2,845 research outputs found
Microwave Conductivity due to Impurity Scattering in a d-wave Superconductor
The self-consistent t-matrix approximation for impurity scattering in
unconventional superconductors is used to interpret recent measurements of the
temperature and frequency dependence of the microwave conductivity of YBCO
crystals below 20K. In this theory, the conductivity is expressed in terms of a
fequency dependent single particle self-energy, determined by the impurity
scattering phase shift which is small for weak (Born) scattering and approaches
for unitary scattering. Inverting this process, microwave
conductivity data are used to extract an effective single-particle self-energy
and obtain insight into the nature of the operative scattering processes. It is
found that the effective self-energy is well approximated by a constant plus a
linear term in frequency with a small positive slope for thermal quasiparticle
energies below 20K. Possible physical origins of this form of self-energy are
discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Shear thickening of cornstarch suspensions as a re-entrant jamming transition
We study the rheology of cornstarch suspensions, a dense system of
non-Brownian particles that exhibits shear thickening, i.e. a viscosity that
increases with increasing shear rate. Using MRI velocimetry we show that the
suspension has a yield stress. From classical rheology it follows that as a
function of the applied stress the suspension is first solid (yield stress),
then liquid and then solid again when it shear thickens. The onset shear rate
for thickening is found to depend on the measurement geometry: the smaller the
gap of the shear cell, the lower the shear rate at which thickening occurs.
Shear thickening can then be interpreted as the consequence of the Reynolds
dilatancy: the system under flow wants to dilate but instead undergoes a
jamming transition because it is confined, as confirmed by measurement of the
dilation of the suspension as a function of the shear rate
Lifetime-Associated Two-Dimensional Infrared Spectroscopy Reveals the Hydrogen-Bond Structure of Supercooled Water in Soft Confinement
[Image: see text] We demonstrate a method to address the problem of spectral overlap in multidimensional vibrational spectroscopy and use it to investigate supercooled aqueous sorbitol solutions. The absence of crystallization in these solutions has been attributed to “soft” confinement of water in subnanometer voids in the sorbitol matrix, but the details of the hydrogen-bond structure are still largely unknown. 2D-IR spectroscopy of the OH-stretch mode is an excellent tool to investigate hydrogen bonding, but in this case it seems difficult because of the overlapping water and sorbitol contributions to the 2D-IR spectrum. Using the difference in OH-stretch lifetimes of water and sorbitol we can cleanly separate these contributions. Surprisingly, the separated 2D-IR spectra show that the hydrogen-bond disorder of soft-confined water is independent of temperature and decoupled from its orientational order. We believe the approach we use to separate overlapping 2D-IR spectra will enhance the applicability of 2D-IR spectroscopy to study multicomponent systems
A simple method to account for topography in the radiometric correction of radar imagery
This article presents a method that allows to study and correct the radiometric distortions caused by topography in SAR images. The method is easy to implement, and requires neither sophisticated software nor code-level programming. It also considers the case of a flat surface having an elevation different from the one for which calibration parameters were derived. An ortho-image of the slant range distance is used with a digital elevation model to generate images of the local incident angle along the range and azimuth directions. The method compensates for variations in the terrain area of each pixel and for the angular dependence of backscatter, allowing the choice of either an empirical or semi- empirical scattering model. The method is applied to high-resolution C-SAR subsets of an agricultural area in the Central Cordillera of Costa Rica. The removal of topographic features appears excellent for local incident angles up to 80 degrees, but small-scale structures have pronounced effects on the radar return for higher local incident angles and are not adequately corrected
Normal stresses in semiflexible polymer hydrogels
Biopolymer gels such as fibrin and collagen networks are known to develop
tensile axial stress when subject to torsion. This negative normal stress is
opposite to the classical Poynting effect observed for most elastic solids
including synthetic polymer gels, where torsion provokes a positive normal
stress. As recently shown, this anomalous behavior in fibrin gels depends on
the open, porous network structure of biopolymer gels, which facilitates
interstitial fluid flow during shear and can be described by a phenomenological
two-fluid model with viscous coupling between network and solvent. Here we
extend this model and develop a microscopic model for the individual diagonal
components of the stress tensor that determine the axial response of
semi-flexible polymer hydrogels. This microscopic model predicts that the
magnitude of these stress components depends inversely on the characteristic
strain for the onset of nonlinear shear stress, which we confirm experimentally
by shear rheometry on fibrin gels. Moreover, our model predicts a transient
behavior of the normal stress, which is in excellent agreement with the full
time-dependent normal stress we measure.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figure
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