28,221 research outputs found
Design and finite element mode analysis of noncircular gear
The noncircular gear transmission is an important branch of the gear transmission, it is characterized by its compact structure, good dynamic equilibration and other advantages, and can be used in the automobile, engineering machine, ship, machine tool, aviation and spaceflight field etc. Studying on the dynamics feature of noncircular gear transmission can improve the ability to carry loads of, reduce the vibration and noise of, increase the life of the noncircular gear transmission machine, provides guidance for the design of the noncircular gear, and has significant theories and practical meanings. In this paper, the gear transmission technique is used to studied the design method of the noncircular gear, which contains distribution of teeth on the pitch curve, designs of the tooth tip curve and the tooth root curve, design of the tooth profile curve, the gear system dynamics principle is introduced to establish dynamics model for the noncircular gear; basic theory of finite element and mode analysis method are applied, finite element model for the noncircular gear is established, natural vibration characteristic of the noncircular gear is studied. And the oval gear is taken as an example, the mathematics software MathCAD, the 3D modeling software UG and the finite element software ABAQUS are used to realize precise 3D model of the oval gear. The finite element method is used, the natural vibration characteristic of the oval gear is studied, the main vibration types and natural frequencies of the oval gear and that of the equivalent cylindrical gears are analyzed and compared, the conclusions received reflect the dynamics performance of the oval gear, and solid foundation is laid for dynamics research and engineering application of the oval gear transmission
Reply to "Comment on 'Semiquantum-key distribution using less than four quantum states' "
Recently Boyer and Mor pointed out the first conclusion of Lemma 1 in our
original paper is not correct, and therefore, the proof of Theorem 5 based on
Lemma 1 is wrong. Furthermore, they gave a direct proof for Theorem 5 and
affirmed the conclusions in our original paper. In this reply, we admit the
first conclusion of Lemma 1 is not correct, but we need to point out the second
conclusion of Lemma 1 is correct. Accordingly, all the proofs for Lemma 2,
Lemma 3, and Theorems 3--6 are only based on the the second conclusion of Lemma
1 and therefore are correct.Comment: 1 pag
Input Comparison of Radiogenic Neutron Estimates for Ultra-low Background Experiments
Ultra-low-background experiments address some of the most important open
questions in particle physics, cosmology and astrophysics: the nature of dark
matter, whether the neutrino is its own antiparticle, and does the proton
decay. These rare event searches require well-understood and minimized
backgrounds. Simulations are used to understand backgrounds caused by naturally
occurring radioactivity in the rock and in every piece of shielding and
detector material used in these experiments. Most important are processes like
spontaneous fission and ({\alpha},n) reactions in material close to the
detectors that can produce neutrons. A comparison study between two dedicated
software packages is detailed. The cross section libraries, neutron yields, and
spectra from the Mei-Zhang-Hime and the SOURCES-4A codes are presented. The
resultant yields and spectra are used as inputs to direct dark matter detector
toy models in GEANT4, to study the impact of their differences on background
estimates and fits. Although differences in neutron yield calculations up to
50% were seen, there was no systematic difference between the Mei-Hime-Zhang
and SOURCES-4A results. Neutron propagation simulations smooth differences in
spectral shape and yield, and both tools were found to meet the broad
requirements of the low-background community
Single transverse-spin asymmetry in Drell-Yan lepton angular distribution
We calculate a single transverse-spin asymmetry for the Drell-Yan
lepton-pair's angular distribution in perturbative QCD. At leading order in the
strong coupling constant, the asymmetry is expressed in terms of a twist-3
quark-gluon correlation function T_F^{(V)}(x_1,x_2). In our calculation, the
same result was obtained in both light-cone and covariant gauge in QCD, while
keeping explicit electromagnetic current conservation for the virtual photon
that decays into the lepton pair. We also present a numerical estimate of the
asymmetry and compare the result to an existing other prediction.Comment: 15 pages, Revtex, 5 Postscript figures, uses aps.sty, epsfig.st
The S=1/2 chain in a staggered field: High-energy bound-spinon state and the effects of a discrete lattice
We report an experimental and theoretical study of the antiferromagnetic
S=1/2 chain subject to uniform and staggered fields. Using inelastic neutron
scattering, we observe a novel bound-spinon state at high energies in the
linear chain compound CuCl2 * 2((CD3)2SO). The excitation is explained with a
mean-field theory of interacting S=1/2 fermions and arises from the opening of
a gap at the Fermi surface due to confining spinon interactions. The mean-field
model also describes the wave-vector dependence of the bound-spinon states,
particularly in regions where effects of the discrete lattice are important. We
calculate the dynamic structure factor using exact diagonalization of finite
length chains, obtaining excellent agreement with the experiments.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, accepted by Phys. Rev.
Spin-Fluctuation-Induced Non-Fermi-Liquid Behavior with suppressed superconductivity in LiFeCoAs
A series of LiFeCoAs compounds with different Co concentrations
have been studied by transport, optical spectroscopy, angle-resolved
photoemission spectroscopy and nuclear magnetic resonance. We observed a Fermi
liquid to non-Fermi liquid to Fermi liquid (FL-NFL-FL) crossover alongside a
monotonic suppression of the superconductivity with increasing Co content. In
parallel to the FL-NFL-FL crossover, we found that both the low-energy spin
fluctuations and Fermi surface nesting are enhanced and then diminished,
strongly suggesting that the NFL behavior in LiFeCoAs is induced
by low-energy spin fluctuations which are very likely tuned by Fermi surface
nesting. Our study reveals a unique phase diagram of LiFeCoAs
where the region of NFL is moved to the boundary of the superconducting phase,
implying that they are probably governed by different mechanisms.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figure
Transverse momentum broadening of vector boson production in high energy nuclear collisions
We calculate in perturbative QCD the transverse momentum broadening of vector
boson production in high energy nuclear collisions. We evaluate the effect of
initial-state parton multiple scattering for the production of the Drell-Yan
virtual photon and bosons. We calculate both the initial- and final-state
multiple scattering effect for the production of heavy quarkonia and their
transverse momentum broadening in both NRQCD and Color Evaporation model of
quarkonium formation. We find that J/ and broadening in
hadron-nucleus collision is close to times the corresponding
Drell-Yan broadening, which gives a good description of existing Fermilab data.
Our calculations are also consistent with RHIC data on J/ broadening in
relativistic heavy ion collisions. We predict the transverse momentum
broadening of vector boson (J/, , and ) production in
relativistic heavy ion collisions at the LHC, and discuss the role of the
vector boson broadening in diagnosing medium properties.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures, revised version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Nuclear Effects on Heavy Boson Production at RHIC and LHC
We predict W and Z transverse momentum distributions from proton-proton and
nuclear collisions at RHIC and LHC. A resummation formalism with power
corrections to the renormalization group equations is used. The dependence of
the resummed QCD results on the non-perturbative input is very weak for the
systems considered. Shadowing effects are discussed and found to be unimportant
at RHIC, but important for LHC. We study the enhancement of power corrections
due to multiple scattering in nuclear collisions and numerically illustrate the
weak effects of the dependence on the nuclear mass.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figure
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Deep learning for cardiac image segmentation: A review
Deep learning has become the most widely used approach for cardiac image segmentation in recent years. In this paper, we provide a review of over 100 cardiac image segmentation papers using deep learning, which covers common imaging modalities including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), computed tomography (CT), and ultrasound (US) and major anatomical structures of interest (ventricles, atria and vessels). In addition, a summary of publicly available cardiac image datasets and code repositories are included to provide a base for encouraging reproducible research. Finally, we discuss the challenges and limitations with current deep learning-based approaches (scarcity of labels, model generalizability across different domains, interpretability) and suggest potential directions for future research
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