1,924,532 research outputs found
Space Shuttle Lightning Protection
The technology for lightning protection of even the most advanced spacecraft is available and can be applied through cost-effective hardware designs and design-verification techniques. In this paper, the evolution of the Space Shuttle Lightning Protection Program is discussed, including the general types of protection, testing, and anlayses being performed to assess the lightning-transient-damage susceptibility of solid-state electronics
Canonical and Grand Canonical Ensemble Expectation Values from Quantum Monte Carlo Simulations
We show how canonical ensemble expectation values can be extracted from
quantum Monte Carlo simulations in the grand canonical ensemble. In order to
obtain results for all particle sectors, a modest number of grand canonical
simulations must be performed, each at a different chemical potential. From the
canonical ensemble results, grand canonical expectation values can be extracted
as a continuous function of the chemical potential. Results are presented from
the application of this method to the two-dimensional Hubbard model.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Chrysler improved numerical differencing analyzer for third generation computers CINDA-3G
New and versatile method has been developed to supplement or replace use of original CINDA thermal analyzer program in order to take advantage of improved systems software and machine speeds of third generation computers. CINDA-3G program options offer variety of methods for solution of thermal analog models presented in network format
Stopping distance for high energy jets in weakly-coupled quark-gluon plasmas
We derive a simple formula for the stopping distance for a high-energy quark
traveling through a weakly-coupled quark gluon plasma. The result is given to
next-to-leading-order in an expansion in inverse logarithms ln(E/T), where T is
the temperature of the plasma. We also define a stopping distance for gluons
and give a leading-log result. Discussion of stopping distance has a
theoretical advantage over discussion of energy loss rates in that stopping
distances can be generalized to the case of strong coupling, where one may not
speak of individual partons.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures [change from v1: fixed embarrassing reference
error
High-Fidelity Readout in Circuit Quantum Electrodynamics Using the Jaynes-Cummings Nonlinearity
We demonstrate a qubit readout scheme that exploits the Jaynes-Cummings
nonlinearity of a superconducting cavity coupled to transmon qubits. We find
that in the strongly-driven dispersive regime of this system, there is the
unexpected onset of a high-transmission "bright" state at a critical power
which depends sensitively on the initial qubit state. A simple and robust
measurement protocol exploiting this effect achieves a single-shot fidelity of
87% using a conventional sample design and experimental setup, and at least 61%
fidelity to joint correlations of three qubits.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Revealing the accretion disc corona in Mrk 335 with multi-epoch X-ray spectroscopy
Active galactic nuclei host an accretion disc with an X-ray producing corona
around a supermassive black hole. In bright sources, such as the Seyfert 1
galaxy Mrk 335, reflection of the coronal emission off the accretion disc has
been observed. Reflection produces spectral features such as an iron emission
line, which allow for properties of the inner accretion disc and the corona to
be constrained. We perform a multi-epoch spectral analysis of all XMM-Newton,
Suzaku, and NuSTAR observations of Mrk 335, and we optimize our fitting
procedure to unveil correlations between the Eddington ratio and the spectral
parameters. We find that the disc's ionization parameter correlates strongly
with the Eddington ratio: the inner disc is more strongly ionized at higher
flux. The slope of the correlation is less steep than previously predicted.
Furthermore, the cut-off of the power-law spectrum increases in energy with the
Eddington ratio, whereas the reflection fraction exhibits a decrease. We
interpret this behaviour as geometrical changes of the corona as a function of
the accretion rate. Below ~10% of the Eddington limit, the compact and
optically thick corona is located close to the inner disc, whereas at higher
accretion rates the corona is likely optically thin and extends vertically
further away from the disc surface. Furthermore, we find a soft excess that
consists of two components. In addition to a contribution from reflection in
low ionization states, a second component is present that traces the overall
flux.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
How rapidly do neutron stars spin at birth? Constaints from archival X-ray observations of extragalactic supernovae
Traditionally, studies aimed at inferring the distribution of birth periods of neutron stars are based on radio surveys. Here we propose an independent method to constrain the pulsar spin periods at birth based on their X-ray luminosities. In particular, the observed luminosity distribution of supernovae (SNe) poses a constraint on the initial rotational energy of the embedded pulsars, via the correlation found for radio pulsars, and under the assumption that this relation continues to hold beyond the observed range. We have extracted X-ray luminosities (or limits) for a large sample of historical SNe observed with Chandra, XMM and Swift, which have been firmly classified as core-collapse SNe. We have then compared these observational limits with the results of Monte Carlo simulations of the pulsar X-ray luminosity distribution for a range of values of the birth parameters. We find that a pulsar population dominated by millisecond periods at birth is ruled out by the data
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