Characterisation of aged HDPE pipes from drinking water distribution : investigation of crack depth by Nol ring tests under creep loading
International audienceHDPE pipes are used for the transport of drinking water. However, disinfectants in waterseem to have a strong impact on their mechanical behaviour, limiting their lifetime inoperation. Indeed, oxidation occurs when they are in contact with disinfectants leading to theformation of a thin oxidised layer coupled to the cracks initiation of cracks of different lengthsfrom the inner wall surface. An original method is proposed here to characterise the ageingeffect of the pipe mechanical behaviour. Inspired from the ASTM D 2290-04 standard, NolRing tests have been performed under tensile and creep loadings on smooth rings. Aconstitutive equation has been determined from these tests using a finite element (FE)modelling. FE simulations have been performed to study the influence of the thin oxidised PElayer. Precracked specimens with different crack depth ratio have also been modelled. Thecrack depth ratio is an important parameter to quantify pipe ageing
Improved sensitivity of H.E.S.S.-II through the fifth telescope focus system
The Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescope (IACT) works by imaging the very
short flash of Cherenkov radiation generated by the cascade of relativistic
charged particles produced when a TeV gamma ray strikes the atmosphere. This
energetic air shower is initiated at an altitude of 10-30 km depending on the
energy and the arrival direction of the primary gamma ray. Whether the best
image of the shower is obtained by focusing the telescope at infinity and
measuring the Cherenkov photon angles or focusing on the central region of the
shower is a not obvious question. This is particularly true for large size IACT
for which the depth of the field is much smaller. We address this issue in
particular with the fifth telescope (CT5) of the High Energy Stereoscopic
System (H.E.S.S.); a 28 m dish large size telescope recently entered in
operation and sensitive to an energy threshold of tens of GeVs. CT5 is equipped
with a focus system, its working principle and the expected effect of focusing
depth on the telescope sensitivity at low energies (50-200 GeV) is discussed.Comment: In Proceedings of the 33rd International Cosmic Ray Conference
(ICRC2013), Rio de Janeiro (Brazil
Comparison of absolute gain photometric calibration between Planck/HFI and Herschel/SPIRE at 545 and 857 GHz
We compare the absolute gain photometric calibration of the Planck/HFI and
Herschel/SPIRE instruments on diffuse emission. The absolute calibration of HFI
and SPIRE each relies on planet flux measurements and comparison with
theoretical far-infrared emission models of planetary atmospheres. We measure
the photometric cross calibration between the instruments at two overlapping
bands, 545 GHz / 500 m and 857 GHz / 350 m. The SPIRE maps used have
been processed in the Herschel Interactive Processing Environment (Version 12)
and the HFI data are from the 2015 Public Data Release 2. For our study we used
15 large fields observed with SPIRE, which cover a total of about 120 deg^2. We
have selected these fields carefully to provide high signal-to-noise ratio,
avoid residual systematics in the SPIRE maps, and span a wide range of surface
brightness. The HFI maps are bandpass-corrected to match the emission observed
by the SPIRE bandpasses. The SPIRE maps are convolved to match the HFI beam and
put on a common pixel grid. We measure the cross-calibration relative gain
between the instruments using two methods in each field, pixel-to-pixel
correlation and angular power spectrum measurements. The SPIRE / HFI relative
gains are 1.047 ( 0.0069) and 1.003 ( 0.0080) at 545 and 857 GHz,
respectively, indicating very good agreement between the instruments. These
relative gains deviate from unity by much less than the uncertainty of the
absolute extended emission calibration, which is about 6.4% and 9.5% for HFI
and SPIRE, respectively, but the deviations are comparable to the values 1.4%
and 5.5% for HFI and SPIRE if the uncertainty from models of the common
calibrator can be discounted. Of the 5.5% uncertainty for SPIRE, 4% arises from
the uncertainty of the effective beam solid angle, which impacts the adopted
SPIRE point source to extended source unit conversion factor (Abridged)Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures; Incorporates revisions in response to referee
comments; cross calibration factors unchange
Translation Representations and Scattering By Two Intervals
Studying unitary one-parameter groups in Hilbert space (U(t),H), we show that
a model for obstacle scattering can be built, up to unitary equivalence, with
the use of translation representations for L2-functions in the complement of
two finite and disjoint intervals.
The model encompasses a family of systems (U (t), H). For each, we obtain a
detailed spectral representation, and we compute the scattering operator, and
scattering matrix. We illustrate our results in the Lax-Phillips model where (U
(t), H) represents an acoustic wave equation in an exterior domain; and in
quantum tunneling for dynamics of quantum states
New Constraints from PAMELA anti-proton data on Annihilating and Decaying Dark Matter
Recently the PAMELA experiment has released its updated anti-proton flux and
anti-proton to proton flux ratio data up to energies of ~200GeV. With no clear
excess of cosmic ray anti-protons at high energies, one can extend constraints
on the production of anti-protons from dark matter. In this letter, we consider
both the cases of dark matter annihilating and decaying into standard model
particles that produce significant numbers of anti-protons. We provide two sets
of constraints on the annihilation cross-sections/decay lifetimes. In the one
set of constraints we ignore any source of anti-protons other than dark matter,
which give the highest allowed cross-sections/inverse lifetimes. In the other
set we include also anti-protons produced in collisions of cosmic rays with
interstellar medium nuclei, getting tighter but more realistic constraints on
the annihilation cross-sections/decay lifetimes.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 3 table
Green functions and propagation of waves in strongly inhomogeneous media
We show that Green functions of second-order differential operators with
singular or unbounded coefficients can have an anomalous behaviour in
comparison to the well-known properties of Green functions of operators with
bounded coefficients. We discuss some consequences of such an anomalous short
or long distance behaviour for a diffusion and wave propagation in an
inhomogeneous medium
The effects of discreteness of galactic cosmic rays sources
Most studies of GeV Galactic Cosmic Rays (GCR) nuclei assume a steady
state/continuous distribution for the sources of cosmic rays, but this
distribution is actually discrete in time and in space. The current progress in
our understanding of cosmic ray physics (acceleration, propagation), the
required consistency in explaining several GCRs manifestation (nuclei,
,...) as well as the precision of present and future space missions
(e.g. INTEGRAL, AMS, AGILE, GLAST) point towards the necessity to go beyond
this approximation. A steady state semi-analytical model that describes well
many nuclei data has been developed in the past years based on this
approximation, as well as others. We wish to extend it to a time dependent
version, including discrete sources. As a first step, the validity of several
approximations of the model we use are checked to validate the approach: i) the
effect of the radial variation of the interstellar gas density is inspected and
ii) the effect of a specific modeling for the galactic wind (linear vs
constant) is discussed. In a second step, the approximation of using continuous
sources in space is considered. This is completed by a study of time
discreteness through the time-dependent version of the propagation equation. A
new analytical solution of this equation for instantaneous point-like sources,
including the effect of escape, galactic wind and spallation, is presented.
Application of time and space discretness to definite propagation conditions
and realistic distributions of sources will be presented in a future paper.Comment: final version, 8 figures, accepted in ApJ. A misprint in fig 8 labels
has been correcte
Atmospheric and Galactic Production and Propagation of Light Antimatter Nuclei
The production and propagation of light antimatter nuclei has been calculated
using inclusive antiproton production cross sections from a new data analysis,
and coalescence models for the production of composite particles. Particles
were propagated using recently proven phenomenological approaches. The
atmospheric secondary flux is evaluated for the first time. The Galactic flux
obtained are larger than those obtained previously in similar calculations. The
non-annihilating scattering contributions of the propagated particles are
introduced. The preliminary results are shown and discussed.Comment: 4 pages, Contribution to the ICRC 200
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