971 resultados para 4n-removal cross section
Resumo:
Intraneural Ganglion Cyst is a 200 year old mystery related to nerve injury which is yet to be solved. Current treatments for the above problem are relatively simple procedures related to removal of cystic contents from the nerve. However, these treatments may result into neuropathic pain and recurrence of the cyst. The articular theory proposed by Spinner et al., (Spinner et al. 2003) takes into consideration the neurological deficit in Common Peroneal Nerve (CPN) branch of the sciatic nerve and affirms that in addition to the above treatments, ligation of articular branch results into foolproof eradication of the deficit. Mechanical Modeling of the Affected Nerve Cross Section will reinforce the articular theory (Spinner et al. 2003). As the cyst propagates, it compresses the neighboring fascicles and the nerve cross section appears like a signet ring. Hence, in order to mechanically model the affected nerve cross section; computational methods capable of modeling excessively large deformations are required. Traditional FEM produces distorted elements while modeling such deformations, resulting into inaccuracies and premature termination of the analysis. The methods described in this Master’s Thesis are effective enough to be able to simulate such deformations. The results obtained from the model adequately resemble the MRI image obtained at the same location and shows an appearance of a signet ring. This Master’s Thesis describes the neurological deficit in brief followed by detail explanation of the advanced computational methods used to simulate this problem. Finally, qualitative results show the resemblance of mechanical model to MRI images of the Nerve Cross Section at the same location validating the capability of these methods to study this neurological deficit.
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Measurements are presented of differential cross-sections for top quark pair production in pp collisions at root s = 7 TeV relative to the total inclusive top quark pair production cross-section. A data sample of 2.05 fb(-1) recorded by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider is used. Relative differential cross-sections are derived as a function of the invariant mass, the transverse momentum and the rapidity of the top quark pair system. Events are selected in the lepton (electron or muon) + jets channel. The background-subtracted differential distributions are corrected for detector effects, normalized to the total inclusive top quark pair production cross-section and compared to theoretical predictions. The measurement uncertainties range typically between 10 % and 20 % and are generally dominated by systematic effects. No significant deviations from the Standard Model expectations are observed.
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We present new experimental constraints on the elastic, spin-dependent WIMP-nucleon cross section using recent data from the XENON100 experiment, operated in the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso in Italy. An analysis of 224.6 live days x 34 kg of exposure acquired during 2011 and 2012 revealed no excess signal due to axial-vector WIMP interactions with Xe-129 and Xe-131 nuclei. This leads to the most stringent upper limits on WIMP-neutron cross sections for WIMP masses above 6 GeV/c(2), with a minimum cross section of 3.5 x 10(-40) cm(2) at a WIMP mass of 45 GeV/c(2), at 90% confidence level.
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The ratio of the production cross sections for W and Z bosons in association with jets has been measured in proton–proton collisions at √s = 7 TeV with the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider. The measurement is based on the entire 2011 dataset, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 4.6 fb−1. Inclusive and differential cross-section ratios for massive vector bosons decaying to electrons and muons aremeasured in association with jets with transverse momentum pT > 30 GeV and jet rapidity |y| < 4.4. The measurements are compared to next to-leading-order perturbative QCD calculations and to predictions from different Monte Carlo generators implementing leading-order matrix elements supplemented by parton showers.
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Measurements of fiducial and differential cross sections are presented for Higgs boson production in proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of √s = 8TeV. The analysis is performed in the H → γγ decay channel using 20.3 fb−1 of data recorded by the ATLAS experiment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider. The signal is extracted using a fit to the diphoton invariant mass spectrum assuming that the width of the resonance is much smaller than the experimental resolution. The signal yields are corrected for the effects of detector inefficiency and resolution. The pp → H → γγ fiducial cross section is measured to be 43.2 ±9.4 (stat.) +3.2 −2.9 (syst.) ±1.2 (lumi) fb for a Higgs boson of mass 125.4 GeV decaying to two isolated photons that have transverse momentum greater than 35% and 25% of the diphoton invariant mass and each with absolute pseudorapidity less than 2.37. Four additional fiducial cross sections and two cross-section limits are presented in phase space regions that test the theoretical modelling of different Higgs boson production mechanisms, or are sensitive to physics beyond the Standard Model. Differential cross sections are also presented, as a function of variables related to the diphoton kinematics and the jet activity produced in the Higgs boson events. The observed spectra are statistically limited but broadly in line with the theoretical expectations.
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Measurements of differential production cross-sections of a Z boson in association with b-jets in pp collisions at √s = 7TeV are reported. The data analysed correspond to an integrated luminosity of 4.6 fb−1 recorded with the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider. Particle-level cross-sections are determined for events with a Z boson decaying into an electron or muon pair, and containing b-jets. For events with at least one b-jet, the cross-section is presented as a function of the Z boson transverse momentum and rapidity, together with the inclusive b-jet cross-section as a function of b-jet transverse momentum, rapidity and angular separations between the b-jet and the Z boson. For events with at least two b-jets, the cross-section is determined as a function of the invariant mass and angular separation of the two highest transverse momentum b-jets, and as a function of the Z boson transverse momentum and rapidity. Results are compared to leading-order and next-to-leading-order perturbative QCD calculations.
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La acumulación de material sólido en embalses, cauces fluviales y en zonas marítimas hace que la extracción mecánica de estos materiales por medio de succión sea cada vez mas frecuente, por ello resulta importante estudiar el rendimiento de la succión de estos materiales analizando la forma de las boquillas y los parámetros del flujo incluyendo la bomba. Esta tesis estudia, mediante equipos experimentales, la eficacia de distintos dispositivos de extracción de sólidos (utilizando boquillas de diversas formas y bombas de velocidad variable). El dispositivo experimental ha sido desarrollado en el Laboratorio de Hidráulica de la E.T.S.I. de Caminos, C. y P. de la Universidad Politécnica de Madrid. Dicho dispositivo experimental incluye un lecho sumergido de distintos tipos de sedimentos, boquillas de extracción de sólidos y bomba de velocidad variable, así como un elemento de separación del agua y los sólidos extraídos. Los parámetros básicos analizados son el caudal líquido total bombeado, el caudal sólido extraído, diámetro de la tubería de succión, forma y sección de la boquilla extractora, así como los parámetros de velocidad y rendimiento en la bomba de velocidad variable. Los resultados de las medidas obtenidas en el dispositivo experimental han sido estudiados por medio del análisis dimensional y con métodos estadísticos. A partir de este estudio se ha desarrollado una nueva formulación, que relaciona el caudal sólido extraído con los diámetros de tubería y boquilla, caudal líquido bombeado y velocidad de giro de la bomba. Así mismo, desde el punto de vista práctico, se han analizado la influencia de la forma de la boquilla con la capacidad de extracción de sólidos a igualdad del resto de los parámetros, de forma que se puedan recomendar que forma de la boquilla es la más apropiada. The accumulation of solid material in reservoirs, river channels and sea areas causes the mechanical extraction of these materials by suction is becoming much more common, so it is important to study the performance of the suction of these materials analyzing the shape of the nozzles and flow parameters, including the pump. This thesis studies, using experimental equipment, the effectiveness of different solids removal devices (using nozzles of different shapes and variable speed pumps). The experimental device was developed at the Hydraulics Laboratory of the Civil University of the Polytechnic University of Madrid. The device included a submerged bed with different types of sediment solids, different removal nozzles and variable speed pump. It also includes a water separation element and the solids extracted. The key parameters analyzed are the total liquid volume pumped, the solid volume extracted, diameter of the suction pipe, a section of the nozzle and hood, and the parameters of speed and efficiency of the variable speed pump. The basic parameters analyzed are the total liquid volume pumped, the removed solid volume, the diameter of the suction pipe, the shape and cross-section of the nozzle, and the parameters of speed, efficiency and energy consumed by the variable speed pump. The measurements obtained on the experimental device have been studied with dimensional analysis and statistical methods. The outcome of this study is a new formulation, which relates the solid volume extracted with the pipe and nozzle diameters, the pumped liquid flow and the speed of the pump. Also, from a practical point of view, the influence of the shape of the nozzle was compared with the solid extraction capacity, keeping equal the rest of the parameters. So, a recommendation of the best shape of the nozzle can be given.
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El viento, como factor medio-ambiental, ha sido objeto de numerosos estudios por los efectos que induce tanto en vehículos como en estructuras. Dentro del ámbito ferroviario, las cargas aerodinámicas debidas a la acción del viento transversal pueden poner en compromiso la seguridad de los vehículos en circulación, pudiendo llegar a ocasionar el vuelco del mismo. Incluso el sistema de cables encargado de realizar el suministro eléctrico necesario para la tracción del tren, conocido como catenaria, es sensible a la acción del viento. De hecho, al igual que ocurre en ciertas estructuras de cables, la interacción entre las fuerzas aerodinámicas no estacionarias y la catenaria puede ocasionar la aparición de oscilaciones de gran amplitud debido al fenómeno de galope. Una forma sencilla de reducir los efectos no deseados de la acción del viento, es la instalación de barreras cortavientos aguas arriba de la zona que se desea proteger. La instalación de estos dispositivos, reduce la velocidad en la estela generada, pero también modifica las propiedades del flujo dentro de la misma. Esta alteración de las condiciones del flujo puede contribuir a la aparición del fenómeno de galope en estructuras caracterizadas por su gran flexibilidad, como la catenaria ferroviaria. Estos dos efectos contrapuestos hacen evidente la importancia de mantener cierta visión global del efecto introducido por la instalación de barreras cortavientos en la plataforma ferroviaria. A lo largo de este documento, se evalúa desde un enfoque multidisciplinar el efecto inducido por las barreras cortavientos en varios subsistemas ferroviarios. Por un lado se analizan las mejoras en la estabilidad lateral del vehículo mediante una serie de ensayos en túnel de viento. La medición de la distribución de presiones en la superficie de un modelo bidimensional de vehículo ferroviario proporciona una buena estimación del nivel de protección que se consigue en función de la altura de una barrera cortavientos. Por otra parte, se analiza la influencia del mismo juego de barreras cortavientos en las características del flujo situado sobre la plataforma ferroviaria, mediante la utilización de anemometría de hilo caliente (HWA) y velocimetría de imágenes de párticulas (PIV). En particular se centra la atención en las características en la posición correspondiente a los hilos conductores de la catenaria. En la última parte del documento, se realiza un análisis simplificado de la aparición oscilaciones en la catenaria, por el efecto de la inestabilidad de galope. La información obtenida sobre las características del flujo se combinan con las propiedades aerodinámicas del hilo de contacto, obtenidas en mediante una serie de ensayos en túnel de viento. De esta manera se realiza una evaluación del riesgo a la aparición de este tipo de inestabilidad aeroeslástica aplicada a una catenaria ferroviaria situada sobre un viaducto tipo. ABSTRACT Wind as an environmental factor may induce undesirable effects on vehicles and structures. The analysis of those effects has caught the attention of several researchers. Concerning the railway system, cross-wind induces aerodynamic loads on rolling stock that may increase the overturning risk of the vehicle, threatening its safe operation. Even the cable system responsible to provide the electric current required for the train traction, known as the railway overhead or catenary, is sensitive to the wind action. In fact, the interaction between the unsteady aerodynamic forces and the railway overhead may trigger the development of undamped oscillations due to galloping phenomena. The inclusion of windbreaks upstream the area that needs wind protection is a simple mean to palliate the undesirable effects caused by the wind action. Although the presence of this wind protection devices reduces the wind speed downstream, they also modify the flow properties inside their wake. This modification on the flow characteristics may ease the apparition of the galloping phenomena on flexible structures, such as the railway overhead. This two opposite effects require to maintain a global perspective on the analysis of the influence of the windbreak presence. In the present document, a multidisciplinary analysis on the effect induced by windbreaks on several railways subsystems is conducted. On the one hand, a set of wind tunnel tests is conducted to assess the improvement on the rolling stock lateral stability. The qualitative estimation of the shelter effect, as function of the windbreak height, is established through the pressure distribution measured on the surface of a two-dimensional train model. On the other hand, the flow properties above the railway platform are assessed using the same set of windbreaks. Two experimental techniques are used to measure the flow properties, hot-wire anemometry (HWA) and particle image velocimetry (PIV). In particular, the attention is focused on the flow characteristics on the contact wire location. A simplified analysis on the catenary oscillations due to galloping phenomena is conducted in the last part of the document. Both, the flow characterization performed via PIV and the aerodynamic properties of the contact wire cross-section are combined. In this manner, the risk of the aeroelastic instabilities on a railway overhead placed on a railway bridge is assessed through a practical application.
Resumo:
Best estimate analysis of rod ejection transients requires 3D kinetics core simulators. If they use cross sections libraries compiled in multidimensional tables,interpolation errors – originated when the core simulator computes the cross sections from the table values – are a source of uncertainty in k-effective calculations that should be accounted for. Those errors depend on the grid covering the domain of state variables and can be easily reduced, in contrast with other sources of uncertainties such as the ones due to nuclear data, by choosing an optimized grid distribution. The present paper assesses the impact of the grid structure on a PWR rod ejection transient analysis using the coupled neutron-kinetics/thermal-hydraulicsCOBAYA3/COBRA-TF system. Forthispurpose, the OECD/NEA PWR MOX/UO2 core transient benchmark has been chosen, as material compositions and geometries are available, allowing the use of lattice codes to generate libraries with different grid structures. Since a complete nodal cross-section library is also provided as part of the benchmark specifications, the effects of the library generation on transient behavior are also analyzed.Results showed large discrepancies when using the benchmark library and own-generated libraries when compared with benchmark participants’ solutions. The origin of the discrepancies was found to lie in the nodal cross sections provided in the benchmark.
Application of the Boundary Method to the determination of the properties of the beam cross-sections
Resumo:
Using the 3-D equations of linear elasticity and the asylllptotic expansion methods in terms of powers of the beam cross-section area as small parameter different beam theories can be obtained, according to the last term kept in the expansion. If it is used only the first two terms of the asymptotic expansion the classical beam theories can be recovered without resort to any "a priori" additional hypotheses. Moreover, some small corrections and extensions of the classical beam theories can be found and also there exists the possibility to use the asymptotic general beam theory as a basis procedure for a straightforward derivation of the stiffness matrix and the equivalent nodal forces of the beam. In order to obtain the above results a set of functions and constants only dependent on the cross-section of the beam it has to be computed them as solutions of different 2-D laplacian boundary value problems over the beam cross section domain. In this paper two main numerical procedures to solve these boundary value pf'oblems have been discussed, namely the Boundary Element Method (BEM) and the Finite Element Method (FEM). Results for some regular and geometrically simple cross-sections are presented and compared with ones computed analytically. Extensions to other arbitrary cross-sections are illustrated.
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In this work, some results obtained by Trabucho and Viaño for the shear stress distribution in beam cross sections using asymptotic expansions of the three-dimensional elasticity equations are compared with those calculated by the classical formulae of the Strength of Materials. We use beams with rectangular and circular cross section to compare the degree of accuracy reached by each method.
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During illumination, Ca2+ enters fly photoreceptor cells through light-activated channels that are located in the rhabdomere, the compartment specialized for phototransduction. From the rhabdomere, Ca2+ diffuses into the cell body. We visualize this process by rapidly imaging the fluorescence in a cross section of a photoreceptor cell injected with a fluorescent Ca2+ indicator in vivo. The free Ca2+ concentration in the rhabdomere shows a very fast and large transient shortly after light onset. The free Ca2+ concentration in the cell body rises more slowly and displays a much smaller transient. After ≈400 ms of light stimulation, the Ca2+ concentration in both compartments reaches a steady state, indicating that thereafter an amount of Ca2+, equivalent to the amount of Ca2+ flowing into the cell, is extruded. Quantitative analysis demonstrates that during the steady state, the free Ca2+ concentration in the rhabdomere and throughout the cell body is the same. This shows that Ca2+ extrusion takes place very close to the location of Ca2+ influx, the rhabdomere, because otherwise gradients in the steady-state distribution of Ca2+ should be measured. The close colocalization of Ca2+ influx and Ca2+ extrusion ensures that, after turning off the light, Ca2+ removal from the rhabdomere is faster than from the cell body. This is functionally significant because it ensures rapid dark adaptation.
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We report absolute experimental integral cross sections (ICSs) for electron impact excitation of bands of electronic-states in furfural, for incident electron energies in the range 20-250 eV. Wherever possible, those results are compared to corresponding excitation cross sections in the structurally similar species furan, as previously reported by da Costa et al. [Phys. Rev. A 85, 062706 (2012)] and Regeta and Allan [Phys. Rev. A 91, 012707 (2015)]. Generally, very good agreement is found. In addition, ICSs calculated with our independent atom model (IAM) with screening corrected additivity rule (SCAR) formalism, extended to account for interference (I) terms that arise due to the multi-centre nature of the scattering problem, are also reported. The sum of those ICSs gives the IAM-SCAR+I total cross section for electron-furfural scattering. Where possible, those calculated IAM-SCAR+I ICS results are compared against corresponding results from the present measurements with an acceptable level of accord being obtained. Similarly, but only for the band I and band II excited electronic states, we also present results from our Schwinger multichannel method with pseudopotentials calculations. Those results are found to be in good qualitative accord with the present experimental ICSs. Finally, with a view to assembling a complete cross section data base for furfural, some binary-encounter-Bethe-level total ionization cross sections for this collision system are presented. (C) 2016 AIP Publishing LLC.
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Absorption induced by electrochemically injected holes is studied in poly-9,9-dioctylfluorene (PFO) films. Injected charges form positive polarons which are delocalised over four fluorene units in the glassy phase and about seven fluorene units in its β-phase. Polaron absorption cross-sections at the 640 nm peak are similar to the published values of chemically reduced oligofluorenes in solution. The absorption cross-section of polaron in the β-phase at 470 nm is about eight times smaller than the stimulated emission cross-section derived from published data. This indicates that β-phase-rich PFO is an attractive candidate for a light-emitting layer in double-heterostructure organic laser diodes.