13,377 research outputs found
Evaluation of 2 cognitive abilities tests in a dual-task environment
Most real world operators are required to perform multiple tasks simultaneously. In some cases, such as flying a high performance aircraft or trouble shooting a failing nuclear power plant, the operator's ability to time share or process in parallel" can be driven to extremes. This has created interest in selection tests of cognitive abilities. Two tests that have been suggested are the Dichotic Listening Task and the Cognitive Failures Questionnaire. Correlations between these test results and time sharing performance were obtained and the validity of these tests were examined. The primary task was a tracking task with dynamically varying bandwidth. This was performed either alone or concurrently with either another tracking task or a spatial transformation task. The results were: (1) An unexpected negative correlation was detected between the two tests; (2) The lack of correlation between either test and task performance made the predictive utility of the tests scores appear questionable; (3) Pilots made more errors on the Dichotic Listening Task than college students
Investigation of refractory dielectric for integrated circuits Third quarterly report, Feb. 1969
Research and development on refractory dielectrics for integrated circuit
Investigation of refractory dielectric for integrated circuits Second quarterly report, Dec. 1968
Process development for chemical deposition of aluminum oxide films as refractory dielectrics for integrated circuit
A new approach to upscaling fracture network models while preserving geostatistical and geomechanical characteristics
A new approach to upscaling two-dimensional fracture network models is proposed for preserving geostatistical and geomechanical characteristics of a smaller-scale “source” fracture pattern. First, the scaling properties of an outcrop system are examined in terms of spatial organization, lengths, connectivity, and normal/shear displacements using fractal geometry and power law relations. The fracture pattern is observed to be nonfractal with the fractal dimension D ≈ 2, while its length distribution tends to follow a power law with the exponent 2 < a < 3. To introduce a realistic distribution of fracture aperture and shear displacement, a geomechanical model using the combined finite-discrete element method captures the response of a fractured rock sample with a domain size L = 2 m under in situ stresses. Next, a novel scheme accommodating discrete-time random walks in recursive self-referencing lattices is developed to nucleate and propagate fractures together with their stress- and scale-dependent attributes into larger domains of up to 54 m × 54 m. The advantages of this approach include preserving the nonplanarity of natural cracks, capturing the existence of long fractures, retaining the realism of variable apertures, and respecting the stress dependency of displacement-length correlations. Hydraulic behavior of multiscale growth realizations is modeled by single-phase flow simulation, where distinct permeability scaling trends are observed for different geomechanical scenarios. A transition zone is identified where flow structure shifts from extremely channeled to distributed as the network scale increases. The results of this paper have implications for upscaling network characteristics for reservoir simulation
Heavy Domain Wall Fermions: The RBC and UKQCD charm physics program
We review the domain wall charm physics program of the RBC and UKQCD
collaborations based on simulations including ensembles with physical pion
mass. We summarise our current set-up and present a status update on the decay
constants , , the charm quark mass, heavy-light and heavy-strange
bag parameters and the ratio .Comment: 8 pagers, 4 figures, conference proceedings for Lattice2017 submitted
to EPJ Web of Conference
Propagation of temporal entanglement
The equations that govern the temporal evolution of two photons in the
Schr{\"o}dinger picture are derived, taking into account the effects of loss,
group-velocity dispersion, temporal phase modulation, linear coupling among
different optical modes, and four-wave mixing. Inspired by the formalism, we
propose the concept of quantum temporal imaging, which uses dispersive elements
and temporal phase modulators to manipulate the temporal correlation of two
entangled photons. We also present the exact solution of a two-photon vector
soliton, in order to demonstrate the ease of use and intuitiveness of the
proposed formulation.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Probing nuclear symmetry energy with the sub-threshold pion production
Within the framework of semiclassical Boltzmann-Uehling-Uhlenbeck (BUU)
transport model, we investigated the effects of symmetry energy on the
sub-threshold pion using the isospin MDI interaction with the stiff and soft
symmetry energies in the central collision of Ca + Ca at the
incident beam energies of 100, 150, 200, 250 and 300 MeV/nucleon, respectively.
We find that the ratio of of sub-threshold charged pion
production is greatly sensitive to the symmetry energy, particularly around 100
MeV/nucleon energies. Large sensitivity of sub-threshold charged pion
production to nuclear symmetry energy may reduce uncertainties of probing
nuclear symmetry energy via heavy-ion collision.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, typo corrections, submitted to Chinese Physics
Letter
An exploratory study of heavy domain wall fermions on the lattice
We report on an exploratory study of domain wall fermions (DWF) as a lattice
regularisation for heavy quarks. Within the framework of quenched QCD with the
tree-level improved Symanzik gauge action we identify the DWF parameters which
minimise discretisation effects. We find the corresponding effective 4
overlap operator to be exponentially local, independent of the quark mass. We
determine a maximum bare heavy quark mass of , below which the
approximate chiral symmetry and O(a)-improvement of DWF are sustained. This
threshold appears to be largely independent of the lattice spacing. Based on
these findings, we carried out a detailed scaling study for the heavy-strange
meson dispersion relation and decay constant on four ensembles with lattice
spacings in the range . We observe very mild
scaling towards the continuum limit. Our findings establish a sound basis for
heavy DWF in dynamical simulations of lattice QCD with relevance to Standard
Model phenomenology.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figure
Re-entrant Layer-by-Layer Etching of GaAs(001)
We report the first observation of re-entrant layer-by-layer etching based on
{\it in situ\/} reflection high-energy electron-diffraction measurements. With
AsBr used to etch GaAs(001), sustained specular-beam intensity oscillations
are seen at high substrate temperatures, a decaying intensity with no
oscillations at intermediate temperatures, but oscillations reappearing at
still lower temperatures. Simulations of an atomistic model for the etching
kinetics reproduce the temperature ranges of these three regimes and support an
interpretation of the origin of this phenomenon as the site-selectivity of the
etching process combined with activation barriers to interlayer adatom
migration.Comment: 11 pages, REVTeX 3.0. Physical Review Letters, in press
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