988 research outputs found
Characterization of a Li-6 loaded liquid organic scintillator for fast neutron spectrometry and thermal neutron detection
The characterization of a liquid scintillator incorporating an aqueous
solution of enriched lithium chloride to produce a scintillator with 0.40% Li-6
is presented, including the performance of the scintillator in terms of its
optical properties and neutron response. The scintillator was incorporated into
a fast neutron spectrometer, and the light output spectra from 2.5 MeV, 14.1
MeV, and Cf-252 neutrons were measured using capture-gated coincidence
techniques. The spectrometer was operated without coincidence to perform
thermal neutron measurements. Possible improvements in spectrometer performance
are discussed.Comment: Submitted to Applied Radiation and Isotopes. 11 pages, 7 figures, 3
tables. Revision addresses reviewers' comment
True Superconductivity in a 2D "Superconducting-Insulating" System
We present results on disordered amorphous films which are expected to
undergo a field-tuned Superconductor-Insulator Transition. Based on low-field
data and I-V characteristics, we find evidence of a low temperature
Metal-to-Superconductor transition. This transition is characterized by
hysteretic magnetoresistance and discontinuities in the I-V curves. The
metallic phase just above the transition is different from the "Fermi Metal"
before superconductivity sets in.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figure
Heavy pseudoscalar mesons in a Schwinger-Dyson--Bethe-Salpeter approach
The mass spectrum of heavy pseudoscalar mesons, described as quark-antiquark
bound systems, is considered within the Bethe-Salpeter formalism with
momentum-dependent masses of the constituents. This dependence is found by
solving the Schwinger-Dyson equation for quark propagators in rainbow-ladder
approximation. Such an approximation is known to provide both a fast
convergence of numerical methods and accurate results for lightest mesons.
However, as the meson mass increases, the method becomes less stable and
special attention must be devoted to details of numerical means of solving the
corresponding equations. We focus on the pseudoscalar sector and show that our
numerical scheme describes fairly accurately the , , , and
ground states. Excited states are considered as well. Our calculations
are directly related to the future physics programme at FAIR.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures; Based on materials of the contribution
"Relativistic Description of Two- and Three-Body Systems in Nuclear Physics",
ECT*, October 19-23, 200
Vortex Lattice Melting into Disentangled Liquid Followed by the 3D-2D Decoupling Transition in YBa_2Cu_4O_8 Single Crystals
A sharp resistance drop associated with vortex lattice melting was observed
in high quality YBa_2Cu_4O_8 single crystals. The melting line is well
described well by the anisotropic GL theory. Two thermally activated flux flow
regions, which were separated by a crossover line B_cr=1406.5(1-T/T_c)/T
(T_c=79.0 K, B_cr in T), were observed in the vortex liquid phase. Activation
energy for each region was obtained and the corresponding dissipation mechanism
was discussed. Our results suggest that the vortex lattice in YBa_2Cu_4O_8
single crystal melts into disentangled liquid, which then undergoes a 3D-2D
decoupling transition.Comment: 5 pages, 4 eps figures, RevTex (Latex2.09
Development of a tight-binding potential for bcc-Zr. Application to the study of vibrational properties
We present a tight-binding potential based on the moment expansion of the
density of states, which includes up to the fifth moment. The potential is
fitted to bcc and hcp Zr and it is applied to the computation of vibrational
properties of bcc-Zr. In particular, we compute the isothermal elastic
constants in the temperature range 1200K < T < 2000K by means of standard Monte
Carlo simulation techniques. The agreement with experimental results is
satisfactory, especially in the case of the stability of the lattice with
respect to the shear associated with C'. However, the temperature decrease of
the Cauchy pressure is not reproduced. The T=0K phonon frequencies of bcc-Zr
are also computed. The potential predicts several instabilities of the bcc
structure, and a crossing of the longitudinal and transverse modes in the (001)
direction. This is in agreement with recent ab initio calculations in Sc, Ti,
Hf, and La.Comment: 14 pages, 6 tables, 4 figures, revtex; the kinetic term of the
isothermal elastic constants has been corrected (Eq. (4.1), Table VI and
Figure 4
Two-dimensional SIR epidemics with long range infection
We extend a recent study of susceptible-infected-removed epidemic processes
with long range infection (referred to as I in the following) from
1-dimensional lattices to lattices in two dimensions. As in I we use hashing to
simulate very large lattices for which finite size effects can be neglected, in
spite of the assumed power law for the
probability that a site can infect another site a distance vector
apart. As in I we present detailed results for the critical case, for the
supercritical case with , and for the supercritical case with . For the latter we verify the stretched exponential growth of the
infected cluster with time predicted by M. Biskup. For we find
generic power laws with dependent exponents in the supercritical
phase, but no Kosterlitz-Thouless (KT) like critical point as in 1-d. Instead
of diverging exponentially with the distance from the critical point, the
correlation length increases with an inverse power, as in an ordinary critical
point. Finally we study the dependence of the critical exponents on in
the regime , and compare with field theoretic predictions. In
particular we discuss in detail whether the critical behavior for
slightly less than 2 is in the short range universality class, as conjectured
recently by F. Linder {\it et al.}. As in I we also consider a modified version
of the model where only some of the contacts are long range, the others being
between nearest neighbors. If the number of the latter reaches the percolation
threshold, the critical behavior is changed but the supercritical behavior
stays qualitatively the same.Comment: 14 pages, including 29 figure
The one-dimensional Bose-Hubbard Model with nearest-neighbor interaction
We study the one-dimensional Bose-Hubbard model using the Density-Matrix
Renormalization Group (DMRG).For the cases of on-site interactions and
additional nearest-neighbor interactions the phase boundaries of the
Mott-insulators and charge density wave phases are determined. We find a direct
phase transition between the charge density wave phase and the superfluid
phase, and no supersolid or normal phases. In the presence of nearest-neighbor
interaction the charge density wave phase is completely surrounded by a region
in which the effective interactions in the superfluid phase are repulsive. It
is known from Luttinger liquid theory that a single impurity causes the system
to be insulating if the effective interactions are repulsive, and that an even
bigger region of the superfluid phase is driven into a Bose-glass phase by any
finite quenched disorder. We determine the boundaries of both regions in the
phase diagram. The ac-conductivity in the superfluid phase in the attractive
and the repulsive region is calculated, and a big superfluid stiffness is found
in the attractive as well as the repulsive region.Comment: 19 pages, 30 figure
The Role of Human-Automation Consensus in Multiple Unmanned Vehicle Scheduling
Objective: This study examined the impact of increasing automation replanning rates on operator performance and workload when supervising a decentralized network of heterogeneous unmanned vehicles. Background: Futuristic unmanned vehicles systems will invert the operator-to-vehicle ratio so that one operator can control multiple dissimilar vehicles connected through a decentralized network. Significant human-automation collaboration will be needed because of automation brittleness, but such collaboration could cause high workload. Method: Three increasing levels of replanning were tested on an existing multiple unmanned vehicle simulation environment that leverages decentralized algorithms for vehicle routing and task allocation in conjunction with human supervision. Results: Rapid replanning can cause high operator workload, ultimately resulting in poorer overall system performance. Poor performance was associated with a lack of operator consensus for when to accept the automation’s suggested prompts for new plan consideration as well as negative attitudes toward unmanned aerial vehicles in general. Participants with video game experience tended to collaborate more with the automation, which resulted in better performance. Conclusion: In decentralized unmanned vehicle networks, operators who ignore the automation’s requests for new plan consideration and impose rapid replans both increase their own workload and reduce the ability of the vehicle network to operate at its maximum capacity. Application: These findings have implications for personnel selection and training for futuristic systems involving human collaboration with decentralized algorithms embedded in networks of autonomous systems.Aurora Flight Sciences Corp.United States. Office of Naval Researc
Time dependent mean field theory of the superfluid-insulator phase transition
We develop a time-dependent mean field approach, within the time-dependent
variational principle, to describe the Superfluid-Insulator quantum phase
transition. We construct the zero temperature phase diagram both of the
Bose-Hubbard model (BHM), and of a spin-S Heisenberg model (SHM) with the XXZ
anisotropy. The phase diagram of the BHM indicates a phase transition from a
Mott insulator to a compressibile superfluid phase, and shows the expected
lobe-like structure. The SHM phase diagram displays a quantum phase transition
between a paramagnetic and a canted phases showing as well a lobe-like
structure. We show how the BHM and Quantum Phase model (QPM) can be rigorously
derived from the SHM. Based on such results, the phase boundaries of the SHM
are mapped to the BHM ones, while the phase diagram of the QPM is related to
that of the SHM. The QPM's phase diagram obtained through the application of
our approach to the SHM, describes the known onset of the macroscopic phase
coherence from the Coulomb blockade regime for increasing Josephson coupling
constant. The BHM and the QPM phase diagrams are in good agreement with Quantum
Monte Carlo results, and with the third order strong coupling perturbative
expansion.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures. To be published in Phys. Rev.
Heat capacity studies of Ce and Rh site substitution in the heavy fermion antiferromagnet CeRhIn_5;: Short-range magnetic interactions and non-Fermi-liquid behavior
In heavy fermion materials superconductivity tends to appear when long range
magnetic order is suppressed by chemical doping or applying pressure. Here we
report heat capacity measurements on diluted alloyes of the heavy fermion
superconductor CeRhIn_5;. Heat capacity measurements have been performed on
CeRh_{1-y}Ir_{y}In_5; (y <= 0.10) and Ce_{1-x}La_{x}Rh_{1-y}Ir_{y}In_5; (x <=
0.50) in applied fields up to 90 kOe to study the affect of doping and magnetic
field on the magnetic ground state. The magnetic phase diagram of
CeRh_{0.9}Ir_{0.1}In_5; is consistent with the magnetic structure of CeRhIn_5;
being unchanged by Ir doping. Doping of Ir in small concentrations is shown to
slightly increase the antiferromagnetic transition temperature T_{N} (T_{N}=3.8
K in the undoped sample). La doping which causes disorder on the Ce sublattice
is shown to lower T_{N} with no long range order observed above 0.34 K for
Ce_{0.50}La_{0.50}RhIn_5;. Measurements on Ce_{0.50}La_{0.50}RhIn_5; show a
coexistence of short range magnetic order and non-Fermi-liquid behavior. This
dual nature of the Ce 4f-electrons is very similar to the observed results on
CeRhIn_5; when long range magnetic order is suppressed at high pressure.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure
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