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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Analysis of a spin-particle tunnelling junction

Bylin, Johan January 2015 (has links)
This project is to analyse the energy spectrum of a spin-molecular tunnelling junction which is composed of molecules confined between two conducting metallic leads. By letting a continuous stream of electrons flow across the junction the molecules can interact with each other with an indirect force called exchange interaction, and those exchange interactions which are of interest in this project are described by models called the Heisenberg, the Ising and the Dzyaloshinski-Moriya models. The molecules may also interact with themselves anisotropically and if there is an external magnetic field there will be yet another kind of interaction. The goal of this project is to see the contribution of all these spin interactions and how they affect the resulting energy spectrum under the variation of the junction's chemical potential and the voltage bias between the leads. This project is of a theoretical nature where the models are analytically adapted for a restricted scenario and is later on numerically calculated to be graphed and analysed. The models are restricted to only consider molecules of same spin and approximated to only consider interactions between closest neighbouring molecules. The results are composed of both analytically derived energy values and numerical computed values which show that there exists certain critical values of the variation parameters which naturally splits the ground state of the system and that the self-interaction may further split the degenerate ground state. A possible outcome of these result could be the possibility to control the magnetic order of the molecules to either be locked in an anti-ferromagnetic configuration or be easily mixed by manipulating the chemical potential or the voltage bias. / Detta projekt handlar om att analysera energispektrumet från en spinn-molekyl-tunnelkor-sning som består av molekyler instängda mellan två ledande metaller. När en kontinuerlig elektronström korsar tunnelkorsningen så kan molekylerna växelverka med varandra via en indirekt kraft kallad utbytesinteraktion, och de utbytesinteraktioner som är relevanta i denna uppställning beskrivs av de så kallade Heisenberg-, Ising- och Dzyaloshinski-Moriya-modellerna. Molekylerna kan också växelverka med sig själva anisotropt och om det finns ett externt magnetfält så tillkommer ytterligare en interaktionsterm. Målet för detta projekt är att se hur alla dessa spinnbidrag påverkar det slutliga energispektrumet under variation av korsningens kemiska potential och spänningen mellan metalledarna.       Projektet är teoretiskt lagt på så sätt att modellerna är analytiskt anpassade för ett begränsat scenario samt att de är numeriskt beräknade så att energispektrumet kan plottas i grafer och analyseras. Modellerna är begränsade för molekyler av samma spinn och är approximerade så att endast närmsta-granne-interaktioner är beaktade.       Resultaten är uppdelade i både analytiskt framtagna energivärden samt numeriskt beräknande energinivåer och båda visar att det finns kritiska värden på variationsparametrarna som automatiskt delar grundtillståndet för systemet samt att självinteraktionerna ytterligare kan dela det degenererade grundtillståndet. Ett möjligt utfall av dessa resultat är att de kan användas till att kontrollera systemets magnetiska ordning på så sätt att det antingen är låst i en antiferromagnetisk konfiguration eller med enkelhet kan mixas genom att ändra den kemiska potentialen eller spänningen mellan metalledarna.
2

A Study of the Celestial Gamma-ray Flux

Keath, Edwin P. (Edwin Paul), 1938- 06 1900 (has links)
This thesis is a study of the celestial gamma-ray flux. It reviews several of the proposed mechanisms for producing high energy gamma rays and describes several of the attempts to detect their presence. Also included is a short historical review of the spark chamber, along with a qualitative description of its operation.
3

Ενεργειακόν φάσμα νετρονίων

Γιάββας, Γεώργιος Δ. 21 September 2010 (has links)
- / -
4

A Framework for Validation and Testing of a CubeSat Retarding Potential Analyzer

Noel, Stephen Elliott 03 September 2015 (has links)
Traditionally, Retarding Potential Analyzers (RPAs) operate exclusively on large satellites due to the size, power, and mass constraints posed by nano-satellites like CubeSats. These sensors take in-situ measurements of Earth's atmospheric ion current during a range of time-varied ``retarding" voltage steps. Curve-fitting the retarding voltage versus collected current data provides derived measurements of ion density, ram velocity, and temperature. In order to successfully miniaturize these instruments and validate their performance prior to launch, thorough calibration and comprehensive end-to-end testing must be performed. This paper discusses the difficulties of performing complete system validation in ground-based vacuum chamber testing for RPAs. A procedure for RPA instrument calibration will be presented along with the calibration results for the Lower Atmosphere/Ionosphere Coupling Experiment (LAICE) CubeSat RPA. This paper presents a user-friendly and robust software control suite developed to read, parse, and interpret the data from the LAICE RPA. Electronics noise testing and analysis defines the performance boundaries of the instrument electronics. End-to-end testing of the LAICE RPA with a hot-filament ion source simulating the space plasma verifies the function of the LAICE RPA sensor and electronics, as well as the software control, thus qualifying the instrument for on-orbit use. / Master of Science
5

Neutron energy spectrum reconstruction method based for htr reactor calculations

Zhang, Zhan 06 July 2011 (has links)
In the deep burn research of Very High Temperature Reactor (VHTR), it is desired to make an accurate estimation of absorption cross sections and absorption rates in burnable poison (BP) pins. However, in traditional methods, multi-group cross sections are generated from single bundle calculations with specular reflection boundary condition, in which the energy spectral effect in the core environment is not taken into account. This approximation introduces errors to the absorption cross sections especially for BPs neighboring reflectors and control rods. In order to correct the BP absorption cross sections in whole core diffusion calculations, energy spectrum reconstruction (ESR) methods have been developed to reconstruct the fine group spectrum (and in-core continuous energy spectrum). Then, using the reconstructed spectrum as boundary condition, a BP pin cell local transport calculation serves an imbedded module within the whole core diffusion code to iteratively correct the BP absorption cross sections for improved results. The ESR methods were tested in a 2D prismatic High Temperature Reactor (HTR) problem. The reconstructed fine-group spectra have shown good agreement with the reference spectra. Comparing with the cross sections calculated by single block calculation with specular reflection boundary conditions, the BP absorption cross sections are effectively improved by ESR methods. A preliminary study was also performed to extend the ESR methods to a 2D Pebble Bed Reactor (PBR) problem. The results demonstrate that the ESR can reproduce the energy spectra on the fuel-outer reflector interface accurately.
6

SIZE, DYNAMICS AND CONSEQUENCES OF LARGE-SCALE HORIZONTAL COHERENT STRUCTURES IN OPEN-CHANNEL FLOWS: AN EXPERIMENTAL STUDY

Ahmari, Habib 20 September 2013 (has links)
This thesis concerns the occurrence of the large-scale bed and plan forms known as alternate bars and meandering, and the internal structures of the flow associated with their formation. The work is to be viewed as an extension of previous work by da Silva (1991), Yalin (1992), and Yalin and da Silva (2001). As a first step in this work, the criteria for occurrence of alternate bars and meandering of Yalin and da Silva (2001) is re-considered in view of additional field and laboratory data from the recent literature and data resulting from two series of experimental runs carried out in two sediment transport flumes. This leads to a number of modifications of the boundary-lines in the related existence-region diagram of Yalin and da Silva. The size of the largest horizontal coherent structures (HCS’s) of an alternate bar inducing flow was then investigated experimentally on the basis of three series of flow velocity measurements. These were carried out in a 21m-long, 1m-wide straight channel, conveying a 4cm-deep flow. The bed consisted of a silica sand having a grain size of 2mm; its surface was flat. The measurements were carried out using a Sontek 2D Micro ADV. The horizontal burst length was found to be between five and seven times the flow width. The effect of the HCS’s on the mean flow was also investigated. A slight internal meandering of the flow caused by the superimposition of burst-sequences on the mean flow was clearly detectable. Finally, with the aid of three new series of measurements in the same channel, an attempt was made to penetrate the dynamics and life-cycle of the HCS’s. For this purpose, quadrant analysis was used; the cross-sectional distribution of relevant statistical turbulence-related parameters was investigated; and cross-correlations of flow velocity along the flow depth and across the channel were performed. The analysis indicates that the HCS’s originate near the channel banks, with the location of ejections and sweeps being anti-symmetrically arranged with regard to the channel centreline, and then evolve so as to occupy the entire depth of the water and the entire width of the channel. / Thesis (Ph.D, Civil Engineering) -- Queen's University, 2010-03-09 10:20:53.596
7

Numerical and experimental analysis of shallow turbulent flow over complex roughness beds

Zhang, Y., Rubinato, M., Kazemi, E., Pu, Jaan H., Huang, Y., Lin, P. 24 July 2019 (has links)
Yes / A set of shallow-water equations (SWEs) based on a k-epsilon Reynold stress model is established to simulate the turbulent flows over a complex roughness bed. The fundamental equations are discretized by the second-order finite-difference method (FDM), in which spatial and temporal discretization are conducted by staggered-grid and leap-frog schemes, respectively. The turbulent model in this study stems from the standard k-epsilon model, but is enhanced by replacing the conventional vertical production with a more rigorous and precise generation derived from the energy spectrum and turbulence scales. To verify its effectiveness, the model is applied to compute the turbulence in complex flow surroundings (including a rough bed) in an abrupt bend and in a natural waterway. The comparison of the model results against experimental data and other numerical results shows the robustness and accuracy of the present model in describing hydrodynamic characteristics, especially turbulence features on the complex roughness bottom. / National Key Research and Development Program of China (Grant No: 2016YFE0122500, 2013CB036401 and 2013CB036402), China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (Grant No: 2016M591184) and Programme of Introducing Talents of Discipline to Universities (Grant No: BC2018038) / Research Development Fund Publication Prize Award winner, June 2019.
8

Multilevel Method for Turbulence Energy Spectrum Estimation by Compressive Sampling

Adalsteinsson, Gudmundur F. 04 1900 (has links)
<p>Recent developments in signal processing called Compressive Sampling (CS) show that the measurement and reconstruction of sparse signals often requires fewer samples than is estimated by the sampling theorem. CS is a combination of a linear sampling scheme and a reconstruction method and, typically, the signal is assumed to be sparse, compressible, or having a prior distribution, with the reconstruction error measured in the \ell^2 norm. This thesis investigates the application of CS to turbulence signals, particularly for estimating some statistics or nonlinear functions of the signals. The main original research result of the thesis is a proposed method, Spectrum Estimation by Sparse Optimization (SpESO), which uses a priori information about isotropic homogeneous turbulent flows and the multilevel structure of wavelet transforms to reconstruct energy spectra from compressive measurements, with errors measured on a logarithmic scale. The method is tested numerically on a variety of 1D and 2D turbulence signals, and is able to approximate energy spectra with an order of magnitude fewer samples than with traditional fixed rate sampling. The results demonstrate that SpESO performs much better than Lumped Orthogonal Matching Pursuit (LOMP), and as well or better than wavelet-based best M-term methods in many cases, even though these methods require complete sampling of the signal before compression.</p> / Master of Science (MSc)
9

Reconstruction of extensive air showers and measurement of the cosmic ray energy spectrum in the range of 1 - 80 PeV at the South Pole

Klepser, Stefan 21 July 2008 (has links)
IceTop ist ein Detektorfeld fuer kosmische Strahlung, das momentan am Suedpol errichtet wird. Es ist Teil des IceCube-Observatoriums und wird nach Fertigstellung eine Flaeche von 1km^2 ueberspannen. Es zielt auf den Nachweis von Teilchenkaskaden ab, die von kosmischer Strahlung mit Energien im PeV-Bereich induziert werden. Die Dissertation beinhaltet die erste Analyse hochenergetischer kosmischer Strahlung mit IceTop. Zunaechst wird hierfuer die Lichtausbeute der Detektortanks untersucht. Dies ermoeglicht die Erstellung einer Erwartungswertverteilung der Schauersignale, und eines entsprechenden Likelihood-Rekonstruktionsalgorithmus. Die damit erreichten Aufloesungen werden untersucht und Effizienzen berechnet. Anschliessend wird das Ansprechverhaltenn von IceTop im Bezug auf die Energie genauer evaluiert. Aus den Ergebnissen werden Faltungsmatrizen fuer unterschiedliche Primaerteilchensorten extrahiert. Darauf basierend werden zwei Entfaltungsalgorithmen vorgestellt, und vier Faltungsmatrizen fuer verschiedene Kompositionsannahmen berechnet. Im August 2007 genommene Daten werden in drei Zenithwinkel-Abschnitte eingeteilt und separat mit den Kompositionsmodellen entfaltet. Die resultierenden Spektren decken einen Energiebereich von 1-80PeV ab. Mit der Forderung isotropen Flusses lassen sich Wahrscheinlichkeiten definieren, die sensitiv sind auf die Konsistenz der Kompositionsannahmen. Diese neue Methode ermoeglicht eine Untersuchung der Komposition ohne Zuhilfenahme weiterer Detektorkomponenten. Die Analyse zeigt eine klare Praeferenz der Modelle gemischter Komposition. Schliesslich wird das Spektrum mit der hoechsten relativen Wahrscheinlichkeit untersucht. Die gemessenen Parameter stimmen innerhalb der systematischen Fehler gut mit denen anderer Experimente ueberein. Die ermittelte Position des sogenannten Knies des Spektrums ist 3,1+-0,3(stat.)+-0,3(sys.)PeV, die Exponenten davor und danach sind -2,71+-0,07(stat.) und -3,110+-0,014(stat.)+-0,08(sys.). / IceTop is a square-kilometer scale detector array for highly energetic cosmic radiation. It is a part of the IceCube Observatory that is presently being built at the geographic South Pole. It aims for the detection of huge particle cascades induced by PeV cosmic rays in the atmosphere. This thesis presents the first analysis of highly energetic cosmic ray data taken with IceTop. First, the light response of the IceTop tanks is parametrised as a function of energy and particle type. An expectation function for the distribution of shower signals in the detector plane is developed. Based on that, a likelihood reconstruction algorithm is developed and its resolution and performance is studied. The resulting energy response of the array is investigated to set up response matrices for different primary nuclei and inclinations. Two unfolding algorithms are implemented, and response matrices are modeled for four different composition assumptions. With each assumption, energy spectra are unfolded for three different bins in inclination, using a data sample taken in August 2007. The range of the spectrum is 1-80PeV. Finally, a new analysis method is developed that uses the fact that cosmic rays in the PeV range are expected to be isotropic. It is shown that this requirement can be used for a likelihood estimation that is sensitive to composition without using additional information from other detector components. The analysis shows a clear preference of the mixed composition models over pure proton or iron assumption. The spectrum with the highest likelihood shows good agreement with results from other experiments within the systematic uncertainties. The found position of the so-called knee feature is 3.1+-0.3(stat.)+-0.3(sys.)PeV, the power indices before and after that are -2.71+-0.07(stat.) and -3.110+-0.014(stat.)+-0.08 (sys.).
10

The development and application of two-time-scale turbulence models for non-equilibrium flows

Klein, Tania S. January 2012 (has links)
The reliable prediction of turbulent non-equilibrium flows is of high academic and industrial interest in several engineering fields. Most turbulent flows are often predicted using single-time-scale Reynolds-Averaged-Navier-Stokes (RANS) turbulence models which assume the flows can be modelled through a single time or length scale which is an admittedly incorrect assumption. Therefore they are not expected to capture the lag in the response of the turbulence in non-equilibrium flows. In attempts to improve prediction of these flows, by taking into consideration some features of the turbulent kinetic energy spectrum, the multiple-time-scale models arose. A number of two-scale models have been proposed, but so far their use has been rather limited.This work thus focusses on the development of two-time-scale approaches. Two two-time-scale linear-eddy-viscosity models, referred to as NT1 and NT2 models, have been developed and the initial stages of the development of two-time-scale non-linear-eddy-viscosity models are also reported. The models' coefficients have been determined through asymptotic analysis of decaying grid turbulence, homogeneous shear flows and the flow in a boundary layer in local equilibrium. Three other important features of these models are that there is consistent partition of the large and the small scales for all above limiting cases, model sensitivity to the partition and production rate ratios and sensitivity of the eddy viscosity sensitive to the mean strain rates.The models developed have been tested through computations of a wide range of flows such as homogeneous shear and normally strained flows, fully developed channel flows, zero-pressure-gradient, adverse-pressure-gradient, favourable-pressure-gradient and oscillatory boundary layer flows, fully developed oscillatory and ramp up pipe flows and steady and pulsated backward-facing-step flows.The proposed NT1 and NT2 two-scale models have been shown to perform well in all test cases, being, among the benchmarked models tested, the models which best performed in the wide range of dimensionless shear values of homogeneous shear flows, the only linear-eddy-viscosity models which predicted well the turbulent kinetic energy in the normally strained cases and the only models which showed satisfactory sensitivity in predicting correctly the reattachment point in the unsteady backward facing step cases with different forcing frequencies. Although the development of the two-time-scale non-linear-eddy-viscosity models is still in progress, the interim versions proposed here have resulted in predictions of the Reynolds normal stresses similar to those of much more complex models in all test cases studied and in predictions of the turbulent kinetic energy in normally strained flows which are better than those of the other models tested in this study.

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