237 research outputs found
Inter-vortex spacing in superfluid turbulence: temperature and Reynolds number dependences
The typical spacing between superfluid vortices in an isothermal turbulent tangle is proportional to the integral scale H rescaled by the quantum Reynolds number Re_K=H.V/K to the power of 3/4, where K is the quantum of circulation around of single vortex [Salort et al.,EPL 2011]. This empirical relation can be seen as the quantum-turbulence version of the corresponding well-know equation giving Kolmogorov dissipative scale in classical turbulence. In 2014, we studied the temperature dependence of the numerical factor (d/H).Re_K^{3/4} in 4He by joint numerical and experimental analysis of steady state turbulence over a wide temperature interval (1.2 - 2.16 K) [Babuin et al., EPL 2014]. Agreement between the two analyses was found good except at the very ends of this temperature interval. We will discuss this issue by presenting additional experimental data obtained by post-processing of superfluid experiments published between 1975 and 1998
From ornament to essence - represented by Gustav Klimt and Egon Schiele
Graduate research paper for painting.AR 695, H.V.1979 Spring
2050 Midwest Structural Masterplan & A Transit Hub for St Louis
The project initiated with researching the condition of the Midwest, it’s major challenges and potential opportunities within the themes of infrastructure, energy, and landscape. After 5 months of research and analysis, the studio produced a 2050 Structural Masterplan for the Midwest. This masterplan involved a strategy for creating a unified, economically strengthened region along with a set of proposals that highlighted potential solutions to some of the specified challenges. This was executed through the lens of large-scale, top down, future vision planning in order to address very complex and challenging issues. Following the research and Masterplan design, each student selected their own site, project, and program within the context of the Midwest: a multi-modal transit hub (highlighting the increased value of passenger rail and the introduction of a maglev high speed rail) within St Louis (at the location of the existing passenger train station). The goal was to test the ideas of the 2050 Structural Masterplan of the Midwest within a city context and at a building scale. The St Louis Transit Hub focused on integrating multiple modes of transportation while providing a more inviting and welcoming experience into the city. This gateway experience became a guiding concept for the project, offering a gateway for the pedestrian, a gateway for the trains, and a symbolic gateway moment for the inhabitants of St Louis: a moment of passing from one mentality to another (an opportunity to offer education, awareness, and understanding about the challenges and opportunities). A gateway in three dimensions.MaterializationArchitectureArchitectur
Materializing Technologies: Surfacing Focal Things and Practices with Design
Today, the world is populated with what we colloquially refer to as “black boxes.” These are technologies that perform sophisticated operations but obfuscate these complex operations, providing us with little context to what they do, how they work, and the role they play in our lives. In simple terms, this thesis addresses the following broadly framed questions: what parts of these black boxes should be made legible to the layperson? And regarding these parts: how can design be harnessed to reframe them as legible?Ethics & Philosophy of TechnologyHuman Information Communication Desig
Experiments on a natural circulation loop - from void fraction to nuclear
Applied Science
Signal detection in fractional Gaussian noise and an RKHS approach to robust detection and estimation
This thesis is divided into two parts. In the first part, the problem of signal detection in fractional Gaussian noise is considered. To facilitate the study of this problem, several results related to the reproducing kernel Hilbert space of fractional Brownian motion are presented. In particular, this reproducing kernel Hilbert space is characterized completely and an alternative characterization for the restriction of this class of functions to a compact interval (0,T) is given. Infinite-interval whitening filters for fractional Brownian motion are also developed. Application of these results to the signal detection problem yields necessary and sufficient conditions for a deterministic or stochastic signal to produce a nonsingular shift when embedded in additive fractional Gaussian noise. Also, a formula for the likelihood ratio corresponding to any deterministic nonsingular shift is developed. Finally, some results concerning detector performance in the presence of additive fractional Gaussian noise are presented.In the second part of the thesis, the application of reproducing kernel Hilbert space theory to the problems of robust detection and estimation is investigated. It is shown that this approach provides a general and unified framework in which to analyze the problems of L\sp2 estimation, matched filtering, and quadratic detection in the presence of uncertainties regarding the second-order structure of the random processes involved. Minimax robust solutions to these problems are characterized completely, and some results concerning existence of robust solutions are presented.Made available in DSpace on 2011-05-07T14:14:57Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2
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Difference-operator-based models in statistical signal processing
Difference-operator-based models are an alternative to conventional shift-operator-based models for modeling stationary discrete-time random processes obtained by sampling continuous-time processes, when the sampling rate is rapid relative to the dynamics of the continuous-time process. In this regime, statistical signal processing procedures derived from the difference-operator-based models tend to be better-conditioned than their conventional analogues, resulting in better numerical performance when implemented using finite-precision arithmetic. Unlike the situation for shift-operator models, estimating the parameters of a difference-operator-based model involves solving a non-Toeplitz system of linear equations. We derive an algorithm for efficiently estimating these parameters, analogous to the Levinson algorithm for conventional models. Numerical results have been obtained that indicate that, in the presence of roundoff errors, the new algorithm gives better results than the Levinson algorithm. We also present a class of algorithms that solve for the model parameters by obtaining triangular factorizations of the covariance matrix of differenced data. These algorithms have the added advantage of not requiring the computation of any n-dimensional inner products, thus rendering them suitable for parallelization. They also suggest a lattice implementation of the modeling filter, in which the basic block is a discrete-time integrator, rather than a delay.Made available in DSpace on 2011-05-07T14:20:34Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2
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Workshop on the implementation of the grand challenges
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Integrative and Comparative Biology following peer review. The version of record [Tsukimura, B., H.V. Carey and D.K. Padilla. 2010. Workshop on the Implementation of the Grand Challenges. Intetgrative Comparative Biology 50: 945-947] is available online at: http://icb.oxfordjournals.org/content/50/6/945.full.https://doi.org/10.1093/icb/icq13
Measurement of the effective B0s→K+K− lifetime
A measurement of the effective lifetime is presented using approximately 37 pb−1 of data collected by LHCb during 2010. This quantity can be used to put constraints on contributions from processes beyond the Standard Model in the meson system and is determined by two complementary approaches as
τKK=1.440±0.096 (stat)±0.008 (syst)±0.003 (model) ps
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