11,271 research outputs found
Testing and analyses of electrochemical cells using frequency response
The feasibility of electrochemical impedance spectroscopy as a method for analyzing battery state of health and state of charge was investigated. Porous silver, zinc, nickel, and cadmium electrodes as well as silver/zinc cells were studied. State of charge could be correlated with impedance data for all but the nickel electrodes. State of health was correlated with impedance data for two silver/zinc cells, one apparently good and the other dead. The experimental data were fit to equivalent circuit models
Magnetic Cataclysmic Variable Accretion Flows
We have used a magnetic accretion model to investigate the accretion flows of magnetic cataclysmic variables (mCVs) throughout a range of parameter space. The results of our numerical simulations demonstrate that broadly four types of flow are possible: discs, streams, rings and propellers. We show that the equilibrium spin periods in asynchronous mCVs, for a given orbital period and magnetic moment, occur where the flow changes from a type characterised by spin-up (i.e. disc or stream) to one characterised by spin-down (i.e. propeller or ring). 'Triple points' occur in the plane of spin-to-orbital period ratio versus magnetic moment, at which stream-disc-propeller flows or stream-ring-propeller flows can co-exist. The first of these is identified as corresponding to when the corotation radius is equal to the circularisation radius, and the second as where the corotation radius is equal to the distance from white dwarf to the L1 point. If mCVs are accreting at their equilibrium spin rates, then for a mass ratio of 0.5, those with Pspin/Porb < 0.1 will be disc-like, those with 0.1 < Pspin/Porb < 0.5 will be stream-like, and those with Pspin/Porb ~ 0.5 will be ring-like. In each case, some material is also lost from the binary in order to maintain angular momentum balance. The spin to orbital period ratio at which the systems transition between these flow types decreases as the mass ratio of the stellar components increases, and vice versa
Comment on ``Superconducting PrBa_2Cu_3O_x''
Recently, Zou et al. (Phys. Rev. Lett. 80, 1074, 1998) reported the
observation of bulk superconductivity (SC) for a PrBa_2Cu_3O_x (Pr123) single
crystal grown by the traveling-solvent floating zone (TSFZ) method. The aim of
this Comment is to show the inconsistency of the value of effective magnetic
moment \mu_{eff} reported by Zou et al. (2.92\mu_B) with their magnetic
susceptibility data. The estimation made directly from their data points gives
a considerably smaller value of \mu_{eff}=2.09\mu_B. At the same time the
values of mu_{eff}=2.9\mu_B and 3.1\mu_B were obtained for our Pr123 single
crystals grown by flux method for H||ab-plane and H||c-axis, respectively. This
suggests that Pr occupies only about a half of the RE sites in TSFZ crystal.
The other half of the RE sites is occupied most probably by the nonmagnetic Ba.
Noteworthy, SC with T_c=43 K was observed earlier for
Pr_{0.5}Ca_{0.5}Ba_2Cu_3O_{7-y} thin films. Ba^{2+} has a larger ionic radius
than Pr^{3+} and so the substitution of Ba for Pr could give a natural
explanation not only for the SC in TSFZ Pr123 but also for the elongation of
the distance between the CuO_2 planes observed by Zou et al.Comment: Slightly extended version of Comment accepted to Phys. Rev. Lett.
(v.81, N24, 1998), tentatevely to be publ. 14Dec98. 1 page, REVTex; 1 EPS fi
X-ray Orbital Modulations in Intermediate Polars
We present an analysis of 30 archival ASCA and RXTE X-ray observations of 16
intermediate polars to investigate the nature of their orbital modulation. We
show that X-ray orbital modulation is widespread amongst these systems, but not
ubiquitous as indicated by previous studies that included fewer objects. Only
seven of the sixteen systems show a clearly statistically significant
modulation depth whose amplitude decreases with increasing X-ray energy.
Interpreting this as due to photoelectric absorption in material at the edge of
an accretion disc would imply that such modulations are visible for all system
inclination angles in excess of 60 degrees. However, it is also apparent that
the presence of an X-ray orbital modulation can appear and disappear on a
timescale of ~years or months in an individual system. This may be evidence for
the presence of a precessing, tilted accretion disc, as inferred in some low
mass X-ray binaries.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics. 9 pages of
text, plus 5 pages of tables, plus 33 pages of figure
Fly-by-light flight control system technology development plan
The results of a four-month, phased effort to develop a Fly-by-Light Technology Development Plan are documented. The technical shortfalls for each phase were identified and a development plan to bridge the technical gap was developed. The production configuration was defined for a 757-type airplane, but it is suggested that the demonstration flight be conducted on the NASA Transport Systems Research Vehicle. The modifications required and verification and validation issues are delineated in this report. A detailed schedule for the phased introduction of fly-by-light system components has been generated. It is concluded that a fiber-optics program would contribute significantly toward developing the required state of readiness that will make a fly-by-light control system not only cost effective but reliable without mitigating the weight and high-energy radio frequency related benefits
On the Meaning of the Principle of General Covariance
We present a definite formulation of the Principle of General Covariance
(GCP) as a Principle of General Relativity with physical content and thus
susceptible of verification or contradiction. To that end it is useful to
introduce a kind of coordinates, that we call quasi-Minkowskian coordinates
(QMC), as an empirical extension of the Minkowskian coordinates employed by the
inertial observers in flat space-time to general observers in the curved
situations in presence of gravitation. The QMC are operationally defined by
some of the operational protocols through which the inertial observers
determine their Minkowskian coordinates and may be mathematically characterized
in a neighbourhood of the world-line of the corresponding observer. It is taken
care of the fact that the set of all the operational protocols which are
equivalent to measure a quantity in flat space-time split into inequivalent
subsets of operational prescriptions under the presence of a gravitational
field or when the observer is not inertial. We deal with the Hole Argument by
resorting to de idea of the QMC and show how it is the metric field that
supplies the physical meaning of coordinates and individuates point-events in
regions of space-time where no other fields exist. Because of that the GCP has
also value as a guiding principle supporting Einstein's appreciation of its
heuristic worth in his reply to Kretschmann in 1918
Remission vs low disease activity: function, quality of life and structural outcomes in the Early Rheumatoid Arthritis Study and Network
Objectives To examine associations between function, quality of life and structural outcomes in patients achieving remission vs low disease activity in early RA. Methods Demographic, clinical and radiographic variables were collected at baseline and then annually from the Early Rheumatoid Arthritis Study (ERAS) and Early Rheumatoid Arthritis Network (ERAN) inception cohorts in routine care from 1986 to 2012. Disease activity was categorized: mean DAS28 score between years 1 and 5: remission [mean remission DAS (mRDAS) <2.6] or low [mean low DAS (mLDAS) 2.6–3.2]; sustained low/remission DAS28 (sLDAS/sRDAS) at years 1 and 2; and sustained Boolean remission (sBR) at years 1 and 2. Changes in HAQ and Short Form 36 Health Survey Questionnaire [SF-36; physical (PCS) and mental (MCS) component score]) and total Sharp van der Heijde (SvdH) scores for each disease activity category were modelled using multi-level models. Covariates included year of onset, age, gender and DMARD use at first visit. Results Of 2701 patients, 562 (21%) were categorized mRDAS, 330 (12%) mLDAS, 279 (10%) sRDAS, 203 (7.5%) sLDAS and 93 (3%) sBR. Patients categorized as mRDAS had increasingly divergent improved HAQ, SF-36 PCS, MCS and total SvdH scores compared with mLDAS (P-values 0.001 to <0.0001, all time points). Patients categorized as sRDAS had better HAQ, SF-36 PCS and MCS scores (P-values 0.05 to <0.0001, all time points) and SvdH scores (P = 0.05, years 3–5) over sLDAS. sBR was associated with better HAQ, and SF-36 PCS and MCS scores over sLDAS (P-values 0.002 to <0.0001, all time points). Conclusion These findings from routine care support ACR/EULAR guidelines that remission is a preferable goal over low disease activity in early RA.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
Gap maps and intrinsic diffraction losses in one-dimensional photonic crystal slabs
A theoretical study of photonic bands for one-dimensional (1D) lattices
embedded in planar waveguides with strong refractive index contrast is
presented. The approach relies on expanding the electromagnetic field on the
basis of guided modes of an effective waveguide, and on treating the coupling
to radiative modes by perturbation theory. Photonic mode dispersion, gap maps,
and intrinsic diffraction losses of quasi-guided modes are calculated for the
case of self-standing membranes as well as for Silicon-on-Insulator structures.
Photonic band gaps in a waveguide are found to depend strongly on the core
thickness and on polarization, so that the gaps for transverse electric and
transverse magnetic modes most often do not overlap. Radiative losses of
quasi-guided modes above the light line depend in a nontrivial way on structure
parameters, mode index and wavevector. The results of this study may be useful
for the design of integrated 1D photonic structures with low radiative losses.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Physical Review
Multiple Function Intubation Apparatus and Method
An apparatus and its method of use are provided allowing lavage, sump and enteral feeding operations with only one intubation. The apparatus includes a first tube having two distinct passageways. One of these passageways completely contains a second, feeding tube during intubation. Once the first tube is in place in the patient, the second tube is extended from the first tube so as to enter the stomach. The extension of the second tube opens ports in the first passageway of the first tube, thereby allowing sump or lavage treatment with the second passageway of the first tube serving as an air vent. A constriction in the end of the first passageway engages a band on the proximal end of the second tube to keep the tubes together. Once gastric emptying of the patient resumes, the second tube immediately moves into the duodenum then into the jejunum past the Ligament of Treitz and the first tube is withdrawn from the patient while maintaining the second tube in position for enteral feeding through feeding ports in its distal end
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