188 research outputs found
The collective gyration of a heavy ion cloud in a magnetized plasma
In both the ionospheric barium injection experiments CRIT 1 and CRIT 2, a long duration oscillation was seen with a frequency close to the gyro frequency of barium and a time duration of about one second. A model for the phenomena which was proposed for the CRIT 1 experiment is compared to the results from CRIT 2 which made a much more complete set of measurements. The model follows the motion of a low Beta ion cloud through a larger ambient plasma. The internal field of the model is close to antiparallel to the injection direction v sub i but slightly tilted towards the self polarization direction E sub p = -V sub i by B. As the ions move across the magnetic field, the space charge is continuously neutralized by magnetic field aligned electron currents from the ambient ionosphere, drawn by the divergence in the perpendicular electric field. These currents give a perturbation of the magnetic field related to the electric field perturbation by Delta E/Delta B approximately equal to V sub A. The model predictions agree quite well with the observed vector directions, field strengths, and decay times of the electric and magnetic fields in CRIT 2. The possibility to extend the model to the active region, where the ions are produces in this type of self-ionizing injection experiments, is discussed
Рентгенометрический анализ кинематики L4-L5 И L5-S1 позвоночных сегментов в III стадии дегенеративного процесса
ПОЗВОНОЧНИКА БОЛЕЗНИОСТЕОХОНДРОЗОСТЕОХОНДРИТГРЫЖА МЕЖПОЗВОНОЧНОГО ДИСКАМЕЖПОЗВОНКОВОГО ДИСКА СМЕЩЕНИЕРЕНТГЕНОГРАФИ
Insights into the copper HiPIMS discharge:deposition rate and ionised flux fraction
The influence of pulse length, working gas pressure, and peak discharge current density on the deposition rate and ionised flux fraction in high power impulse magnetron sputtering discharges of copper is investigated experimentally using a charge-selective (electrically biasable) magnetically shielded quartz crystal microbalance (or ionmeter). The large explored parameter space covers both common process conditions and extreme cases. The measured ionised flux fraction for copper is found to be in the range from ≈10% to 80%, and to increase with increasing peak discharge current density up to a maximum at ≈ 1.25 A cm − 2 , before abruptly falling off at even higher current density values. Low working gas pressure is shown to be beneficial in terms of both ionised flux fraction and deposition rate fraction. For example, decreasing the working gas pressure from 1.0 Pa to 0.5 Pa leads on average to an increase of the ionised flux fraction by ≈ 14 percentage points (pp) and of the deposition rate fraction by ≈ 4 pp taking into account all the investigated pulse lengths.</p
Assessing uncertainties in landslide susceptibility predictions in a changing environment (Styrian Basin, Austria)
The assessment of uncertainties in landslide susceptibility modelling in a changing environment is an important, yet often neglected, task. In an Austrian case study, we investigated the uncertainty cascade in storylines of landslide susceptibility emerging from climate change and parametric landslide model uncertainty. In June 2009, extreme events of heavy thunderstorms occurred in the Styrian Basin, triggering thousands of landslides. Using a storyline approach, we discovered a generally lower landslide susceptibility for the pre-industrial climate, while for the future climate (2071–2100) a potential increase of 35 % in highly susceptible areas (storyline of much heavier rain) may be compensated for by much drier soils (−45 % areas highly susceptible to landsliding). However, the estimated uncertainties in predictions were generally high. While uncertainties related to within-event internal climate model variability were substantially lower than parametric uncertainties in the landslide susceptibility model (ratio of around 0.25), parametric uncertainties were of the same order as the climate scenario uncertainty for the higher warming levels (+3 and +4 K). We suggest that in future uncertainty assessments, an improved availability of event-based landslide inventories and high-resolution soil and precipitation data will help to reduce parametric uncertainties in landslide susceptibility models used to assess the impacts of climate change on landslide hazard and risk.</p
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Target ion and neutral spread in high power impulse magnetron sputtering
In magnetron sputtering, only a fraction of the sputtered target material leaving the ionization region is directed toward the substrate. This fraction may be different for ions and neutrals of the target material as the neutrals and ions can exhibit a different spread as they travel from the target surface toward the substrate. This difference can be significant in high power impulse magnetron sputtering (HiPIMS) where a substantial fraction of the sputtered material is known to be ionized. Geometrical factors or transport parameters that account for the loss of produced film-forming species to the chamber walls are needed for experimental characterization and modeling of the magnetron sputtering discharge. Here, we experimentally determine transport parameters for ions and neutral atoms in a HiPIMS discharge with a titanium target for various magnet configurations. Transport parameters are determined to a typical substrate, with the same diameter (100 mm) as the cathode target, and located at a distance 70 mm from the target surface. As the magnet configuration and/or the discharge current are changed, the transport parameter for neutral atoms ζ tn remains roughly the same, while transport parameters for ions ζ ti vary greatly. Furthermore, the relative ion-to-neutral transport factors, ζ ti / ζ tn, that describe the relative deposited fractions of target material ions and neutrals onto the substrate, are determined to be in the range from 0.4 to 1.1
On the electron energy distribution function in the high power impulse magnetron sputtering discharge
We apply the Ionization Region Model (IRM) and the Orsay Boltzmann equation
for ELectrons coupled with Ionization and eXcited states kinetics (OBELIX)
model to study the electron kinetics of a high power impulse magnetron
sputtering (HiPIMS) discharge. In the IRM the bulk (cold) electrons are assumed
to exhibit a Maxwellian energy distribution and the secondary (hot) electrons,
emitted from the target surface upon ion bombardment, are treated as a high
energy tail, while in the OBELIX the electron energy distribution is calculated
self-consistently using an isotropic Boltzmann equation. The two models are
merged in the sense that the output from the IRM is used as an input for
OBELIX. The temporal evolutions of the particle densities are found to agree
very well between the two models. Furthermore, a very good agreement is
demonstrated between the bi-Maxwellian electron energy distribution assumed by
the IRM and the electron energy distribution calculated by the OBELIX model. It
can therefore be concluded that assuming a bi-Maxwellian electron energy
distribution, constituting a cold bulk electron group and a hot secondary
electron group, is a good approximation for modeling the HiPIMS discharge
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