• Title/Summary/Keyword: General physics

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DESIGN OF GENERAL PURPOSE SAR MONITOR

  • Lee, Kang-Hyun;Kim, Yong-Sik;Park, Jung-Il;Choi, Sung-Eun;Lee, Heung-Kyu;Suh, Tae-Suk;Choe, Bo-Young;Lee, Hyoung-Koo
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society of Medical Physics Conference
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    • 1999.11a
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    • pp.222-223
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    • 1999
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Implementation and benchmarking of the local weight window generation function for OpenMC

  • Hu, Yuan;Yan, Sha;Qiu, Yuefeng
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.54 no.10
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    • pp.3803-3810
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    • 2022
  • OpenMC is a community-driven open-source Monte Carlo neutron and photon transport simulation code. The Weight Window Mesh (WWM) function and an automatic Global Variance Reduction (GVR) method was recently developed and implemented in a developmental branch of OpenMC. This WWM function and GVR method broaden OpenMC's usage in general purposes deep penetration shielding calculations. However, the Local Variance Reduction (LVR) method, which suits the source-detector problem, is still missing in OpenMC. In this work, the Weight Window Generator (WWG) function has been developed and benchmarked for the same branch. This WWG function allows OpenMC to generate the WWM for the source-detector problem on its own. Single-material cases with varying shielding and sources were used to benchmark the WWG function and investigate how to set up the particle histories utilized in WWG-run and WWM-run. Results show that there is a maximum improvement of WWM generated by WWG. Based on the above results, instructions on determining the particle histories utilized in WWG-run and WWM-run for optimal computation efficiency are given and tested with a few multi-material cases. These benchmarks demonstrate the ability of the OpenMC WWG function and the above instructions for the source-detector problem. This developmental branch will be released and merged into the main distribution in the future.

Development of a New Moment of Inertia Experiment Apparatus That Does Not Require Deformation of a Sample for Measurement Purpose (측정을 목적으로 시료에 변형을 가하지 않아도 되는 새로운 관성모멘트 실험 장치의 개발)

  • Nam, Hyoung Joo
    • Journal of Engineering Education Research
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    • v.23 no.3
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    • pp.32-40
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    • 2020
  • A new moment of inertia experiment apparatus different from the existing one has been developed, which does not require deformation of a sample in order to fix it to the apparatus. This new experiment apparatus was able to experiment with constant-shaped objects that did not deform the samples, so that it enabled them for conducting an experiment which is close to an ideal rigid model dealt in the general physics course. The new experimental apparatus was easy and accurate in measuring the physical quantity by using the experimental principle of physical pendulum. In the results of the measurement of the moments of inertia of the six samples, all measurements were made to be accurate enough to measure with very small errors within 1%. In addition, it has been found to be useful as an experiment apparatus to understand the concept of the moment of inertia and to prove the formula for moment of inertia. Therefore, if the new moment of inertia experiment apparatus developed in this study is used in students' experiments, it is expected that students will be able to greatly increase their understanding of the concept of moment of inertia.

High rate diffusion-scale approximation for counters with extendable dead time

  • Dubi, Chen;Atar, Rami
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.51 no.6
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    • pp.1616-1625
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    • 2019
  • Measuring occurrence times of random events, aimed to determine the statistical properties of the governing stochastic process, is a basic topic in science and engineering, and has been the subject of numerous mathematical modeling approaches. Often, true statistical properties deviate from measured properties due to the so called dead time phenomenon, where for a certain time period following detection, the detection system is not operational. Understanding the dead time effect is especially important in radiation measurements, often characterized by high count rates and a non-reducible detector dead time (originating in the physics of particle detection). The effect of dead time can be interpreted as a suitable rarefied sequence of the original time sequence. This paper provides a limit theorem for a high rate (diffusion-scale) counter with extendable (Type II) dead time, where the underlying counting process is a renewal process with finite second moment for the inter-event distribution. The results are very general, in the sense that they refer to a general inter arrival time and a random dead time with general distribution. Following the theoretical results, we will demonstrate the applicability of the results in three applications: serially connected components, multiplicity counting and measurements of aerosol spatial distribution.

A Report on the ESR and Magnetic Structure of BixCa1-xMnO3 (x=0.15, 0.22)

  • Na, S.H.;Kim, J.W.;Choi, S.N.;Park, J.W.
    • Journal of Magnetics
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    • v.11 no.2
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    • pp.95-97
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    • 2006
  • The electron spin resonance signals of $Bi_xCa_{1-x}MnO_3$ have been acquired for two samples of x=0.15 and 0.22. ESR signal of the sample of x=0.15 clearly shows signal shape change into Dysonian with g-value shift at around 165 K so that the charge ordering temperature can be identified. The general features of ESR signal of the two samples well correlate with magnetic susceptibility measurement and also confirm the validity of former investigations.

Reconsidering the Formal Accounts of Continuity in the Theory-Change from Newtonian to Einsteinian Physics

  • Yang, Kyoung-Eun
    • Korean Journal of Logic
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    • v.12 no.2
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    • pp.171-199
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    • 2009
  • This essay will consider evolutionary views that attempt to capture the continuity of theory-change from Newtonian to Einsteinian physics via the formal aspects of these theories. Although it cannot be denied that the formal aspects such as 'correspondence principles' and 'covariance principles' provide important information concerning this theory-change, these formal properties are not sufficient to capture the essential elements of any evolutionary account of the development of Einstein's special and general theories of relativity from Newtonian mechanics.

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Long-Range Guided Wave Inspection of Structures Using the Magnetostrictive Sensor

  • Kwun, He-Geon;Kim, Sang-Young;Light, Glenn M.
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Nondestructive Testing
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    • v.21 no.4
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    • pp.383-390
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    • 2001
  • Long-range guided wave inspection is a new emerging technology for rapidly and globally inspecting a large area of a structure from a single test location. This paper describes a general overview of the guided wave properties and its application for long-range inspection of structures the principle and instrument system for a guided wave inspection technology called "magnetostrictive sensor (MsS)" that generates and detects guided waves electromagnetically in the material under testing, and examples of long-range guided wave inspection of structures that can be accomplished using the MsS.

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Adaptive Mesh Refinement in Computational Astrophysics - Methods and Applications

  • BALSARA DINSHAW
    • Journal of The Korean Astronomical Society
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    • v.34 no.4
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    • pp.181-190
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    • 2001
  • The advent of robust, reliable and accurate higher order Godunov schemes for many of the systems of equations of interest in computational astrophysics has made it important to understand how to solve them in multi-scale fashion. This is so because the physics associated with astrophysical phenomena evolves in multi-scale fashion and we wish to arrive at a multi-scale simulational capability to represent the physics. Because astrophysical systems have magnetic fields, multi-scale magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) is of especial interest. In this paper we first discuss general issues in adaptive mesh refinement (AMR), We then focus on the important issues in carrying out divergence-free AMR-MHD and catalogue the progress we have made in that area. We show that AMR methods lend themselves to easy parallelization. We then discuss applications of the RIEMANN framework for AMR-MHD to problems in computational astophysics.

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Constructivist Science Education and the Map of Students' Physics Misconceptions (구성주의적 과학교육과 학생의 물리 오개념 지도)

  • 송진웅
    • The Mathematical Education
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    • v.42 no.2
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    • pp.87-109
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    • 2003
  • This paper aims to review the overall development of constructivist approaches in science education research from two different perspectives, that is a summary of the past development in science education in general and a report of the outline of a recent research project on students' physics misconceptions in particular. In the summary of the past development of constructivist science education the introduction of constructivism as well as its psychological and philosophical backgrounds are briefly reported. Then main findings of the researches of constructivist approach are discussed in terms of the features of students' misconceptions, of the ways of effective conceptual change, of the implications toward school science education, and of the criticisms given to the constructivist approach. In the report of a recent development in addition to its background necessity and implications, the research structure and the format of the data analysis of the study on the map of students' physics misconceptions are presented. It is particularly emphasized that the practical informations and suggestions for actual teaching of school science, such as the database(DB) of students' misconceptions and teaching guides, are of most practical and effective values in order to maximize the advantage of the constructivist approach to science education.

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