22,347 research outputs found
Transient excitation and data processing techniques employing the fast fourier transform for aeroelastic testing
The development of testing techniques useful in airplane ground resonance testing, wind tunnel aeroelastic model testing, and airplane flight flutter testing is presented. Included is the consideration of impulsive excitation, steady-state sinusoidal excitation, and random and pseudorandom excitation. Reasons for the selection of fast sine sweeps for transient excitation are given. The use of the fast fourier transform dynamic analyzer (HP-5451B) is presented, together with a curve fitting data process in the Laplace domain to experimentally evaluate values of generalized mass, model frequencies, dampings, and mode shapes. The effects of poor signal to noise ratios due to turbulence creating data variance are discussed. Data manipulation techniques used to overcome variance problems are also included. The experience is described that was gained by using these techniques since the early stages of the SST program. Data measured during 747 flight flutter tests, and SST, YC-14, and 727 empennage flutter model tests are included
Thermodynamic properties of Pb determined from pressure-dependent critical-field measurements
We have carried out extensive low-temperature (1.5 to 10 K) measurements of
the critical field, , for the element Pb up to a pressure of GPa.
From this data the electronic entropy, specific heat, thermal expansion
coefficient and compressibility is calculated as a function of temperature,
pressure and magnetic field. The zero-field data is consistent with direct
thermodynamic measurements and the -dependence of and specific heat
coefficient, allows the determination of the -dependence of
the pairing interaction.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, in press Phys. Rev.
Neutron skin uncertainties of Skyrme energy density functionals
Background: Neutron-skin thickness is an excellent indicator of isovector
properties of atomic nuclei. As such, it correlates strongly with observables
in finite nuclei that depend on neutron-to-proton imbalance and the nuclear
symmetry energy that characterizes the equation of state of neutron-rich
matter. A rich worldwide experimental program involving studies with rare
isotopes, parity violating electron scattering, and astronomical observations
is devoted to pinning down the isovector sector of nuclear models. Purpose: We
assess the theoretical systematic and statistical uncertainties of neutron-skin
thickness and relate them to the equation of state of nuclear matter, and in
particular to nuclear symmetry energy parameters. Methods: We use the nuclear
superfluid Density Functional Theory with several Skyrme energy density
functionals and density dependent pairing. To evaluate statistical errors and
their budget, we employ the statistical covariance technique. Results: We find
that the errors on neutron skin increase with neutron excess. Statistical
errors due to uncertain coupling constants of the density functional are found
to be larger than systematic errors, the latter not exceeding 0.06 fm in most
neutron-rich nuclei across the nuclear landscape. The single major source of
uncertainty is the poorly determined slope L of the symmetry energy that
parametrizes its density dependence. Conclusions: To provide essential
constraints on the symmetry energy of the nuclear energy density functional,
next-generation measurements of neutron skins are required to deliver precision
better than 0.06 fm.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Coulomb corrections to bremsstrahlung in electric field of heavy atom at high energies
The differential and partially integrated cross sections are considered for
bremsstrahlung from high-energy electrons in atomic field with the exact
account of this field. The consideration exploits the quasiclassical electron
Green's function and wave functions in an external electric field. It is shown
that the Coulomb corrections to the differential cross section are very
susceptible to screening. Nevertheless, the Coulomb corrections to the cross
section summed up over the final-electron states are independent of screening
in the leading approximation over a small parameter ( is
a screening radius, is the electron mass, ). Bremsstrahlung from
an electron beam of the finite size on heavy nucleus is considered as well.
Again, the Coulomb corrections to the differential probability are very
susceptible to the beam shape, while those to the probability integrated over
momentum transfer are independent of it, apart from the trivial factor, which
is the electron-beam density at zero impact parameter. For the Coulomb
corrections to the bremsstrahlung spectrum, the next-to-leading terms with
respect to the parameters ( is the electron energy) and
are obtained.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
The NASA SETI sky survey: Recent developments
NASA's Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) project utilizes two complementary search strategies: a sky survey and a targeted search. The SETI team at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, has primary responsibility to develop and carry out the sky survey part. Described here is progress that has been made developing the major elements of the survey including a 2-million channel wideband spectrum analyzer system that is being designed and constructed by JPL for the Deep Space Network (DSN). The system will be a multiuser instrument; it will serve as a prototype for the SETI sky survey processor. This prototype system will be used to test the signal detection and observational strategies on DSN antennas in the near future
Can the frequency-dependent specific heat be measured by thermal effusion methods?
It has recently been shown that plane-plate heat effusion methods devised for
wide-frequency specific-heat spectroscopy do not give the isobaric specific
heat, but rather the so-called longitudinal specific heat. Here it is shown
that heat effusion in a spherical symmetric geometry also involves the
longitudinal specific heat.Comment: Paper presented at the Fifth International Workshop on Complex
Systems (Sendai, September, 2007), to appear in AIP Conference Proceeding
Fuzzy Nambu-Goldstone Physics
In spacetime dimensions larger than 2, whenever a global symmetry G is
spontaneously broken to a subgroup H, and G and H are Lie groups, there are
Nambu-Goldstone modes described by fields with values in G/H. In
two-dimensional spacetimes as well, models where fields take values in G/H are
of considerable interest even though in that case there is no spontaneous
breaking of continuous symmetries. We consider such models when the world sheet
is a two-sphere and describe their fuzzy analogues for G=SU(N+1),
H=S(U(N-1)xU(1)) ~ U(N) and G/H=CP^N. More generally our methods give fuzzy
versions of continuum models on S^2 when the target spaces are Grassmannians
and flag manifolds described by (N+1)x(N+1) projectors of rank =< (N+1)/2.
These fuzzy models are finite-dimensional matrix models which nevertheless
retain all the essential continuum topological features like solitonic sectors.
They seem well-suited for numerical work.Comment: Latex, 18 pages; references added, typos correcte
Examining paraphilia and emotional regulation with Norwegian speaking adults
Exploration of paraphilia has become an interesting topic for researchers the latest years. Norway lacks sufficient research on paraphilia. Current literature has shown distinct sex differences with men reporting more interest in paraphilia than women. Emotional regulation is suggested from research as a plausible psychological factor that could affect paraphilia. We started a collaboration with SIFER to explore paraphilia and emotional regulation from a non-clinical Norwegian-speaking sample. Two questionnaires were administered: The Paraphilia Scale and DERS-18. Data material was collected through an online study. 313 participants (N = 114 males, 191 females) took part in our study with age from 18 to over 50 years old. To simplify our analysis, The Paraphilia Scale was divided into 13 themes. Findings indicate evident sex differences when looking at paraphilic interests. Masochism and Sadism were the two most popular paraphilic themes for both male and female participants. The least popular themes were found to be Pedohebephilia and Zoophilia. The following paraphilic themes demonstrated sex differences: Biastophilia, Cro/Urophilia, Exhibitionism, Fetishism, Frotteurism, Pedohebephilia, Sadism, Somnophilia and Voyeurism. Male participants reported higher interest on these paraphilic themes. There were no sex differences when only assessing paraphilic behaviors. The relationship between paraphilic interests and paraphilic behaviors showed correlations that were moderate to strong on Biastophilia, Eroticized Gender, Masochism, Sadism, Telephone Scatologia and Voyeurism. The two questionnaires provide evidence showing only one significant association between emotional regulation and paraphilic interests. Implications of our results for research and clinical purposes on The Paraphilia Scale and DERS-18 are discussed
Supercooled Liquid Dynamics Studied via Shear-Mechanical Spectroscopy
We report dynamical shear-modulus measurements for five glass-forming liquids
(pentaphenyl trimethyl trisiloxane, diethyl phthalate, dibutyl phthalate,
1,2-propanediol, and m-touluidine). The shear-mechanical spectra are obtained
by the piezoelectric shear-modulus gauge (PSG) method. This technique allows
one to measure the shear modulus ( Pa) of the liquid within a
frequency range from 1 mHz to 10 kHz. We analyze the frequency-dependent
response functions to investigate whether time-temperature superposition (TTS)
is obeyed. We also study the shear-modulus loss-peak position and its
high-frequency part. It has been suggested that when TTS applies, the
high-frequency side of the imaginary part of the dielectric response decreases
like a power law of the frequency with an exponent -1/2. This conjecture is
analyzed on the basis of the shear mechanical data. We find that TTS is obeyed
for pentaphenyl trimethyl trisiloxane and in 1,2-propanediol while in the
remaining liquids evidence of a mechanical process is found. Although
the the high-frequency power law behavior of the shear-loss
may approach a limiting value of when lowering the temperature, we
find that the exponent lies systematically above this value (around 0.4). For
the two liquids without beta relaxation (pentaphenyl trimethyl trisiloxane and
1,2-propanediol) we also test the shoving model prediction, according to which
the the relaxation-time activation energy is proportional to the instantaneous
shear modulus. We find that the data are well described by this model.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
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