3,487 research outputs found
Oxidation and emittance of superalloys in heat shield applications
Recently developed superalloys that form alumina coatings have a high potential for heat shield applications for advanced aerospace vehicles at temperatures above 1095C. Both INCOLOY alloy MA 956 (of the Inco Alloys International, Inc.), an iron-base oxide-dispersion-strengthened alloy, and CABOT alloy No. 214 (of the Cabot Corporation), an alumina-forming nickel-chromium alloy, have good oxidation resistance and good elevated temperature strength. The oxidation resistance of both alloys has been attributed to the formation of a thin alumina layer (alpha-Al2O3) at the surface. Emittance and oxidation data were obtained for simulated Space Shuttle reentry conditions using a hypersonic arc-heated wind tunnel. The surface oxides and substrate alloys were characterized using X-ray diffraction and scanning and transmission electron microscopy with an energy-dispersive X-ray analysis unit. The mass loss and emittance characteristics of the two alloys are discussed
Measurement of Source Chaoticity for Particle Emission in Au+Au Collisions at = 130 GeV using 3-Particle HBT Correlations
Data from the first physics run at the Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collider at
Brookhaven National Laboratory from the STAR experiment have been analyzed
using three-pion correlations to study whether pions are emitted independently
at freezeout. We have made a high-statistics measurement of the three-pion
correlation function and calculated the normalized three-particle correlator to
obtain a quantitative measurement of the degree of chaoticity in the freeze-out
environment.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Plenary talk presented at Quark Matter 2002,
Nantes, France, July 18-24, 200
Non-Abelian Energy Loss at Finite Opacity
A systematic expansion in opacity, , is used to clarify the
non-linear behavior of induced gluon radiation in quark-gluon plasmas. The
inclusive differential gluon distribution is calculated up to second order in
opacity and compared to the zeroth order (factorization) limit. The opacity
expansion makes it possible to take finite kinematic constraints into account
that suppress jet quenching in nuclear collisions below RHIC (
AGeV) energies.Comment: 4 pages (revtex) with 3 eps figures, submitted to PR
On the Angular Dependence of the Radiative Gluon Spectrum
The induced momentum spectrum of soft gluons radiated from a high energy
quark produced in and propagating through a QCD medium is reexamined in the
BDMPS formalism. A mistake in our published work (Physical Review C60 (1999)
064902) is corrected. The correct dependence of the fractional induced loss
as a universal function of the variable
where is the size of the medium and
the transport coefficient is presented. We add the proof that the
radiated gluon momentum spectrum derived in our formalism is equivalent with
the one derived in the Zakharov-Wiedemann approach.Comment: LaTex, 5 pages, 1 figur
Mechanical properties of coated titanium Beta-21S after exposure to air at 700 and 800 C
Mechanical properties of Beta-21S (Ti-15Mo-3Al-2.7Nb-0.2Si, wt percent) with glass, aluminide, and glass-on-aluminide coatings less than 3-micron thick were studied. Coatings were deposited by sol-gel processing or electron-beam evaporation onto 4.5-mil (113-micron) thick Beta-21S sheet from which, after oxidizing in air at 700 or 800 C, tensile test specimens were machined. Plastic elongation was the most severely degraded of the tensile properties; the glass-on-aluminide coatings were the most effective in preventing degradation. It was found that oxygen trapping by forming oxides in the coating, and reactions between the coatings and the Beta-21S alloy played significant roles
Flow effects on the freeze-out phase-space density in heavy ion collisions
The strong longitudinal expansion of the reaction zone formed in relativistic
heavy-ion collisions is found to significantly reduce the spatially averaged
pion phase-space density, compared to naive estimates based on thermal
distributions. This has important implications for data interpretation and
leads to larger values for the extracted pion chemical potential at kinetic
freeze-out.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures included via epsfig, added discussion of different
transverse density profiles, 1 new figur
Infrared Observations During the Secondary Eclipse of HD 209458b: I. 3.6-Micron Occultation Spectroscopy Using the VLT
We search for an infrared signature of the transiting extrasolar planet HD
209458b during secondary eclipse. Our method, which we call `occultation
spectroscopy,' searches for the disappearance and reappearance of weak spectral
features due to the exoplanet as it passes behind the star and later reappears.
We argue that at the longest infrared wavelengths, this technique becomes
preferable to conventional `transit spectroscopy'. We observed the system in
the wing of the strong nu-3 band of methane near 3.6 microns during two
secondary eclipses, using the VLT/ISAAC spectrometer at a spectral resolution
of 3300. Our analysis, which utilizes a model template spectrum, achieves
sufficient precision to expect detection of the spectral structure predicted by
an irradiated, low-opacity (cloudless), low-albedo, thermochemical equilibrium
model for the exoplanet atmosphere. However, our observations show no evidence
for the presence of this spectrum from the exoplanet, with the statistical
significance of the non-detection depending on the timing of the secondary
eclipse, which depends on the assumed value for the orbital eccentricity. Our
results reject certain specific models of the atmosphere of HD 209458b as
inconsistent with our observations at the 3-sigma level, given assumptions
about the stellar and planetary parameters.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures Accepted to Astrophysical Journa
Calculating Quenching Weights
We calculate the probability (``quenching weight'') that a hard parton
radiates an additional energy fraction due to scattering in spatially extended
QCD matter. This study is based on an exact treatment of finite in-medium path
length, it includes the case of a dynamically expanding medium, and it extends
to the angular dependence of the medium-induced gluon radiation pattern. All
calculations are done in the multiple soft scattering approximation
(Baier-Dokshitzer-Mueller-Peign\'e-Schiff--Zakharov ``BDMPS-Z''-formalism) and
in the single hard scattering approximation (N=1 opacity approximation). By
comparison, we establish a simple relation between transport coefficient, Debye
screening mass and opacity, for which both approximations lead to comparable
results. Together with this paper, a CPU-inexpensive numerical subroutine for
calculating quenching weights is provided electronically. To illustrate its
applications, we discuss the suppression of hadronic transverse momentum
spectra in nucleus-nucleus collisions. Remarkably, the kinematic constraint
resulting from finite in-medium path length reduces significantly the
transverse momentum dependence of the nuclear modification factor, thus leading
to consistency with the data measured at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider
(RHIC).Comment: 45 pages LaTeX, 20 eps-figure
Cyclic mutually unbiased bases, Fibonacci polynomials and Wiedemann's conjecture
We relate the construction of a complete set of cyclic mutually unbiased
bases, i. e., mutually unbiased bases generated by a single unitary operator,
in power-of-two dimensions to the problem of finding a symmetric matrix over
F_2 with an irreducible characteristic polynomial that has a given Fibonacci
index. For dimensions of the form 2^(2^k) we present a solution that shows an
analogy to an open conjecture of Wiedemann in finite field theory. Finally, we
discuss the equivalence of mutually unbiased bases.Comment: 11 pages, added chapter on equivalenc
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