10 resultados para decomposition of gauge field
em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
In this thesis, numerical methods aiming at determining the eigenfunctions, their adjoint and the corresponding eigenvalues of the two-group neutron diffusion equations representing any heterogeneous system are investigated. First, the classical power iteration method is modified so that the calculation of modes higher than the fundamental mode is possible. Thereafter, the Explicitly-Restarted Arnoldi method, belonging to the class of Krylov subspace methods, is touched upon. Although the modified power iteration method is a computationally-expensive algorithm, its main advantage is its robustness, i.e. the method always converges to the desired eigenfunctions without any need from the user to set up any parameter in the algorithm. On the other hand, the Arnoldi method, which requires some parameters to be defined by the user, is a very efficient method for calculating eigenfunctions of large sparse system of equations with a minimum computational effort. These methods are thereafter used for off-line analysis of the stability of Boiling Water Reactors. Since several oscillation modes are usually excited (global and regional oscillations) when unstable conditions are encountered, the characterization of the stability of the reactor using for instance the Decay Ratio as a stability indicator might be difficult if the contribution from each of the modes are not separated from each other. Such a modal decomposition is applied to a stability test performed at the Swedish Ringhals-1 unit in September 2002, after the use of the Arnoldi method for pre-calculating the different eigenmodes of the neutron flux throughout the reactor. The modal decomposition clearly demonstrates the excitation of both the global and regional oscillations. Furthermore, such oscillations are found to be intermittent with a time-varying phase shift between the first and second azimuthal modes.
Resumo:
In questo lavoro abbiamo studiato la presenza di correzioni, dette unusuali, agli stati eccitati delle teorie conformi. Inizialmente abbiamo brevemente descritto l'approccio di Calabrese e Cardy all'entropia di entanglement nei sistemi unidimensionali al punto critico. Questo approccio permette di ottenere la famosa ed universale divergenza logaritmica di questa quantità. Oltre a questo andamento logaritmico son presenti correzioni, che dipendono dalla geometria su cui si basa l'approccio di Calabrese e Cardy, il cui particolare scaling è noto ed è stato osservato in moltissimi lavori in letteratura. Questo scaling è dovuto alla rottura locale della simmetria conforme, che è una conseguenza della criticità del sistema, intorno a particolari punti detti branch points usati nell'approccio di Calabrese e Cardy. In questo lavoro abbiamo dimostrato che le correzioni all'entropia di entanglement degli stati eccitati della teoria conforme, che può anch'essa essere calcolata tramite l'approccio di Calabrese e Cardy, hanno lo stesso scaling di quelle osservate negli stati fondamentali. I nostri risultati teorici sono stati poi perfettamente confermati dei calcoli numerici che abbiamo eseguito sugli stati eccitati del modello XX. Sono stati inoltre usati risultati già noti per lo stato fondamentale del medesimo modello per poter studiare la forma delle correzioni dei suoi stati eccitati. Questo studio ha portato alla conclusione che la forma delle correzioni nei due differenti casi è la medesima a meno di una funzione universale.
Resumo:
Holding the major share of stellar mass in galaxies and being also old and passively evolving, early-type galaxies (ETGs) are the primary probes in investigating these various evolution scenarios, as well as being useful means to provide insights on cosmological parameters. In this thesis work I focused specifically on ETGs and on their capability in constraining galaxy formation and evolution; in particular, the principal aims were to derive some of the ETGs evolutionary parameters, such as age, metallicity and star formation history (SFH) and to study their age-redshift and mass-age relations. In order to infer galaxy physical parameters, I used the public code STARLIGHT: this program provides a best fit to the observed spectrum from a combination of many theoretical models defined in user-made libraries. the comparison between the output and input light-weighted ages shows a good agreement starting from SNRs of ∼ 10, with a bias of ∼ 2.2% and a dispersion 3%. Furthermore, also metallicities and SFHs are well reproduced. In the second part of the thesis I performed an analysis on real data, starting from Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) spectra. I found that galaxies get older with cosmic time and with increasing mass (for a fixed redshift bin); absolute light-weighted ages, instead, result independent from the fitting parameters or the synthetic models used. Metallicities, instead, are very similar from each other and clearly consistent with the ones derived from the Lick indices. The predicted SFH indicates the presence of a double burst of star formation. Velocity dispersions and extinctiona are also well constrained, following the expected behaviours. As a further step, I also fitted single SDSS spectra (with SNR∼ 20), to verify that stacked spectra gave the same results without introducing any bias: this is an important check, if one wants to apply the method at higher z, where stacked spectra are necessary to increase the SNR. Our upcoming aim is to adopt this approach also on galaxy spectra obtained from higher redshift Surveys, such as BOSS (z ∼ 0.5), zCOSMOS (z 1), K20 (z ∼ 1), GMASS (z ∼ 1.5) and, eventually, Euclid (z 2). Indeed, I am currently carrying on a preliminary study to estabilish the applicability of the method to lower resolution, as well as higher redshift (z 2) spectra, just like the Euclid ones.
Resumo:
Upgrade of hydrogen to valuable fuel is a central topic in modern research due to its high availability and low price. For the difficulties in hydrogen storage, different pathways are still under investigation. A promising way is in the liquid-phase chemical hydrogen storage materials, because they can lead to greener transformation processes with the on line development of hydrogen for fuel cells. The aim of my work was the optimization of catalysts for the decomposition of formic acid made by sol immobilisation method (a typical colloidal method). Formic acid was selected because of the following features: it is a versatile renewable reagent for green synthesis studies. The first aim of my research was the synthesis and optimisation of Pd nanoparticles by sol-immobilisation to achieve better catalytic performances and investigate the effect of particle size, oxidation state, role of stabiliser and nature of the support. Palladium was chosen because it is a well-known active metal for the catalytic decomposition of formic acid. Noble metal nanoparticles of palladium were immobilized on carbon charcoal and on titania. In the second part the catalytic performance of the “homemade” catalyst Pd/C to a commercial Pd/C and the effect of different monometallic and bimetallic systems (AuxPdy) in the catalytic formic acid decomposition was investigated. The training period for the production of this work was carried out at the University of Cardiff (Group of Dr. N. Dimitratos).
Resumo:
The goal of this simulation thesis is to present a tool for studying and eliminating various numerical problems observed while analyzing the behavior of the MIND cable during fast voltage polarity reversal. The tool is built on the MATLAB environment, where several simulations were run to achieve oscillation-free results. This thesis will add to earlier research on HVDC cables subjected to polarity reversals. Initially, the code does numerical simulations to analyze the electric field and charge density behavior of a MIND cable for certain scenarios such as before, during, and after polarity reversal. However, the primary goal is to reduce numerical oscillations from the charge density profile. The generated code is notable for its usage of the Arithmetic Mean Approach and the Non-Uniform Field Approach for filtering and minimizing oscillations even under time and temperature variations.
Resumo:
In questo lavoro estendiamo concetti classici della geometria Riemanniana al fine di risolvere le equazioni di Maxwell sul gruppo delle permutazioni $S_3$. Cominciamo dando la strutture algebriche di base e la definizione di calcolo differenziale quantico con le principali proprietà. Generalizziamo poi concetti della geometria Riemanniana, quali la metrica e l'algebra esterna, al caso quantico. Tutto ciò viene poi applicato ai grafi dando la forma esplicita del calcolo differenziale quantico su $\mathbb{K}(V)$, della metrica e Laplaciano del secondo ordine e infine dell'algebra esterna. A questo punto, riscriviamo le equazioni di Maxwell in forma geometrica compatta usando gli operatori e concetti della geometria differenziale su varietà che abbiamo generalizzato in precedenza. In questo modo, considerando l'elettromagnetismo come teoria di gauge, possiamo risolvere le equazioni di Maxwell su gruppi finiti oltre che su varietà differenziabili. In particolare, noi le risolviamo su $S_3$.
Resumo:
The decomposition of Feynman integrals into a basis of independent master integrals is an essential ingredient of high-precision theoretical predictions, that often represents a major bottleneck when processes with a high number of loops and legs are involved. In this thesis we present a new algorithm for the decomposition of Feynman integrals into master integrals with the formalism of intersection theory. Intersection theory is a novel approach that allows to decompose Feynman integrals into master integrals via projections, based on a scalar product between Feynman integrals called intersection number. We propose a new purely rational algorithm for the calculation of intersection numbers of differential $n-$forms that avoids the presence of algebraic extensions. We show how expansions around non-rational poles, which are a bottleneck of existing algorithms for intersection numbers, can be avoided by performing an expansion in series around a rational polynomial irreducible over $\mathbb{Q}$, that we refer to as $p(z)-$adic expansion. The algorithm we developed has been implemented and tested on several diagrams, both at one and two loops.
Resumo:
In this thesis, I address quantum theories and specifically quantum field theories in their interpretive aspects, with the aim of capturing some of the most controversial and challenging issues, also in relation to possible future developments of physics. To do so, I rely on and review some of the discussions carried on in philosophy of physics, highlighting methodologies and goals. This makes the thesis an introduction to these discussions. Based on these arguments, I built and conducted 7 face-to-face interviews with physics professors and an online survey (which received 88 responses from master's and PhD students and postdoctoral researchers in physics), with the aim of understanding how physicists make sense of concepts related to quantum theories and to find out what they can add to the discussion. Of the data collected, I report a qualitative analysis through three constructed themes.
Resumo:
The aim of this thesis is to study the angular momentum of a sample of S0 galaxies. In the quest to understand whether the formation of S0 galaxies is more closely linked to that of ellipticals or that of spirals, our goal is to compare the amount of their specific angular momentum as a function of stellar mass with respect to spirals. Through kinematic comparison between these different classes of galaxies we aim to understand if a scenario of passive evolution, in which the galaxy’s gas is consumed and the star formation is quenched, can be considered as plausible mechanism to explain the transformation from spirals to S0s. In order to derive the structural and photometric parameters of galaxy sub-components we performed a bulge-disc decomposition of optical images using GALFIT. The stellar kinematic of the galaxies was measured using integral field spectroscopic data from CALIFA survey. The development of new original software, based on a Monte Carlo Markov Chain algorithm, allowed us to obtain the values of the line of sight velocity and velocity dispersion of disc and bulge components. The result that we obtained is that S0 discs have a distribution of stellar specific angular momentum that is in full agreement with that of spiral discs, so the mechanism of simple fading can be considered as one of the most important for transformation from spirals to S0s.
Resumo:
Intermediate-complexity general circulation models are a fundamental tool to investigate the role of internal and external variability within the general circulation of the atmosphere and ocean. The model used in this thesis is an intermediate complexity atmospheric general circulation model (SPEEDY) coupled to a state-of-the-art modelling framework for the ocean (NEMO). We assess to which extent the model allows a realistic simulation of the most prominent natural mode of variability at interannual time scales: El-Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO). To a good approximation, the model represents the ENSO-induced Sea Surface Temperature (SST) pattern in the equatorial Pacific, despite a cold tongue-like bias. The model underestimates (overestimates) the typical ENSO spatial variability during the winter (summer) seasons. The mid-latitude response to ENSO reveals that the typical poleward stationary Rossby wave train is reasonably well represented. The spectral decomposition of ENSO features a spectrum that lacks periodicity at high frequencies and is overly periodic at interannual timescales. We then implemented an idealised transient mean state change in the SPEEDY model. A warmer climate is simulated by an alteration of the parametrized radiative fluxes that corresponds to doubled carbon dioxide absorptivity. Results indicate that the globally averaged surface air temperature increases of 0.76 K. Regionally, the induced signal on the SST field features a significant warming over the central-western Pacific and an El-Niño-like warming in the subtropics. In general, the model features a weakening of the tropical Walker circulation and a poleward expansion of the local Hadley cell. This response is also detected in a poleward rearrangement of the tropical convective rainfall pattern. The model setting that has been here implemented provides a valid theoretical support for future studies on climate sensitivity and forced modes of variability under mean state changes.