782 research outputs found
Cleaved surface of i-AlPdMn quasicrystals: Influence of the local temperature elevation at the crack tip on the fracture surface roughness
Roughness of i-AlPdMn cleaved surfaces are presently analysed. From the
atomic scale to 2-3 nm, they are shown to exhibit scaling properties hiding the
cluster (0.45 nm) aperiodic structure. These properties are quantitatively
similar to those observed on various disordered materials, albeit on other
ranges of length scales. These properties are interpreted as the signature of
damage mechanisms occurring within a 2-3 nm wide zone at the crack tip. The
size of this process zone finds its origin in the local temperature elevation
at the crack tip. For the very first time, this effect is reported to be
responsible for a transition from a perfectly brittle behavior to a nanoductile
one.Comment: 8 page
Effect of Disorder and Notches on Crack Roughness
We analyze the effect of disorder and notches on crack roughness in two
dimensions. Our simulation results based on large system sizes and extensive
statistical sampling indicate that the crack surface exhibits a universal local
roughness of and is independent of the initial notch size
and disorder in breaking thresholds. The global roughness exponent scales as
and is also independent of material disorder. Furthermore, we
note that the statistical distribution of crack profile height fluctuations is
also independent of material disorder and is described by a Gaussian
distribution, albeit deviations are observed in the tails.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Origin of the Universal Roughness Exponent of Brittle Fracture Surfaces: Correlated Percolation in the Damage Zone
We suggest that the observed large-scale universal roughness of brittle
fracture surfaces is due to the fracture process being a correlated percolation
process in a self-generated quadratic damage gradient. We use the quasi-static
two-dimensional fuse model as a paradigm of a fracture model. We measure for
this model, that exhibits a correlated percolation process, the correlation
length exponent nu approximately equal to 1.35 and conjecture it to be equal to
that of uncorrelated percolation, 4/3. We then show that the roughness exponent
in the fuse model is zeta = 2 nu/(1+2 nu)= 8/11. This is in accordance with the
numerical value zeta=0.75. As for three-dimensional brittle fractures, a
mean-field theory gives nu=2, leading to zeta=4/5 in full accordance with the
universally observed value zeta =0.80.Comment: 4 pages RevTeX
A longitudinal study of influences on alcohol consumption and related harm in Central Australia: with a particular emphasis on the role of price.
Made available by the Northern Territory Library via the Publications (Legal Deposit) Act 2004 (NT).Northern Territory, Department of Health,
Central Australian Aboriginal Congres
COVID-19 and tuberculosis in South Africa: A dangerous combination
There has been much speculation during the past week about the catastrophe that awaits once coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) establishes itself in the poorest communities of South Africa (SA) and, importantly, in informal settlements. Evidence to date suggests that COVID-19 is efficiently passed from infected individuals via large droplets and hard-surface fomites
Permeability of self-affine rough fractures
The permeability of two-dimensional fractures with self-affine fractal
roughness is studied via analytic arguments and numerical simulations. The
limit where the roughness amplitude is small compared with average fracture
aperture is analyzed by a perturbation method, while in the opposite case of
narrow aperture, we use heuristic arguments based on lubrication theory.
Numerical simulations, using the lattice Boltzmann method, are used to examine
the complete range of aperture sizes, and confirm the analytic arguments.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
Management of tree diversity in agricultural landscapes around Mabira Forest
Abstract As natural forests contract, farming systems become increasingly important to landscape biodiversity conservation, yet assets and limits of their contribution are insufficiently documented. A sound understanding of farmer strategies in the management of on-farm tree biodiversity is also critical to landscape approaches for biodiversity conservation and livelihood improvement. Diversity and management of woody species were surveyed in 105 farms around Mabira Forest in South-Central Uganda. Farms were selected according to distance to forest, landscape axis, gender, wealth, and specialized forest use of household heads. Farmer management has a strong influence on tree diversity in the coffee-banana systems around Mabira Forest. This is reflected in the relatively high number of planted and exotic species at the levels of farm niche, farm and landscape. Both the number of years under cultivation and farmer involvement in specialized forest use were conducive to higher species diversity. Gender, wealth and tenure status did not influence tree diversity. Variation in on-farm species richness was noted between landscape axes radiating out of the forest rather than concentric distance categories. Farming systems around Mabira Forest Reserve provide a key complementary rather than substitute tree diversity refuge and can be managed to enhance overall landscape biodiversity
- …