9,732 research outputs found
Investigation of test methods, material properties, and processes for solar cell encapsulants
The development of pottant compounds is emphasized. Formulation of the butyl acrylate syrup/casting pottant was completed. The formulation contains an ultraviolet stabilizer system and may be cured with an initiator that, unlike former selections, presents no shipping of handling hazards to the user. The catalyzed syrup is stable at room temperature and has a pot life of at least eight hours. The formulation of the ethylene/methyl acrylate lamination pottant was also completed. This compound is the alternative pottant to EVA and is similarly produced as an extruded sheet that is wound into rolls. This resin is inherently nonblocking
Encapsulation task of the low-cost silicon solar array project. Investigation of test methods, material properties, and processes for solar cell encapsulants
The results of an investigation of solar module encapsulation systems applicable to the Low-Cost Solar Array Project 1986 cost and performance goals are presented. Six basic construction elements were identified and their specific uses in module construction defined. A uniform coating basis was established for each element. The survey results were also useful in revealing price ranges for classes of materials and estimating the cost allocation for each element within the encapsulating cost goal. The six construction elements were considered to be substrates, superstrates, pottants, adhesives, outer covers and back covers
Ect2/Pbl Acts via Rho and Polarity Proteins to Direct the Assembly of an Isotropic Actomyosin Cortex upon Mitotic Entry.
Entry into mitosis is accompanied by profound changes in cortical actomyosin organization. Here, we delineate a pathway downstream of the RhoGEF Pbl/Ect2 that directs this process in a model epithelium. Our data suggest that the release of Pbl/Ect2 from the nucleus at mitotic entry drives Rho-dependent activation of Myosin-II and, in parallel, induces a switch from Arp2/3 to Diaphanous-mediated cortical actin nucleation that depends on Cdc42, aPKC, and Par6. At the same time, the mitotic relocalization of these apical protein complexes to more lateral cell surfaces enables Cdc42/aPKC/Par6 to take on a mitosis-specific function-aiding the assembly of a relatively isotropic metaphase cortex. Together, these data reveal how the repolarization and remodeling of the actomyosin cortex are coordinated upon entry into mitosis to provide cells with the isotropic and rigid form they need to undergo faithful chromosome segregation and division in a crowded tissue environment
The Relationship Between Beam Power and Radio Power for Classical Double Radio Sources
Beam power is a fundamental parameter that describes, in part, the state of a
supermassive black hole system. Determining the beam powers of powerful
classical double radio sources requires substantial observing time, so it would
be useful to determine the relationship between beam power and radio power so
that radio power could be used as a proxy for beam power. A sample of 31
powerful classical double radio sources with previously determined beam and
radio powers are studied; the sources have redshifts between about 0.056 and
1.8. It is found that the relationship between beam power, Lj, and radio power,
P, is well described by Log(Lj) = 0.84 Log(P) + 2.15, where both L_j and P are
in units of 10^(44) erg/s. This indicates that beam power is converted to radio
power with an efficiency of about 0.7%. The ratio of beam power to radio power
is studied as a function of redshift; there is no significant evidence for
redshift evolution of this ratio over the redshift range studied. The
relationship is consistent with empirical results obtained by Cavagnolo et al.
(2010) for radio sources in gas rich environments, which are primarily FRI
sources, and with the theoretical predictions of Willott et al. (1999).Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables; accepted for publication in MNRA
Optimal eigenvalues estimate for the Dirac operator on domains with boundary
We give a lower bound for the eigenvalues of the Dirac operator on a compact
domain of a Riemannian spin manifold under the \MIT bag boundary condition.
The limiting case is characterized by the existence of an imaginary Killing
spinor.Comment: 10 page
In democracies an effective media and opposition are both needed to sanction leaders’ foreign policy missteps
Common wisdom in international affairs is that when democratically elected leaders and governments make threats towards other states, these are credible; voters will punish leaders who do not follow through on their words. New research by Philip B. K. Potter and Matthew A. Baum argues however, that not all democracies are equal in the credibility of their threats of military action. By analyzing data on international military disputes over a 35-year period, they find that both an effective and widespread media, and a robust opposition are needed in order for voters to become aware of foreign policy blunders. Without either of these, leaders can avoid following through on their threats with little fear of being punished by voters
Raman-Scattering Detection of Nearly Degenerate -Wave and -Wave Pairing Channels in Iron-Based BaKFeAs and RbFeSe Superconductors
We show that electronic Raman scattering affords a window into the essential
properties of the pairing potential of
iron-based superconductors. In BaKFeAs we observe band
dependent energy gaps along with excitonic Bardasis-Schrieffer modes
characterizing, respectively, the dominant and subdominant pairing channel. The
symmetry of all excitons allows us to identify the subdominant
channel to originate from the interaction between the electron bands.
Consequently, the dominant channel driving superconductivity results from the
interaction between the electron and hole bands and has the full lattice
symmetry. The results in RbFeSe along with earlier ones in
Ba(FeCo)As highlight the influence of the Fermi
surface topology on the pairing interactions.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
The twistor spinors of generic 2- and 3-distributions
Generic distributions on 5- and 6-manifolds give rise to conformal structures
that were discovered by P. Nurowski resp. R. Bryant. We describe both as
Fefferman-type constructions and show that for orientable distributions one
obtains conformal spin structures. The resulting conformal spin geometries are
then characterized by their conformal holonomy and equivalently by the
existence of a twistor spinor which satisfies a genericity condition. Moreover,
we show that given such a twistor spinor we can decompose a conformal Killing
field of the structure. We obtain explicit formulas relating conformal Killing
fields, almost Einstein structures and twistor spinors.Comment: 26 page
Applications of ethylene vinyl acetate as an encapsulation material for terrestrial photovoltaic modules
Terrestrial photovoltaic modules must undergo substantial reductions in cost in order to become economically attractive as practical devices for large scale production of electricity. Part of the cost reductions must be realized by the encapsulation materials that are used to package, protect, and support the solar cells, electrical interconnects, and other ancillary components. As many of the encapsulation materials are polymeric, cost reductions necessitate the use of low cost polymers. The performance and status of ethylene vinyl acetate, a low cost polymer that is being investigated as an encapsulation material for terrestrial photovoltaic modules, are described
The Emergence of the Modern Universe: Tracing the Cosmic Web
This is the report of the Ultraviolet-Optical Working Group (UVOWG)
commissioned by NASA to study the scientific rationale for new missions in
ultraviolet/optical space astronomy approximately ten years from now, when the
Hubble Space Telescope (HST) is de-orbited. The UVOWG focused on a scientific
theme, The Emergence of the Modern Universe, the period from redshifts z = 3 to
0, occupying over 80% of cosmic time and beginning after the first galaxies,
quasars, and stars emerged into their present form. We considered
high-throughput UV spectroscopy (10-50x throughput of HST/COS) and wide-field
optical imaging (at least 10 arcmin square). The exciting science to be
addressed in the post-HST era includes studies of dark matter and baryons, the
origin and evolution of the elements, and the major construction phase of
galaxies and quasars. Key unanswered questions include: Where is the rest of
the unseen universe? What is the interplay of the dark and luminous universe?
How did the IGM collapse to form the galaxies and clusters? When were galaxies,
clusters, and stellar populations assembled into their current form? What is
the history of star formation and chemical evolution? Are massive black holes a
natural part of most galaxies? A large-aperture UV/O telescope in space
(ST-2010) will provide a major facility in the 21st century for solving these
scientific problems. The UVOWG recommends that the first mission be a 4m
aperture, SIRTF-class mission that focuses on UV spectroscopy and wide-field
imaging. In the coming decade, NASA should investigate the feasibility of an 8m
telescope, by 2010, with deployable optics similar to NGST. No high-throughput
UV/Optical mission will be possible without significant NASA investments in
technology, including UV detectors, gratings, mirrors, and imagers.Comment: Report of UV/O Working Group to NASA, 72 pages, 13 figures, Full
document with postscript figures available at
http://casa.colorado.edu/~uvconf/UVOWG.htm
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