6,992 research outputs found
The Mullins effect in the wrinkling behavior of highly stretched thin films
Recent work demonstrates that finite-deformation nonlinear elasticity is
essential in the accurate modeling of wrinkling in highly stretched thin films.
Geometrically exact models predict an isola-center bifurcation, indicating that
for a bounded interval of aspect ratios only, stable wrinkles appear and then
disappear as the macroscopic strain is increased. This phenomenon has been
verified in experiments. In addition, recent experiments revealed the following
striking phenomenon: For certain aspect ratios for which no wrinkling occurred
upon the first loading, wrinkles appeared during the first unloading and again
during all subsequent cyclic loading. Our goal here is to present a simple
pseudo-elastic model, capturing the stress softening and residual strain
observed in the experiments, that accurately predicts wrinkling behavior on the
first loading that differs from that under subsequent cyclic loading. In
particular for specific aspect ratios, the model correctly predicts the
scenario of no wrinkling during first loading with wrinkling occurring during
unloading and for all subsequent cyclic loading.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
Automobile ride quality experiments correlated to iso-weighted criteria
As part of an overall study to evaluate the usefulness of ride quality criteria for the design of improved ground transportation systems an experiment was conducted involving subjective and objective measurement of ride vibrations found in an automobile riding over roadways of various roughness. Correlation of the results led to some very significant relationships between passenger rating and ride accelerations. The latter were collapsed using a frequency-weighted root mean square measure of the random vibration. The results suggest the form of a design criterion giving the relationship between ride vibration and acceptable automobile ride quality. Further the ride criterion is expressed in terms that relate to rides with which most people are familiar. The design of the experiment, the ride vibration data acquisition, the concept of frequency weighting and the correlations found between subjective and objective measurements are presented
Linking teaching and research in disciplines and departments
This paper supports the effective links between teaching and discipline-based research in disciplinary communities and in academic departments. It is authored by Alan Jenkins, Mick Healey and Roger Zetter
Faking
Recent evidence from observation of the flavor-changing neutral current decay
B_s to mu+ mu- by the LHCb collaboration B(B_s to mu^+ mu^-) = (3.2 * 10^{-9}),
is consistent with the latest standard model prediction B(B_s to mu^+ mu^-) =
(3.23 +- 0.27) * 10^{-9}. While New Physics can still affect this decay
amplitude, its contribution is certainly not the dominant one. We analyze
branching ratios of the decays B_s to mu+ mu- X, with X = a photon or neutrino
anti-neutrino pair, which can mimic B_s to mu+ mu- on portions of the parameter
space where X is soft. We perform a model-independent standard model
calculation of those processes incorporating heavy quark and chiral symmetries
of QCD. We show that the considered contributions contribute to B_s to mu+ mu-
at a sub-percent level.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, .v2 changes : fixed diagram TeX, small notation
change, fixed referenc
Local Causality, Probability and Explanation
In papers published in the 25 years following his famous 1964 proof John Bell refined and reformulated his views on locality and causality. Although his formulations of local causality were in terms of probability, he had little to say about that notion. But assumptions about probability are implicit in his arguments and conclusions. Probability does not conform to these assumptions when quantum mechanics is applied to account
for the particular correlations Bell argues are locally inexplicable. This account involves no superluminal action and there is even a sense in which it is local, but it is in tension with the requirement that the direct causes and effects of events are nearby
Control And Random Searching With Multiple Robots
Proceedings IEEE CDC Conference 2000, Sydney Australia, Nov. 2000 paper No INV-230
On the properties of superconducting planar resonators at mK temperatures
Planar superconducting resonators are now being increasingly used at mK
temperatures in a number of novel applications. They are also interesting
devices in their own right since they allow us to probe the properties of both
the superconductor and its environment. We have experimentally investigated
three types of niobium resonators - including a lumped element design -
fabricated on sapphire and SiO_2/Si substrates. They all exhibit a non-trivial
temperature dependence of their centre frequency and quality factor. Our
results shed new light on the interaction between the electromagnetic waves in
the resonator and two-level fluctuators in the substrate.Comment: V2 includes some minor corrections/changes. Submitted to PR
Magnetic field tuning of coplanar waveguide resonators
We describe measurements on microwave coplanar resonators designed for
quantum bit experiments. Resonators have been patterned onto sapphire and
silicon substrates, and quality factors in excess of a million have been
observed. The resonant frequency shows a high sensitivity to magnetic field
applied perpendicular to the plane of the film, with a quadratic dependence for
the fundamental, second and third harmonics. Frequency shift of hundreds of
linewidths can be obtained.Comment: Accepted for publication in AP
Nonstandard neutrino interactions and transition magnetic moments
We constrain generic nonstandard neutrino interactions with existing
experimental data on neutrino transition magnetic moments and derive strong
bounds on tensorial couplings of neutrinos to charged fermions. We also discuss
how some of these tensorial couplings can be constrained by other experiments,
e.g., on neutrino-electron and neutrino-nucleus scattering.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, 1 table; the entries in the central column of
Table I are corrected by the factor of 2, and a misprint in Eq. (17) is
correcte
- …
