• Title/Summary/Keyword: Surface dipoles

Search Result 37, Processing Time 0.018 seconds

Source Current Reconstruction Based on MCG Signal (심자도 신호를 이용한 전류원 재구성)

  • 권혁찬;이용호;김진목
    • Progress in Superconductivity
    • /
    • v.4 no.1
    • /
    • pp.48-52
    • /
    • 2002
  • When applying a SQUID system for diagnosing heart disease, it is informative to obtain the source current distributions from the measured MCG (magnetocardiogram) signals since the bioelectric activity in the heart is generally represented by distributed current sources. In order to estimate the Primary current distribution in a heart, the minimum norm estimate was computed, assuming a source plane below the chest surface. In the simulation, current distributions, which were computed for the test dipoles represented well the essential feature of the test-current configurations. Source current reconstruction was performed for MCG signal of a healthy volunteer, which was recorded using a 40-channel SQUID system in a magnetically shielded room. It was found that the obtained current distribution is consistent with the electrical activity in a heart.

  • PDF

Optoelectronic and electronic applications of graphene

  • Yang, Hyun-Soo
    • Proceedings of the Materials Research Society of Korea Conference
    • /
    • 2012.05a
    • /
    • pp.67.2-67.2
    • /
    • 2012
  • Graphene is expected to have a significant impact in various fields in the foreseeable future. For example, graphene is considered to be a promising candidate to replace indium tin oxide (ITO) as transparent conductive electrodes in optoelectronics applications. We report the tunability of the wavelength of localized surface plasmon resonance by varying the distance between graphene and Au nanoparticles [1]. It is estimated that every nanometer of change in the distance between graphene and the nanoparticles corresponds to a resonance wavelength shift of ~12 nm. The nanoparticle-graphene separation changes the coupling strength of the electromagnetic field of the excited plasmons in the nanoparticles and the antiparallel image dipoles in graphene. We also show a hysteresis in the conductance and capacitance can serve as a platform for graphene memory devices. We report the hysteresis in capacitance-voltage measurements on top gated bilayer graphene which provide a direct experimental evidence of the existence of charge traps as the cause for the hysteresis [2]. By applying a back gate bias to tune the Fermi level, an opposite sequence of switching with the different charge carriers, holes and electrons, is found [3]. The charging and discharging effect is proposed to explain this ambipolar bistable hysteretic switching.

  • PDF

Drift Forces on a Freely-Floating Sphere in Water of Finite Depth(I) -Momentum Theorem Method- (유한수심(有限水深)의 해상(海上)에서 규칙파(規則波)에 놓인 구(球)에 작용(作用)하는 표류력(漂流力)(I) -운동량(運動量) 이론(理論) 방법(方法)-)

  • H.S.,Choi;T.M.,Oh
    • Bulletin of the Society of Naval Architects of Korea
    • /
    • v.20 no.4
    • /
    • pp.33-40
    • /
    • 1983
  • The drift force acting on a freely-floating sphere in water of finite depth is studied within the framework of a linear potential theory. A velocity potential describing fluid motion is determined by distribution pulsating sources and dipoles on the immersed surface of the sphere. Upon knowing values of the potential, hydrodynamic forces are evaluated by integrating pressures over the immersed surface of the sphere. The motion response of the sphere in water of finite depth is obtained by solving the equation of motion. From these results, the drift force on the sphere is evaluated by the momentum theorem, in which a far-field velocity potential is utilized in forms of Kochin function. The drift force coefficient Cdr of a fixed sphere increases monotononically with non-dimensional wave frequency ${\sigma}a$. On the other hand, in freely-floating case, the Cdr has a peak value at ${\sigma}a$ of heave resonance. The magnitude of the drift force coefficient Cdr in the case of finite depth is different form that for deep water, but the general tendency seems to be similar in both cases. It is to note that Cdr is greater than 1.0 when non-dimensional water depth d/a is 1.5 in the case of freely-floating sphere.

  • PDF

Analysis of Steady Flow Around a Two-Dimensional Body Under the Free Surface Using B-Spline Based Higher Order Panel Method (B-Spline 기저 고차경계요소법에 의한 자유수면하의 2차원 물체주위 유동해석)

  • Jae-Moon Lew;Yang-Ik Kim
    • Journal of the Society of Naval Architects of Korea
    • /
    • v.39 no.1
    • /
    • pp.8-15
    • /
    • 2002
  • A two-dimensional higher order panel method using B-splines has been developed to overcome the disadvantages of the low order panel method and to obtain more accurate solution. The sources and the normal dipoles are distributed on both the body and the free surface. Instead of applying the upwind finite difference schemes to satisfy the linearized free surface and the radiation condition, the derivatives of the basis functions of the B-splines are directly applied to the linearized free surface condition. Numerical damping in the Dawson's method are avoided in the Present computations. In order to validate the present method, numerical computations are carried out for a submerged cylinder and a two-dimensional hydrofoil steadily moving beneath a free surface. The numerical results show that fast convergence and better accuracies have been achieved by the present method.

A Potential-Based Panel Method for the Analysis of Resistance Characteristics of a High Speed Catamaran (포텐셜기저 패널법에 의한 고속쌍동선의 저항성능 해석)

  • Kim, Y.G.;Rhyu, S.S.;Yoo, J.H.;Lew, J.M.;Hong, S.K.
    • Journal of the Society of Naval Architects of Korea
    • /
    • v.34 no.4
    • /
    • pp.12-20
    • /
    • 1997
  • A potential-based panel method has been developed to investigate the resistance characteristics of a high speed catamaran advancing on the free surface. Normal dipoles and sources are distributed on the body surface while sources are distributed on the free surface. Linearised free surface conditions are used in the present analysis. To avoid the instabilities due to the velocity difference between inner and outer flow of a high speed catamaran, Kutta condition has been applied at the stern. Model test has been carried out not only to validate the numerical results but to confirm the capabilities of a CWC(Circulating Water Channel). It is believed that we can obtain the qualitatively reasonable results in the CWC. Computed results are compared with those of experiments and Insel's experimental values. Since the Kutta condition is applied at the stern, stable solutions are obtained at the high speed range. The present method, using linearised free surface conditions at the high speed range, seems to be a useful tool in the hull form design of a high speed catamaran.

  • PDF

Application of a Potential-Based Panel Method for Analysis of a 2-Dimensional Cavitating Hydrofoils Advancing Beneath a Free-Surface (자유수면 아래서 유한 Froude 수로 전진하는 2차원 수중익의 부분 및 초월 공동 유동 문제 해석)

  • J.M. Lew;C.S. Lee;Y.G. Kim
    • Journal of the Society of Naval Architects of Korea
    • /
    • v.30 no.2
    • /
    • pp.112-122
    • /
    • 1993
  • A potential-based panel method is presented for the analysis of a partially or supercavitating two-dimensional hydrofoil at a finite submergence beneath a free surface, treating without approximation the effects of the finite Froude number and the hydrostatic pressure. Free surface sources and normal dipoles are distributed on the foil and cavity surfaces, their strength being determined by satisfying the kinematic and dynamic boundary conditions on the foil-cavity boundary. The cavity surface is determined iteratively as a part of the solution. Numerical results show that the wave profile is altered significantly due to the presence of the cavity. The buoyancy effect due to the hydrostatic pressure, which has usually been neglected in most of the cavitating flow analysis, is found playing an important role, especially for the supercavitating hydrofoil; the gravity field increases the cavity size in shallow submergence, but decreases it when deeply submerged, while the lift reduces at all submergence depth.

  • PDF

Calculation of Wave Resistance of a Hybrid Hydrofoil (복합지지형 고속선의 조파저항 계산)

  • Yoo, J.H.;Kim, Y.G.;Lew, J.M.
    • Journal of the Society of Naval Architects of Korea
    • /
    • v.33 no.1
    • /
    • pp.1-8
    • /
    • 1996
  • A potential-based panel method has been developed for numerical computation of wave resistance on a hybrid hydrofoil. Hybrid hydrofoil is composed of a main body, two struts and two hydrofoils. The main body, which is assumed to be an axisymmetric body for the present analysis, is normally used to support displacement of a body with its buoyancy. Normal dipoles and the sources are distributed on the body(main body, struts, hydrofoils) and the sources are distributed on the free surface. Linearized free surface and the radiation conditions are satisfied using the fourth order finite difference operator and the semi-linear pressure Kutta condition is used for the numerical computation of the hydrofoils. Poisson type free surface condition has been used for the numerical computation and hyperboloidal panel method has been used for better numerical accuracy. To verify this numeric method, model tests are performed in circulation water channel. From the comparison of experimental results with numeric ones, the present method can be used as a useful tool for the design of high speed vessels.

  • PDF

Beam line design and beam transport calculation for the μSR facility at RAON

  • Pak, Kihong;Park, Junesic;Jeong, Jae Young;Kim, Jae Chang;Kim, Kyungmin;Kim, Yong Hyun;Son, Jaebum;Lee, Ju Hahn;Lee, Wonjun;Kim, Yong Kyun
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
    • /
    • v.53 no.10
    • /
    • pp.3344-3351
    • /
    • 2021
  • The Rare Isotope Science Project was launched in 2011 in Korea toward constructing the Rare isotope Accelerator complex for ON line experiments (RAON). RAON will house several experimental systems, including the Muon Spin Rotation/Relaxation/Resonance (μSR) facility in High Energy Experimental Building B. This facility will use 600-MeV protons with a maximum current of 660 pμA and beam power of 400 kW. The key μSR features will facilitate projects related to condensed-matter and nuclear physics. Typical experiments require a few million surface muons fully spin-polarized opposite to their momentum for application to small samples. Here, we describe the design of a muon transport beam line for delivering the requisite muon numbers and the electromagnetic-component specifications in the μSR facility. We determine the beam-line configuration via beam-optics calculations and the transmission efficiency via single-particle tracking simulations. The electromagnet properties, including fringe field effects, are applied for each component in the calculations. The designed surface-muon beamline is 17.3 m long, consisting of 2 solenoids, 2 dipoles affording 70° deflection, 9 quadrupoles, and a Wien filter to eliminate contaminant positrons. The average incident-muon flux and spin rotation angle are estimated as 5.2 × 106 μ+/s and 45°, respectively.

A Study on the Design of Ship′s Bow Form using Surface Panel Method (판요소법을 이용한 선수형상 설계에 관한 연구[1])

  • Jae-Hoon Yoo;Hyo-Chul Kim
    • Journal of the Society of Naval Architects of Korea
    • /
    • v.33 no.3
    • /
    • pp.35-47
    • /
    • 1996
  • A surface panel method treating a boundary-value problem of the Dirichlet type is presented to design a three dimensional body with free surface corresponding to a prescribed pressure distribution. An integral equation is derived from Green's theorem, giving a relation between total potential of known strength and the unknown local flux. Upon discretization, a system of linear simultaneous equations is formed including free surface boundary condition and is solved for an assumed geometry. The pseudo local flux, present due to the incorrect positioning of the assumed geometry, plays a role f the geometry corrector, with which the new geometry is computed for the next iteration. Sample designs for submerged spheroids and Wigley hull and carried out to demonstrate the stable convergence, the effectiveness and the robustness of the method. For the calculation of the wave resistance, normal dipoles and Rankine sources are distributed on the body surface and Rankine sources on the free surface. The free surface boundary condition is linearized with respect to the oncoming flow. Four-points upwind finite difference scheme is used to compute the free surface boundary condition. A hyperboloidal panel is adopted to represent the hull surface, which can compensate the defects of the low-order panel method. The design of a 5500TEU container carrier is performed with respect to reduction of the wave resistance. To reduce the wave resistance, calculated pressure on the hull surface is modified to have the lower fluctuation, and is applied as a Dirichlet type dynamic boundary condition on the hull surface. The designed hull form is verified to have the lower wave resistance than the initial one not only by computation but by experiment.

  • PDF

A Study on the Dynamic Ground Effect on Three-Dimensional Wings Using a Time Domain Panel Method (시간영역패널법을 사용한 3차원 날개의 동적지면효과 연구)

  • Han, Cheol-Heui;Cho, Jin-Soo
    • Journal of the Korean Society for Aeronautical & Space Sciences
    • /
    • v.30 no.4
    • /
    • pp.10-17
    • /
    • 2002
  • A study on the dynamic ground effect on three-dimensional wings is done using an indirect boundary element method(unsteady panel method). An integral equation is obtained by applying Green's theorem on all surfaces of the fluid domain. Constant strength dipole and source panels arc distributed on a wing's surface. The wake sheet is represented by constant strength dipoles. At each time step, a row of wake panels is assumed to be convected from the trailing edge of the wing. The tip vortex behind wings in dynamic ground effect moves outward. The amplitudes of the aerodynamic coefficients for the wings in dynamic ground effect are augmented much more comparing to the case in static ground effect.