2,620 research outputs found
Sulfur cycling and metabolism of phototrophic and filamentous sulfur bacteria
Phototrophic sulfur bacteria taken from different habitate (Alum Rock State Park, Palo Alto salt marsh, and Big Soda Lake) were grown on selective media, characterized by morphological and pigment analysis, and compared with bacteria maintained in pure culture. A study was made of the anaerobic reduction of intracellular sulfur globules by a phototrophic sulfur bacterium (Chromatium vinosum) and a filamentous aerobic sulfur bacterium (Beggiatoa alba). Buoyant densities of different bacteria were measured in Percoll gradients. This method was also used to separate different chlorobia in mixed cultures and to assess the relative homogeneity of cultures taken directly or enriched from natural samples (including the purple bacterial layer found at a depth of 20 meters at Big Soda Lake.) Interactions between sulfide oxidizing bacteria were studied
Aerodynamic design of gas and aerosol samplers for aircraft
The aerodynamic design of airborne probes for the capture of air and aerosols is discussed. Emphasis is placed on the key parameters that affect proper sampling, such as inlet-lip design, internal duct components for low pressure drop, and exhaust geometry. Inlet designs that avoid sonic flow conditions on the lip and flow separation in the duct are shown. Cross-stream velocities of aerosols are expressed in terms of droplet density and diameter. Flow curvature, which can cause aerosols to cross streamlines and impact on probe walls, can be minimized by means of a proper inlet shape and proper probe orientation, and by avoiding bends upstream of the test section. A NASA panel code called PMARC was used successfully to compute streamlines around aircraft and probes, as well as to compute to local velocity and pressure distributions in inlets. A NACA 1-series inlet with modified lip radius was used for the airborne capture of stratospheric chlorine monoxide at high altitude and high flight speed. The device has a two-stage inlet that decelerates the inflow with little disturbance to the flow through the test section. Diffuser design, exhaust hood design, valve loss, and corner vane geometry are discussed
Antiferromagnetic MnNi tips for spin-polarized scanning probe microscopy
Spin-polarized scanning tunneling microscopy (SP-STM) measures tunnel
magnetoresistance (TMR) with atomic resolution. While various methods for
achieving SP probes have been developed, each is limited with respect to
fabrication, performance, and allowed operating conditions. In this study, we
present the fabrication and use of SP-STM tips made from commercially available
antiferromagnetic foil. The tips are intrinsically SP,
which is attractive for exploring magnetic phenomena in the zero field limit.
The tip material is relatively ductile and straightforward to etch. We
benchmark the conventional STM and spectroscopic performance of our tips and
demonstrate their spin sensitivity by measuring the two-state switching of
holmium single atom magnets on MgO/Ag(100)
Island size distributions in submonolayer growth: successful prediction by mean field theory with coverage dependent capture numbers
We show that mean-field rate equations for submonolayer growth can
successfully predict island size distributions in the pre-coalescence regime if
the full dependence of capture numbers on both the island size and the coverage
is taken into account. This is demonstrated by extensive Kinetic Monte Carlo
simulations for a growth kinetics with hit and stick aggregation. A detailed
analysis of the capture numbers reveals a nonlinear dependence on the island
size for small islands. This nonlinearity turns out to be crucial for the
successful prediction of the island size distribution and renders an analytical
treatment based on a continuum limit of the mean-field rate equations
difficult.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figue
Loss of control in pattern-directed nucleation: a theoretical study
The properties of template-directed nucleation are studied close to the
transition where full nucleation control is lost and additional nucleation
occurs beyond the pre-patterned regions. First, kinetic Monte Carlo simulations
are performed to obtain information on a microscopic level. Here the
experimentally relevant cases of 1D stripe patterns and 2D square lattice
symmetry are considered. The nucleation properties in the transition region
depend in a complex way on the parameters of the system, i.e. the flux, the
surface diffusion constant, the geometric properties of the pattern and the
desorption rate. Second, the properties of the stationary concentration field
in the fully controlled case are studied to derive the remaining nucleation
probability and thus to characterize the loss of nucleation control. Using the
analytically accessible solution of a model system with purely radial symmetry,
some of the observed properties can be rationalized. A detailed comparison to
the Monte Carlo data is included
A Three-Dimensional Solution of Flows over Wings with Leading-Edge Vortex Separation. Part 1: Engineering Document
A method of predicting forces, moments, and detailed surface pressures on thin, sharp-edged wings with leading-edge vortex separation in incompressible flow is presented. The method employs an inviscid flow model in which the wing and the rolled-up vortex sheets are represented by piecewise, continuous quadratic doublet sheet distributions. The Kutta condition is imposed on all wing edges. Computed results are compared with experimental data and with the predictions of the leading-edge suction analogy for a selected number of wing planforms over a wide range of angle of attack. These comparisons show the method to be very promising, capable of producing not only force predictions, but also accurate predictions of detailed surface pressure distributions, loads, and moments
Realization of a superconducting atom chip
We have trapped rubidium atoms in the magnetic field produced by a
superconducting atom chip operated at liquid Helium temperatures. Up to
atoms are held in a Ioffe-Pritchard trap at a distance of 440
m from the chip surface, with a temperature of 40 K. The trap
lifetime reaches 115 s at low atomic densities. These results open the way to
the exploration of atom--surface interactions and coherent atomic transport in
a superconducting environment, whose properties are radically different from
normal metals at room temperature.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Generating and probing a two-photon Fock state with a single atom in a cavity
A two-photon Fock state is prepared in a cavity sustaining a "source mode "
and a "target mode", with a single circular Rydberg atom. In a third-order
Raman process, the atom emits a photon in the target while scattering one
photon from the source into the target. The final two-photon state is probed by
measuring by Ramsey interferometry the cavity light shifts induced by the
target field on the same atom. Extensions to other multi-photon processes and
to a new type of micromaser are briefly discussed
Entanglement of a Mesoscopic Field with an Atom induced by Photon Graininess in a Cavity
We observe that a mesoscopic field made of several tens of microwave photons
exhibits quantum features when interacting with a single Rydberg atom in a
high-Q cavity. The field is split into two components whose phases differ by an
angle inversely proportional to the square root of the average photon number.
The field and the atomic dipole are phase-entangled. These manifestations of
photon graininess vanish at the classical limit. This experiment opens the way
to studies of large Schrodinger cat states at the quantum-classical boundary
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