9,017 research outputs found
Dynamic and tribological analysis of a toroidal CVT
The continuously variable transmission investigated in this paper works with contacts in the elastohydrodynamic regime of lubrication, thus the tangential forces are transmitted between elements through the shearing the lubricant film. The behavior of the lubricant film when subjected to shear depends of the nature of the lubricant and the relative motion between the contacting surfaces. In this paper a non-Newtonian behavior is assumed for the lubricant while the relative motion is determined for every point on the contact area by kinematic methods. The net tractive force in the sliding direction, and the spin torque are evaluated and from these the power losses in the contacts are calculated. The dynamic behavior of the device is evaluated taking into account the rheological behavior of the lubricant
The Conflict between Bell-Zukowski Inequality and Bell-Mermin Inequality
We consider a two-particle/two-setting Bell experiment to visualize the
conflict between Bell-\.Zukowski inequality and Bell-Mermin inequality. The
experiment is reproducible by local realistic theories which are not
rotationally invariant. We found that the average value of the Bell-\.Zukowski
operator can be evaluated only by the two-particle/two-setting Bell experiment
in question. The Bell-\.Zukowski inequality reveals that the constructed local
realistic models for the experiment are not rotationally invariant. That is,
the two-particle Bell experiment in question reveals the conflict between
Bell-\.Zukowski inequality and Bell-Mermin inequality. Our analysis has found
the threshold visibility for the two-particle interference to reveal the
conflict noted above. It is found that the threshold visibility agrees with the
value to obtain a violation of the Bell-\.Zukowski inequality.Comment: To appear in Modern Physics Letters
Near-Infrared Counterparts to Chandra X-ray Sources toward the Galactic Center. I. Statistics and a Catalog of Candidates
We present a catalog of 5184 candidate infrared counterparts to X-ray sources
detected towards the Galactic center. The X-ray sample contains 9017 point
sources detected in this region by the Chandra X-ray Observatory, including
data from a recent deep survey of the central 2 x 0.8 deg of the Galactic
plane. A total of 6760 of these sources have hard X-ray colors, and the
majority of them lie near the Galactic center, while most of the remaining 2257
soft X-ray sources lie in the foreground. We cross-correlated the X-ray source
positions with the 2MASS and SIRIUS near-infrared catalogs, which collectively
contain stars with a 10-sigma limiting flux of K_s<=15.6 mag. In order to
distinguish absorbed infrared sources near the Galactic center from those in
the foreground, we defined red and blue sources as those which have H-K_s>=0.9
and <=0.9 mag, respectively. We find that 5.8(1.5)% of the hard X-ray sources
have real infrared counterparts, of which 228(99) are red and 166(27) are blue.
The red counterparts are probably comprised of WR/O stars, HMXBs, and
symbiotics near the Galactic center. We also find that 39.4(1.0)% of the soft
X-ray sources have blue infrared counterparts; most of these are probably
coronally active dwarfs in the foreground. There is a noteworthy collection of
~20 red counterparts to hard X-ray sources near the Sagittarius-B H II region,
which are probably massive binaries that have formed within the last several
Myr. For each of the infrared matches to X-ray sources in our catalog we
derived the probability that the association is real, based on the results of
the cross-correlation analysis. The catalog will serve spectroscopic surveys to
identify infrared counterparts to X-ray sources near the Galactic center.Comment: Submitted to ApJ January 16, 2009; accepted July 21, 2009; 30 pages,
6 figure
The fluctuation of transmission specificity and efficiency of tomato spotted wilt virus by Frankliniella schultzei.
Made available in DSpace on 2011-04-09T16:15:49Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
nagatafluctuation.pdf: 739681 bytes, checksum: e2ffccc9d42f8de46432200b6535d959 (MD5)
Previous issue date: 2008-04-2
Some remarks on the hyperelliptic moduli of genus 3
In 1967, Shioda \cite{Shi1} determined the ring of invariants of binary
octavics and their syzygies using the symbolic method. We discover that the
syzygies determined in \cite{Shi1} are incorrect. In this paper, we compute the
correct equations among the invariants of the binary octavics and give
necessary and sufficient conditions for two genus 3 hyperelliptic curves to be
isomorphic over an algebraically closed field , . For
the first time, an explicit equation of the hyperelliptic moduli for genus 3 is
computed in terms of absolute invariants.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1209.044
Wide-Field Infrared Imaging Polarimetry of the NGC 6334 Region: A Nest of Infrared Reflection Nebulae
We report the detection of eighteen infrared reflection nebulae (IRNe) in the
, , & linear polarimetric observations of the NGC 6334 massive
star-formation complex, of which 16 IRNe are new discoveries. Our images cover
180 square arcminutes, one of the widest near-infrared polarization data
in star-formation regions so far. These IRNe are most likely associated with
embedded young OB stars at different evolutionary phases, showing a variety of
sizes, morphologies, and polarization properties, which can be divided into
four categories. We argue the different nebula characteristics to be a possible
evolutionary sequence of circumstellar structures around young massive stars.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
A one-sided Prime Ideal Principle for noncommutative rings
Completely prime right ideals are introduced as a one-sided generalization of
the concept of a prime ideal in a commutative ring. Some of their basic
properties are investigated, pointing out both similarities and differences
between these right ideals and their commutative counterparts. We prove the
Completely Prime Ideal Principle, a theorem stating that right ideals that are
maximal in a specific sense must be completely prime. We offer a number of
applications of the Completely Prime Ideal Principle arising from many diverse
concepts in rings and modules. These applications show how completely prime
right ideals control the one-sided structure of a ring, and they recover
earlier theorems stating that certain noncommutative rings are domains (namely,
proper right PCI rings and rings with the right restricted minimum condition
that are not right artinian). In order to provide a deeper understanding of the
set of completely prime right ideals in a general ring, we study the special
subset of comonoform right ideals.Comment: 38 page
Molecular Structure and Modeling of Water-Air and Ice-Air Interfaces Monitored by Sum-Frequency Generation.
From a glass of water to glaciers in Antarctica, water-air and ice-air interfaces are abundant on Earth. Molecular-level structure and dynamics at these interfaces are key for understanding many chemical/physical/atmospheric processes including the slipperiness of ice surfaces, the surface tension of water, and evaporation/sublimation of water. Sum-frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopy is a powerful tool to probe the molecular-level structure of these interfaces because SFG can specifically probe the topmost interfacial water molecules separately from the bulk and is sensitive to molecular conformation. Nevertheless, experimental SFG has several limitations. For example, SFG cannot provide information on the depth of the interface and how the orientation of the molecules varies with distance from the surface. By combining the SFG spectroscopy with simulation techniques, one can directly compare the experimental data with the simulated SFG spectra, allowing us to unveil the molecular-level structure of water-air and ice-air interfaces. Here, we present an overview of the different simulation protocols available for SFG spectra calculations. We systematically compare the SFG spectra computed with different approaches, revealing the advantages and disadvantages of the different methods. Furthermore, we account for the findings through combined SFG experiments and simulations and provide future challenges for SFG experiments and simulations at different aqueous interfaces
Constraints on the time variation of the fine structure constant by the 5-year WMAP data
The constraints on the time variation of the fine structure constant at
recombination epoch relative to its present value, , are
obtained from the analysis of the 5-year WMAP cosmic microwave background data.
As a result of Markov-Chain Monte-Carlo analysis, it is found that, contrary to
the analysis based on the previous WMAP data, the mean value of
does not change significantly whether we use the
Hubble Space Telescope (HST) measurement of the Hubble parameter as a prior or
not. The resultant 95% confidence ranges of are with HST prior and without HST prior.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures; references adde
Exact Analysis of ESR Shift in the Spin-1/2 Heisenberg Antiferromagnetic Chain
A systematic perturbation theory is developed for the ESR shift and is
applied to the spin-1/2 Heisenberg chain. Using the Bethe ansatz technique, we
exactly analyze the resonance shift in the first order of perturbative
expansion with respect to an anisotropic exchange interaction. Exact result for
the whole range of temperature and magnetic field, as well as asymptotic
behavior in the low-temperature limit are presented. The obtained g-shift
strongly depends on magnetic fields at low temperature, showing a significant
deviation from the previous classical result.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures,to be published in Phys. Rev. Let
- âŠ