43,946 research outputs found
Drilling system design project 1967: final report of frame design committee
This report outlines the recommendations of the Frame
Design Committee for the final design of the machine, each
major part of the structure being considered individually
in the following sections :
1. Worktables
2. Guide and Slideways
3. Drill Head Support Structure
4. Swarf Disposal and Coolant Supply
5. General Constructio
Improved zinc oxide thermal control coatings
Ferricyanide/ferrocyanide couple prevents zinc oxide pigment degradation in thermal control coatings. Chemical couple retards physical optical property changes
The Habitability of our Evolving Galaxy
The notion of a Galactic Habitable Zone (GHZ), or regions of the Milky Way
galaxy that preferentially maintain the conditions to sustain complex life, has
recently gained attention due to the detection of numerous exoplanets and
advances made in understanding habitability on the Earth and other
environments. We discuss what a habitable environment means on large spatial
and temporal scales, which necessarily requires an approximated definition of
habitability to make an assessment of the astrophysical conditions that may
sustain complex life. We discuss a few key exoplanet findings that directly
relate to estimating the distribution of Earth-size planets in the Milky Way.
With a broad notion of habitability defined and major observable properties of
the Milky Way described, we compare selected literature on the GHZ and
postulate why the models yield differing predictions of the most habitable
regions at the present day, which include: (1) the majority of the galactic
disk; (2) an annular ring between 7-9 kpc, and (3) the galactic outskirts. We
briefly discuss the habitability of other galaxies as influenced by these
studies. We note that the dangers to biospheres in the Galaxy taken into
account in these studies may be incomplete and we discuss the possible role of
Gamma-Ray Bursts and other dangers to life in the Milky Way. We speculate how
changing astrophysical properties may affect the GHZ over time, including
before the Earth formed, and describe how new observations and other related
research may fit into the bigger picture of the habitability of the Galaxy.Comment: Chapter in Habitability of the Universe Before Earth, R. Gordon and
A. Sharov (Eds.), Elsevie
Non-Simply-Connected Gauge Groups and Rational Points on Elliptic Curves
We consider the F-theory description of non-simply-connected gauge groups
appearing in the E8 x E8 heterotic string. The analysis is closely tied to the
arithmetic of torsion points on an elliptic curve. The general form of the
corresponding elliptic fibration is given for all finite subgroups of E8 which
are applicable in this context. We also study the closely-related question of
point-like instantons on a K3 surface whose holonomy is a finite group. As an
example we consider the case of the heterotic string on a K3 surface having the
E8 gauge symmetry broken to (E6 x SU(3))/Z3 or SU(9)/Z3 by point-like
instantons with Z3 holonomy.Comment: 15 pages, 2 embedded figures, some spurious U(1)'s remove
A comparative study of online news retrieval and presentation strategies
We introduce a news retrieval system on which we evaluated three alternative presentation strategies for online news retrieval. We used a user-oriented and task-oriented evaluation framework. The interfaces studied were Image, giving a grid of thumbnails for each story together with query-based summaries presented as tooltips, Summary, which displayed the summary information alongside each thumbnail, and Cluster, which grouped similar stories together and used the same display format as Image. The evaluation showed that the Summary Interface was preferred to the Image Interface, and that the Cluster Interface was helpful to users with a set task to complete. The implications of this study are also discussed in this paper
Effect of environment on thermal control coatings Final report
Thermal control coating degradation under vacuum and ultraviolet radiation by chemical change of photoproduced holes and electron
Ensuring cost-effective heat exchanger network design for non-continuous processes
The variation in stream conditions over time inevitably adds significant complexity to the task of integrating non-continuous processes. The Time Averaging Method (TAM), where stream conditions are simply averaged across the entire time cycle, leads to unrealistic energy targets for direct heat recovery and consequently to Heat Exchanger Network (HEN) designs that are in fact suboptimal. This realisation led to the development of the Time Slice Method (TSM) that instead considers each time interval separately, and can be used to reach accurate targets and to design the appropriate HEN to maximise heat recovery. However, in practise the HENs often require excessive exchanger surface area, which renders them unfeasible when capital costs are taken in to account. An extension of the TSM that reduces the required overall exchanger surface area and systematically distributes it across the stream matches is proposed. The methodology is summarised with the help of a simple case study and further improvement opportunities are discusse
Dynamical quantum phase transitions in the dissipative Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick model and proposed realization in optical cavity QED
We present an optical cavity QED configuration that is described by a
dissipative version of the Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick model of an infinitely
coordinated spin system. This open quantum system exhibits both first- and
second-order non-equilibrium quantum phase transitions as a single, effective
field parameter is varied. Light emitted from the cavity offers measurable
signatures of the critical behavior, including that of the spin-spin
entanglement.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, typos corrected and other minor change
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