43,027 research outputs found
Casimir Force for Arbitrary Objects Using the Argument Principle and Boundary Element Methods
Recent progress in the simulation of Casimir forces between various objects
has allowed traditional computational electromagnetic solvers to be used to
find Casimir forces in arbitrary three-dimensional objects. The underlying
theory to these approaches requires knowledge and manipulation of quantum field
theory and statistical physics. We present a calculation of the Casimir force
using the method of moments via the argument principle. This simplified
derivation allows greater freedom in the moment matrix where the argument
principle can be used to calculate Casimir forces for arbitrary geometries and
materials with the use of various computational electromagnetic techniques.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Heavy Baryons and electromagnetic decays
In this talk I review the theory of electromagnetic decays of the ground
state baryon multiplets with oneheavy quark, calculated using Heavy Hadron
Chiral Perturbation Theory. The M1 and E2 amplitudes for (S^{*}-> S gamma),
(S^{*} -> T gamma) and (S -> T gamma)are separately analyzed. All M1
transitions are calculated up to O(1/\Lambda_\chi^2). The E2 amplitudes
contribute at the same order for (S^{*}-> S gamma), while for (S^{*} -> T
gamma) they first appear at O(1/(m_Q \Lambda_\chi^2))and for (S -> T gamma) are
completely negligible. Once the loop contributions is considered, relations
among different decay amplitudes are derived. Furthermore, one can obtain an
absolute prediction for the widths of Xi^{0'(*)}_c-> Xi^{0}_c gamma and
Xi^{-'(*)}_b-> Xi^{-}_b gamma.Comment: Talk presented at 4^{th} International Conference Hyperons, Charm and
Beauty Hadrons Conference, Valencia June 200
Fundamental study of flow field generated by rotorcraft blades using wide-field shadowgraph
The vortex trajectory and vortex wake generated by helicopter rotors are visualized using a wide-field shadowgraph technique. Use of a retro-reflective Scotchlite screen makes it possible to investigate the flow field generated by full-scale rotors. Tip vortex trajectories are visible in shadowgraphs for a range of tip Mach number of 0.38 to 0.60. The effect of the angle of attack is substantial. At an angle of attack greater than 8 degrees, the visibility of the vortex core is significant even at relatively low tip Mach numbers. The theoretical analysis of the sensitivity is carried out for a rotating blade. This analysis demonstrates that the sensitivity decreases with increasing dimensionless core radius and increases with increasing tip Mach number. The threshold value of the sensitivity is found to be 0.0015, below which the vortex core is not visible and above which it is visible. The effect of the optical path length is also discussed. Based on this investigation, it is concluded that the application of this wide-field shadowgraph technique to a large wind tunnel test should be feasible. In addition, two simultaneous shadowgraph views would allow three-dimensional reconstruction of vortex trajectories
Combined Field Integral Equation Based Theory of Characteristic Mode
Conventional electric field integral equation based theory is susceptible to
the spurious internal resonance problem when the characteristic modes of closed
perfectly conducting objects are computed iteratively. In this paper, we
present a combined field integral equation based theory to remove the
difficulty of internal resonances in characteristic mode analysis. The electric
and magnetic field integral operators are shown to share a common set of
non-trivial characteristic pairs (values and modes), leading to a generalized
eigenvalue problem which is immune to the internal resonance corruption.
Numerical results are presented to validate the proposed formulation. This work
may offer efficient solutions to characteristic mode analysis which involves
electrically large closed surfaces
Heat dissipation of high rate Li-SOCl sub 2 primary cells
The heat dissipation problem occurring in the lithium thionyl chloride cells discharged at relatively high rates under normal discharge conditions is examined. Four heat flow paths were identified, and the thermal resistances of the relating cell components along each flow path were accordingly calculated. From the thermal resistance network analysis, it was demonstrated that about 90 percent of the total heat produced within the cell should be dissipated along the radial direction in a spirally wound cell. In addition, the threshold value of the heat generation rate at which cell internal temperature could be maintained below 100 C, was calculated from total thermal resistance and found to be 2.9 W. However, these calculations were made only at the cell components' level, and the transient nature of the heat accumulation and dissipation was not considered. A simple transient model based on the lumped-heat-capacity concept was developed to predict the time-dependent cell temperature at different discharge rates. The overall objective was to examine the influence of cell design variable from the heat removal point of view under normal discharge conditions and to make recommendations to build more efficient lithium cells
Magnetic Helicity Conservation and Inverse Energy Cascade in Electron Magnetohydrodynamic Wave Packets
Electron magnetohydrodynamics (EMHD) provides a fluid-like description of
small-scale magnetized plasmas. An EMHD wave (also known as whistler wave)
propagates along magnetic field lines. The direction of propagation can be
either parallel or anti-parallel to the magnetic field lines. We numerically
study propagation of 3-dimensional (3D) EMHD wave packets moving in one
direction. We obtain two major results: 1. Unlike its magnetohydrodynamic (MHD)
counterpart, an EMHD wave packet is dispersive. Because of this, EMHD wave
packets traveling in one direction create opposite traveling wave packets via
self-interaction and cascade energy to smaller scales. 2. EMHD wave packets
traveling in one direction clearly exhibit inverse energy cascade. We find that
the latter is due to conservation of magnetic helicity. We compare inverse
energy cascade in 3D EMHD turbulence and 2-dimensional (2D) hydrodynamic
turbulence.Comment: Phys. Rev. Lett., accepted (4pages, 4 figures
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Single-shot optical conductivity measurement of dense aluminum plasmas
The optical conductivity of a dense femtosecond laser-heated aluminum plasma heated to 0.1-1.5 eV was measured using frequency-domain interferometry with chirped pulses, permitting simultaneous observation of optical probe reflectivity and probe pulse phase shift. Coupled with published models of bound-electron contributions to the conductivity, these two independent experimental data yielded a direct measurement of both real and imaginary components of the plasma conductivity.DOE National Nuclear Security Administration DE-FC52-03NA00156Physic
Effective Lagrangian from Higher Curvature Terms: Absence of vDVZ Discontinuity in AdS Space
We argue that the van Dam-Veltman-Zakharov discontinuity arising in the limit of the massive graviton through an explicit Pauli-Fierz mass term
could be absent in anti de Sitter space. This is possible if the graviton can
acquire mass spontaneously from the higher curvature terms or/and the massless
limit is attained faster than the cosmological constant . We discuss the effects of higher-curvature couplings and of an explicit
cosmological term () on stability of such continuity and of massive
excitations.Comment: 23 pages, Latex, the version to appear in Class. Quant. Gra
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