310 research outputs found

    Characterization of Hardness and Elastic Modulus of a Pharmaceutical Material for Multiple Crystal Orientations

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    Nanoindentation has made it possible to test material properties of extremely brittle molecular crystals, which include many pharmaceuticals. An antifungal, griseofulvin, is tested to determine differences in hardness and elastic modulus for different crystal orientations. Hardness and elastic modulus are determined by nanoindentation on single crystals that are rotated in 15° intervals. There are differences in hardness at rotation degrees of 45°, 60°, and 75° from the 0° orientation and differences in elastic modulus at rotation degrees of 15°, 60°, and 75° from the 0° orientation. It is also found that the elastic modulus and hardness values of the 75° rotation are only similar to the 60° rotation. Griseofulvin displays anisotropy in hardness and elastic modulus, which implies that different crystal rotations activate different slip systems. Further work is needed to correlate rotation angle with the crystal structure as well as confirm these findings on another crystal

    Surface engineering impacts on hydrogen charging and hardness of high strength steels

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    Please click Additional Files below to see the full abstract

    How big should your nanoindentation be? The implications of indentation size in assessing the properties of complex structure

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    Drivers for testing small volumes of materials for assessing the mechanical properties are either (1) the sample you want to test is very small in the first place, such as measuring the hardness of a wear resistant coating which is in thin film form or (2) you can well-characterize a small volume or the small volume has some spatially distinct feature, such as probing properties near a grain boundary, or in two phase systems. Small scale mechanical testing using instrumented indentation generally requires minimal sample preparation and has high spatial fidelity, but creates complex loading states as opposed to uniaxial or biaxial applied stress methods. However, the ease of use and wide range of samples which are amenable for indentation testing has made this a common tool both for experimental assessment studies and for experimental validation of providing comparisons to simulations and predictions of mechanical properties. Please click Additional Files below to see the full abstract

    Towards classical geometrodynamics from Group Field Theory hydrodynamics

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    We take the first steps towards identifying the hydrodynamics of group field theories (GFTs) and relating this hydrodynamic regime to classical geometrodynamics of continuum space. We apply to GFT mean field theory techniques borrowed from the theory of Bose condensates, alongside standard GFT and spin foam techniques. The mean field configuration we study is, in turn, obtained from loop quantum gravity coherent states. We work in the context of 2d and 3d GFT models, in euclidean signature, both ordinary and colored, as examples of a procedure that has a more general validity. We also extract the effective dynamics of the system around the mean field configurations, and discuss the role of GFT symmetries in going from microscopic to effective dynamics. In the process, we obtain additional insights on the GFT formalism itself.Comment: revtex4, 32 pages. Contribution submitted to the focus issue of the New Journal of Physics on "Classical and Quantum Analogues for Gravitational Phenomena and Related Effects", R. Schuetzhold, U. Leonhardt and C. Maia, Eds; v2: typos corrected, references updated, to match the published versio

    Measuring the Polarization of Boosted Hadronic Tops

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    We propose a new technique for measuring the polarization of hadronically decaying boosted top quarks. In particular, we apply a subjet-based technique to events where the decay products of the top are clustered within a single jet. The technique requires neither b-tagging nor W-reconstruction, and does not rely on assumptions about either the top production mechanism or the sources of missing energy in the event. We include results for various new physics scenarios made with different Monte Carlo generators to demonstrate the robustness of the technique.Comment: v2: version accepted for publication in JHE

    Gaugino production in proton-proton collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 8 TeV

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    Motivated by hints for a light Standard Model-like Higgs boson and a shift in experimental attention towards electroweak supersymmetry particle production at the CERN LHC, we update in this paper our precision predictions at next-to-leading order of perturbative QCD matched to resummation at the next-to-leading logarithmic accuracy for direct gaugino pair production in proton-proton collisions with a center-of-mass energy of 8 TeV. Tables of total cross sections are presented together with the corresponding scale and parton density uncertainties for benchmark points adopted recently by the experimental collaborations, and figures are presented for up-to-date model lines attached to them. Since the experimental analyses are currently obtained with parton showers matched to multi-parton matrix elements, we also analyze the precision of this procedure by comparing invariant-mass and transverse-momentum distributions obtained in this way to those obtained with threshold and transverse-momentum resummation.Comment: 28 pages, 7 figures, 9 tables; version to appear in JHE

    Acoustics and oceanographic observations collected during the QPE Experiment by Research Vessels OR1, OR2 and OR3 in the East China Sea in the Summer of 2009

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    This document describes data, sensors, and other useful information pertaining to the ONR sponsored QPE field program to quantify, predict and exploit uncertainty in observations and prediction of sound propagation. This experiment was a joint operation between Taiwanese and U.S. researchers to measure and assess uncertainty of predictions of acoustic transmission loss and ambient noise, and to observe the physical oceanography and geology that are necessary to improve their predictability. This work was performed over the continental shelf and slope northeast of Taiwan at two sites: one that was a relatively flat, homogeneous shelf region and a more complex geological site just shoreward of the shelfbreak that was influenced by the proximity of the Kuroshio Current. Environmental moorings and ADCP moorings were deployed and a shipboard SeaSoar vehicle was used to measure environmental spatial structure. In addition, multiple bottom moored receivers and a horizontal hydrophone array were deployed to sample transmission loss from a mobile source and ambient noise. The acoustic sensors, environmental sensors, shipboard resources, and experiment design, and their data, are presented and described in this technical report.Funding was provided by the Office of Naval Research under Contract No. N00014-08-1-076
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