2,444 research outputs found
Some remarks on particle size effects on the abrasion of a range of Fe based alloys
The low-stress three body abrasion behaviour of a range of steels was investigated. The tests were carried out in a rubber wheel tester (according to ASTM G65-94, reapproved in 2000) at room temperature. The abrasive particles used were angular alumina particles of four different sizes. The results showed that, in general, the smaller particles (50 8m and 125 8m average size) caused more damage. With these particles, observations of surface morphology indicarted a more intense cutting and ploughing action, leading to more damage, whereas bigger particles i.e. larger 250 8m and 560 8m particles produced less damage, and their action involved more plastic deformation type wear. The 304 SS had a lower abrasion resistance than the 310 SS. For the austentic and ferritic steels the subsurface deformation was larger for impact with the coarser particles. Variations in substrate hardness had no effect on the abrasive behaviour observed. On the whole, the hardest steel (mild steel in martensitic condition) showed the higher extent of damage, irrespective of particle size
String Tension from Monopoles in SU(2) Lattice Gauge Theory
The axis for Figure 2 was wrong. It has been fixed and the postscript file
replaced (The file was called comp.ps).Comment: (22 pages latex (revtex); 2 figures appended as postscript files -
search for mono.ps and comp.ps. Figures mailed on request--send a note to
[email protected]) Preprint ILL-(TH)-94-#1
Vaccinia virus protein A46R targets multiple Toll-like-interleukin-1 receptor adaptors and contributes to virulence
Viral immune evasion strategies target key aspects of the host antiviral response. Recently, it has been recognized that Toll-like receptors (TLRs) have a role in innate defense against viruses. Here, we define the function of the vaccinia virus (VV) protein A46R and show it inhibits intracellular signalling by a range of TLRs. TLR signalling is triggered by homotypic interactions between the Toll-like-interleukin-1 resistance (TIR) domains of the receptors and adaptor molecules. A46R contains a TIR domain and is the only viral TIR domain-containing protein identified to date. We demonstrate that A46R targets the host TIR adaptors myeloid differentiation factor 88 (MyD88), MyD88 adaptor-like, TIR domain-containing adaptor inducing IFN-beta (TRIF), and the TRIF-related adaptor molecule and thereby interferes with downstream activation of mitogen-activated protein kinases and nuclear factor kappaB. TRIF mediates activation of interferon (IFN) regulatory factor 3 (IRF3) and induction of IFN-beta by TLR3 and TLR4 and suppresses VV replication in macrophages. Here, A46R disrupted TRIF-induced IRF3 activation and induction of the TRIF-dependent gene regulated on activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted. Furthermore, we show that A46R is functionally distinct from another described VV TLR inhibitor, A52R. Importantly, VV lacking the A46R gene was attenuated in a murine intranasal model, demonstrating the importance of A46R for VV virulence
The Coulomb law in the pure gauge U(1) theory on a lattice
We study the heavy charge potential in the Coulomb phase of pure gauge
compact U(1) theory on the lattice. We calculate the static potential
from Wilson loops on a lattice and compare
with the predictions of lattice perturbation theory. We investigate finite size
effects and, in particular, the importance of non-Coulomb contributions to the
potential. We also comment on the existence of a maximal coupling in the
Coulomb phase of pure gauge U(1) theory.Comment: 14 pages. LaTeX file and 3 postscript figure
Large Loops of Magnetic Current and Confinement in Four Dimensional Lattice Gauge Theory
We calculate the heavy quark potential from the magnetic current due to
monopoles in four dimensional lattice gauge theory. The magnetic current
is found from link angle configurations using the DeGrand-Toussaint
identification method. The link angle configurations are generated in a cosine
action simulation on a lattice. The magnetic current is resolved into
large loops which wrap around the lattice and simple loops which do not.
Wrapping loops are found only in the confined phase. It is shown that the long
range part of the heavy quark potential, in particular the string tension, can
be calculated solely from the large, wrapping loops of magnetic current.Comment: 15 pages (Latex file plus 3 postscript files appended), Univeristy of
Illinois Preprint ILL-(TH)-93-\#1
Remarks on abelian dominance
We used a renormalisation group based smoothing to address two questions
related to abelian dominance. Smoothing drastically reduces short distance
fluctuations but it preserves the long distance physical properties of the
SU(2) configurations. This enabled us to extract the abelian heavy-quark
potential from time-like Wilson loops on Polyakov gauge projected
configurations. We obtained a very small string tension which is inconsistent
with the string tension extracted from Polyakov loop correlators. This shows
that the Polyakov gauge projected abelian configurations do not have a
consistent physical meaning. We also applied the smoothing on SU(2)
configurations to test how sensitive abelian dominance in the maximal abelian
gauge is to the short distance fluctuations. We found that on smoothed SU(2)
configurations the abelian string tension was about 30% smaller than the SU(2)
string tension which was unaffected by smoothing. This suggests that the
approximate abelian dominance found with the Wilson action is probably an
accident and it has no fundamental physical relevance.Comment: 13 pages, LaTeX, 3 eps figure
Color confinement and dual superconductivity of the vacuum. III
It is demonstrated that monopole condensation in the confined phase of SU(2)
and SU(3) gauge theories is independent of the specific Abelian projection used
to define the monopoles. Hence the dual excitations which condense in the
vacuum to produce confinement must have magnetic U(1) charge in all the Abelian
projections. Some physical implications of this result are discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 5 postscript figure
Scaling and confinement aspects of tadpole improved SU(2) lattice gauge theory and its abelian projection
Using a tadpole improved SU(2) gluodynamics action, the nonabelian potential
and the abelian potential after the abelian projection are computed. Rotational
invariance is found restored at coarse lattices both in the nonabelian theory
and in the effective abelian theory resulting from maximal abelian projection.
Asymptotic scaling is tested for the SU(2) string tension. Deviation of the
order of is found, for lattice spacings between 0.27 and 0.06 fm. Evidence
for asymptotic scaling and scaling of the monopole density in maximal abelian
projection is also seen, but not at coarse lattices. The scaling behavior is
compared with analyses of Wilson action results, using bare and renormalized
coupling schemes. Using extended monopoles, evidence is found that the gauge
dependence of the abelian projection reflects short distance fluctuations, and
may thus disappear at large scales.Comment: 28 pages, RevTeX, 12 figures using epsfig (included); accepted for
publication in Physical Revie
Dual Superconductor Scenario of Confinement: A Systematic Study of Gribov Copy Effects
We perform a study of the effects from maximal abelian gauge Gribov copies in
the context of the dual superconductor scenario of confinement, on the basis of
a novel approach for estimation of systematic uncertainties from incomplete
gauge fixing. We present numerical results, in SU(2) lattice gauge theory,
using the overrelaxed simulated annealing gauge fixing algorithm. We find
abelian and non-abelian string tensions to differ significantly, their ratio
being 0.92(4) at BETA = 2.5115. An approximate factorization of the abelian
potential into monopole and photon contributions has been confirmed, the former
giving rise to the abelian string tension.Comment: 35 pages uucompressed LaTeX with 10 encapsuled postscript figure
Representations of sport in the revolutionary socialist press in Britain, 1988–2012
This paper considers how sport presents a dualism to those on the far left of the political spectrum. A long-standing, passionate debate has existed on the contradictory role played by sport, polarised between those who reject it as a bourgeois capitalist plague and those who argue for its reclamation and reformation. A case study is offered of a political party that has consistently used revolutionary Marxism as the basis for its activity and how this party, the largest in Britain, addresses sport in its publications. The study draws on empirical data to illustrate this debate by reporting findings from three socialist publications. When sport did feature it was often in relation to high profile sporting events with a critical tone adopted and typically focused on issues of commodification, exploitation and alienation of athletes and supporters. However, readers’ letters, printed in the same publications, revealed how this interpretation was not universally accepted, thus illustrating the contradictory nature of sport for those on the far left
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