1,871 research outputs found

    Rate statistics for radio noise from lightning

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    Radio frequency noise from lightning was measured at several frequencies in the HF - VHF range at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida. The data were examined to determine flashing rate statistics during periods of strong activity from nearby storms. It was found that the time between flashes is modeled reasonably well by a random variable with a lognormal distribution

    Pressure effects on charge, spin, and metal-insulator transitions in narrow bandwidth manganite Pr1−x_{1-x}Cax_{x}MnO3_{3}

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    Pressure effects on the charge and spin states and the relation between the ferromagnetic and metallic states were explored on the small bandwidth manganite Pr1−x_{1-x}Cax_{x}MnO3_{3} (x = 0.25, 0.3, 0.35). Under pressure, the charge ordering state is suppressed and a ferromagnetic metallic state is induced in all three samples. The metal-insulator transition temperature (TMI_{MI}) increases with pressure below a critical point P*, above which TMI_{MI} decreases and the material becomes insulating as at the ambient pressure. The eg_{g} electron bandwidth and/or band-filling mediate the pressure effects on the metal-insulator transition and the magnetic transition. In the small bandwidth and low doping concentration compound (x = 0.25), the TMI_{MI} and Curie temperature (TC_{C}) change with pressure in a reverse way and do not couple under pressure. In the x = 0.3 compound, the relation of TMI_{MI} and TC_{C} shows a critical behavior: They are coupled in the range of ∼\sim0.8-5 GPa and decoupled outside of this range. In the x = 0.35 compound, TMI_{MI} and TC_{C} are coupled in the measured pressure range where a ferromagnetic state is present

    Standard Deviation of Spatially-Averaged Surface Cross Section Data from the TRMM Precipitation Radar

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    We investigate the spatial variability of the normalized radar cross section of the surface (NRCS or Sigma(sup 0)) derived from measurements of the TRMM Precipitation Radar (PR) for the period from 1998 to 2009. The purpose of the study is to understand the way in which the sample standard deviation of the Sigma(sup 0) data changes as a function of spatial resolution, incidence angle, and surface type (land/ocean). The results have implications regarding the accuracy by which the path integrated attenuation from precipitation can be inferred by the use of surface scattering properties

    Microwave properties of Nb/PdNi/Nb trilayers. Observation of flux flow in excess of Bardeen-Stephen theory

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    We combine wideband (1-20 GHz) Corbino disk and dielectric resonator (8.2 GHz) techniques to study the microwave properties in Nb/PdNi/Nb trilayers, grown by UHV dc magnetron sputtering, composed by Nb layers of nominal thickness dSd_S=15 nm, and a ferromagnetic PdNi layer of thickness dFd_F= 1, 2, 8 and 9 nm. We focus on the vortex state. Magnetic fields up to Hc2H_{c2} were applied. The microwave resistivity at fixed H/Hc2H/H_{c2} increases with dFd_F, eventually exceeding the Bardeen Stephen flux flow value.Comment: 6 pages. Submitted to Journal of Superconductivity and Novel Magnetis

    Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Couette flow

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    The first steps towards developing a continuum-molecular coupled simulations techniques are presented, for the purpose of computing macroscopic systems of confined fluids. The idea is to compute the interface wall-fluid by Molecular Dynamics simulations, where Lennard-Jones potential (and others) have been employed for the molecular interactions, so the usual non slip boundary condition is not specified. Instead, a shear rate can be imposed at the wall, which allows to obtain the properties of the wall material by means of an iterative method. The remaining fluid region will be computed by a spectral hp method. We present MD simulations of a Couette flow, and the results of the developed boundary conditions from the wall fluid interaction

    Competitive coevolutionary algorithm for robust multi-objective optimization: the worst case minimization

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    Multi-Objective Optimization (MOO) problems might be subject to many modeling or manufacturing uncertainties that affect the performance of the solutions obtained by a multi-objective optimizer. The decision maker must perform an extra step of sensitivity analysis in which each solution should be verified for its robustness, but this post optimization procedure makes the optimization process expensive and inefficient. In order to avoid this situation, many researchers are developing Robust MOO, where uncertainties are incorporated in the optimization process, which seeks optimal robust solutions. We introduce a coevolutionary approach for robust MOO, without incorporating robustness measures neither in the objective function nor in the constraints. Two populations compete in the environment, one representing solutions and minimizing the objectives, another representing uncertainties and maximizing the objectives in a worst case scenario. The proposed coevolutionary method is a coevolutionary version of MOEA/D. The results clearly suggest that these competing co-evolving populations are able to identify robust solutions to multi-objective optimization problems.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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