2,572 research outputs found
The reflection and transmission properties of a triple band dichroic surface
The development of a triple-band dichroic surface design is detailed that is reflective in the Ka-band from 22.5 to 27.3 GHz and the Ku-band from 13.7 to 15.1 GHz, yet transparent in the S-band from 2.0 to 2.3 GHz, for all planes of incidence, and for all angles of incidence out to eta = 45 deg. The design is comprised of two gangbuster whole-surfaces separated by a distance, d, that is comparable to a fraction of a wavelength in S-band, and enhanced by the addition of a dielectric matching plate. The gangbuster array is comprised of tightly packed straight skewed dipole elements referred to as half-surfaces. Two of these half-surfaces are oriented orthogonal to each other and placed an array separation distance, s, apart to form the gangbuster whole-surface which allows any arbitrary plane of incidence. Results are given for the triple-band design with and without dielectric and conduction losses. The cross polarization properties of the dichroic surface was further investigated. It is shown that the reflection cross polarized component is dominated by the geometry of the front whole surface of the design (particularly the array separation s) and is never more than -22.5 dB in the frequency band 0 to 30 GHz. The transmission cross polarization component is dependent on both whole-surfaces and is never more than -30 dB in the same frequency band
Design, theory, and measurement of a polarization insensitive absorber for terahertz imaging
We present the theory, design, and realization of a polarization-insensitive
metamaterial absorber for terahertz frequencies. We derive
geometrical-independent conditions for effective medium absorbers in general,
and for resonant metamaterials specically. Our fabricated design reaches and
absorptivity of 78% at 1.145 ThzComment: 6 Pages, 5 figures; figures update
Kolmogorov Similarity Hypotheses for Scalar Fields: Sampling Intermittent Turbulent Mixing in the Ocean and Galaxy
Kolmogorov's three universal similarity hypotheses are extrapolated to
describe scalar fields like temperature mixed by turbulence. By the analogous
Kolmogorov third hypothesis for scalars, temperature dissipation rates chi
averaged over lengths r > L_K should be lognormally distributed with
intermittency factors I that increase with increasing turbulence energy length
scales L_O as I_chi-r = m_T ln(L_O/r). Tests of Kolmogorovian velocity and
scalar universal similarity hypotheses for very large ranges of turbulence
length and time scales are provided by data from the ocean and the Galactic
interstellar medium. The universal constant for turbulent mixing intermittency
m_T is estimated from oceanic data to be 0.44+-0.01, which is remarkably close
to estimates for Kolmogorov's turbulence intermittency constant m_u of
0.45+-0.05 from Galactic as well as atmospheric data. Extreme intermittency
complicates the oceanic sampling problem, and may lead to quantitative and
qualitative undersampling errors in estimates of mean oceanic dissipation rates
and fluxes. Intermittency of turbulence and mixing in the interstellar medium
may be a factor in the formation of stars.Comment: 23 pages original of Proc. Roy. Soc. article, 8 figures; in
"Turbulence and Stochastic Processes: Kolmogorov's ideas 50 years on", London
The Royal Society, 1991, J.C.R. Hunt, O.M. Phillips, D. Williams Eds., pages
1-240, vol. 434 (no. 1890) Proc. Roy. Soc. Lond. A, PDF fil
Employing combination procedures to short-time EOP prediction
A well known problem with Earth Orientation Parameters (EOP) prediction is
that a prediction strategy proved to be the best for some testing time span and
prediction length may not remain the same for other time intervals. In this
paper, we consider possible strategies to combine EOP predictions computed
using different analysis techniques to obtain a final prediction with the best
accuracy corresponding to the smallest prediction error of input predictions.
It was found that this approach is most efficient for ultra-short-term EOP
forecast.Comment: 7 pages, presented at the IERS Workshop on EOP Combination and
Prediction, Warsaw, Poland, 19-21 Oct 200
Infection of North Sea cod (<em>Gadus morhua</em> L.) postlarvae and juveniles with the parasites <em>Hysterothylacium aduncum</em> Rudolphi and <em>Caligus </em>sp.
The generalized non-conservative model of a 1-planet system - revisited
We study the long-term dynamics of a planetary system composed of a star and
a planet. Both bodies are considered as extended, non-spherical, rotating
objects. There are no assumptions made on the relative angles between the
orbital angular momentum and the spin vectors of the bodies. Thus, we analyze
full, spatial model of the planetary system. Both objects are assumed to be
deformed due to their own rotations, as well as due to the mutual tidal
interactions. The general relativity corrections are considered in terms of the
post-Newtonian approximation. Besides the conservative contributions to the
perturbing forces, there are also taken into account non-conservative effects,
i.e., the dissipation of the mechanical energy. This dissipation is a result of
the tidal perturbation on the velocity field in the internal zones with
non-zero turbulent viscosity (convective zones). Our main goal is to derive the
equations of the orbital motion as well as the equations governing
time-evolution of the spin vectors (angular velocities). We derive the
Lagrangian equations of the second kind for systems which do not conserve the
mechanical energy. Next, the equations of motion are averaged out over all fast
angles with respect to time-scales characteristic for conservative
perturbations. The final equations of motion are then used to study the
dynamics of the non-conservative model over time scales of the order of the age
of the star. We analyze the final state of the system as a function of the
initial conditions. Equilibria states of the averaged system are finally
discussed.Comment: 37 pages, 13 figures, accepted to Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical
Astronom
Evolution of surface gravity waves over a submarine canyon
The effects of a submarine canyon on the propagation of ocean surface waves
are examined with a three-dimensional coupled-mode model for wave propagation
over steep topography. Whereas the classical geometrical optics approximation
predicts an abrupt transition from complete transmission at small incidence
angles to no transmission at large angles, the full model predicts a more
gradual transition with partial reflection/transmission that is sensitive to
the canyon geometry and controlled by evanescent modes for small incidence
angles and relatively short waves. Model results for large incidence angles are
compared with data from directional wave buoys deployed around the rim and over
Scripps Canyon, near San Diego, California, during the Nearshore Canyon
Experiment (NCEX). Wave heights are observed to decay across the canyon by
about a factor 5 over a distance shorter than a wavelength. Yet, a spectral
refraction model predicts an even larger reduction by about a factor 10,
because low frequency components cannot cross the canyon in the geometrical
optics approximation. The coupled-mode model yields accurate results over and
behind the canyon. These results show that although most of the wave energy is
refractively trapped on the offshore rim of the canyon, a small fraction of the
wave energy 'tunnels' across the canyon. Simplifications of the model that
reduce it to the standard and modified mild slope equations also yield good
results, indicating that evanescent modes and high order bottom slope effects
are of minor importance for the energy transformation of waves propagating
across depth contours at large oblique angles
Integrated cross-domain object storage in working memory: Evidence from a verbal-spatial memory task
Working-memory theories often include domain-specific verbal and visual stores (e.g., the phonological and visuospatial buffers of Baddeley, 1986), and some also posit more general stores thought to be capable of holding verbal or visuospatial materials (Baddeley, 2000; Cowan, 2005). However, it is currently unclear which type of store is primarily responsible for maintaining objects that include components from multiple domains. In these studies, a spatial array of letters was followed by a single probe identical to an item in the array or differing systematically in spatial location, letter identity, or their combination. Concurrent verbal rehearsal suppression impaired memory in each of these trial types in a task that required participants to remember verbal-spatial binding, but did not impair memory for spatial locations if the task did not require verbal-spatial binding for a correct response. Thus, spatial information might be stored differently when it must be bound to verbal information. This suggests that a cross-domain store such as the episodic buffer of Baddeley (2000) or the focus of attention of Cowan (2001) might be used for integrated object storage, rather than the maintenance of associations between features stored in separate domain-specific buffers
Use of specific Green's functions for solving direct problems involving a heterogeneous rigid frame porous medium slab solicited by acoustic waves
A domain integral method employing a specific Green's function (i.e.,
incorporating some features of the global problem of wave propagation in an
inhomogeneous medium) is developed for solving direct and inverse scattering
problems relative to slab-like macroscopically inhomogeneous porous obstacles.
It is shown how to numerically solve such problems, involving both
spatially-varying density and compressibility, by means of an iterative scheme
initialized with a Born approximation. A numerical solution is obtained for a
canonical problem involving a two-layer slab.Comment: submitted to Math.Meth.Appl.Sc
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