11,264 research outputs found
Model of large scale man-machine systems with an application to vessel traffic control
Mathematical models are discussed to deal with complex large-scale man-machine systems such as vessel (air, road) traffic and process control systems. Only interrelationships between subsystems are assumed. Each subsystem is controlled by a corresponding human operator (HO). Because of the interaction between subsystems, the HO has to estimate the state of all relevant subsystems and the relationships between them, based on which he can decide and react. This nonlinear filter problem is solved by means of both a linearized Kalman filter and an extended Kalman filter (in case state references are unknown and have to be estimated). The general model structure is applied to the concrete problem of vessel traffic control. In addition to the control of each ship, this involves collision avoidance between ship
A model of the vessel traffic process
A model of the total vessel traffic control process that includes the functioning of the human operator (HO) is presented. The vessel traffic services (VTSs) are modeled in their possible role of monitor, conflict detector, and advisor for the total vessel traffic system. The model assumes a number of ships, with a given planned route, in a given confined area. The navigation of each ship is based on a planned route, which is updated by information about the visual scene, instruments, and the VTS. Both normal operation and collision avoidance are modeled. The model is implemented in a C program. Typical traffic situations have been simulated to showing the ability of the model to address realistic vessel traffic scenarios. The model can answer questions related to safety and efficiency, the effect of HO functioning, information necessary to perform tasks, communication between ships and VTS, the optimization of procedures, automation of the total vessel traffic process, et
Structure and decay at rapid proton capture waiting points
We investigate the region of the nuclear chart around from a
three-body perspective, where we compute reaction rates for the radiative
capture of two protons. One key quantity is here the photon dissociation cross
section for the inverse process where two protons are liberated from the
borromean nucleus by photon bombardment. We find a number of peaks at low
photon energy in this cross section where each peak is located at the energy
corresponding to population of a three-body resonance. Thus, for these energies
the decay or capture processes proceed through these resonances. However, the
next step in the dissociation process still has the option of following several
paths, that is either sequential decay by emission of one proton at a time with
an intermediate two-body resonance as stepping stone, or direct decay into the
continuum of both protons simultaneously. The astrophysical reaction rate is
obtained by folding of the cross section as function of energy with the
occupation probability for a Maxwell-Boltzmann temperature distribution. The
reaction rate is then a function of temperature, and of course depending on the
underlying three-body bound state and resonance structures. We show that a very
simple formula at low temperature reproduces the elaborate numerically computed
reaction rate.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, conference proceedings, publishe
Two-proton capture on the Se nucleus with a new self-consistent cluster model
We investigate the two-proton capture reaction of the prominent rapid proton
capture waiting point nucleus, Se, that produces the borromean nucleus
Kr (Se). We apply a recently formulated general model where
the core nucleus, Se, is treated in the mean-field approximation and the
three-body problem of the two valence protons and the core is solved exactly.
The same Skyrme interaction is used to find core-nucleon and core
valence-proton interactions. We calculate electromagnetic two-proton
dissociation and capture cross sections, and derive the temperature dependent
capture rates. We vary the unknown resonance energy without changing any
of the structures computed self-consistently for both core and valence
particles. We find rates increasing quickly with temperature below ~GK
after which we find rates varying by less than a factor of two independent of
resonance energy. The capture mechanism is sequential through the
proton-core resonance, but the continuum background contributes
significantly.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Emergence of clusters: Halos, Efimov states, and experimental signals
We investigate emergence of halos and Efimov states in nuclei by use of a
newly designed model which combines self-consistent mean-field and three-body
descriptions. Recent interest in neutron heavy calcium isotopes makes Ca
(Ca+n+n) an ideal realistic candidate on the neutron dripline, and we
use it as a representative example that illustrates our broadly applicable
conclusions. By smooth variation of the interactions we simulate the crossover
from well-bound systems to structures beyond the threshold of binding, and find
that halo-configurations emerge from the mean-field structure for three-body
binding energy less than keV. Strong evidence is provided that Efimov
states cannot exist in nuclei. The structure that bears the most resemblance to
an Efimov state is a giant halo extending beyond the neutron-core scattering
length. We show that the observable large-distance decay properties of the wave
function can differ substantially from the bulk part at short distances, and
that this evolution can be traced with our combination of few- and many-body
formalisms. This connection is vital for interpretation of measurements such as
those where an initial state is populated in a reaction or by a beta-decay.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, under revie
Combined few-body and mean-field model for nuclei
The challenging nuclear many-body problem is discussed along with
classifications and qualitative descriptions of existing methods and models. We
present detailed derivations of a new method where cluster correlations
co-exist with an underlying mean-field described core-structure. The variation
of an antisymmetrized product of cluster and core wave functions and a given
nuclear interaction, provide sets of self-consistent equations of motion.
After the applications on dripline nuclei we discuss perspectives with
improvements and applications. In the conclusion we summarize while emphasizing
the merits of consistently treating both short- and large-distance properties,
few- and many-body correlations, ordinary nuclear structure, and concepts of
halos and Efimov states
Assessing the accuracy of Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov calculations by use of mass relations
The accuracy of three different sets of Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov calculations
of nuclear binding energies is systematically evaluated. To emphasize minor
fluctuations, a second order, four-point mass relation, which almost completely
eliminates smooth aspects of the binding energy, is introduced. Applying this
mass relation yields more scattered results for the calculated binding
energies. By examining the Gaussian distributions of the non-smooth aspects
which remain, structural differences can be detected between measured and
calculated binding energies. Substructures in regions of rapidly changing
deformation, specifically around and , are clearly
seen for the measured values, but are missing from the calculations. A similar
three-point mass relation is used to emphasize odd-even effects. A clear
decrease with neutron excess is seen continuing outside the experimentally
known region for the calculations.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, published versio
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