51,149 research outputs found
Narrow 87Rb and 133Cs hyperfine transitions in evacuated wall-coated cells
An extension of work on wall-coated cells was made to include observation by a triple resonance technique of the 0-0 hyperfine transitions in 87Rb and 133Cs. Conventional RF excited lamps were used. Interest in such cells is for possible application in atomic clocks. The Rb cell would appear to remain especially promising in this respect
Technical Note: Could benzalkonium chloride be a suitable alternative to mercuric chloride for preservation of seawater samples?
Instrumental equipment unsuitable or unavailable for fieldwork as well as lack of ship space can necessitate the preservation of seawater samples prior to analysis in a shore-based laboratory. Mercuric chloride (HgCl2) is routinely used for such preservation, but its handling and subsequent disposal incur environmental risks and significant expense. There is therefore a strong motivation to find less hazardous alternatives. Benzalkonium chloride (BAC) has been used previously as microbial inhibitor for freshwater samples. Here, we assess the use of BAC for marine samples prior to the measurement of oxygen-to-argon (O2 / Ar) ratios, as used for the determination of biological net community production. BAC at a concentration of 50 mg dm−3 inhibited microbial activity for at least 3 days in samples tested with chlorophyll a (Chl a) concentrations up to 1 mg m−3. BAC concentrations of 100 and 200 mg dm−3 were no more effective than 50 mg dm−3 . With fewer risks to human health and the environment, and no requirement for expensive waste disposal, BAC could be a viable alternative to HgCl2 for short-term preservation of seawater samples, but is not a replacement for HgCl2 in the case of oxygen triple isotope analysis, which requires storage over weeks to months. In any event, further tests on a case-by-case basis should be undertaken if use of BAC was considered, since its inhibitory activity may depend on concentration and composition of the microbial community
Contemporary perspectives of the child in action: An investigation into children’s connectedness with, and contribution to, the world around them
Childcare within Australia has undergone significant reform as a result of the implementation of the nationally mandated Belonging, Being and Becoming: The Early Years Learning Framework [EYLF] (Department for Education, Employment and Workplace Relations [DEEWR]. 2009. Belonging, Being and Becoming. The Early Years Learning Framework for Australia. Canberra: Australian Government Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations). The EYLF articulates contemporary perspectives of the child through its principles, practices and learning outcomes. Educators are required to promote these principles, practices and learning outcomes with children aged from birth to 5 years. This paper reports the findings from a research project that sought to investigate how educators applied their understanding of learning outcome two of the EYLF (children are connected with and contribute to their world). The focus of this research was educators working with children aged two to three years within childcare centres operating on school sites, in metropolitan Western Australian. The research design was qualitative and situated within the interpretivist paradigm. Observations were used as the method for gathering data and these were analysed through a process of coding. This paper presents the observational findings of educators’ practices within learning outcome two. Composite vignettes from the voice of the child are included to present the observational findings. In centralising the voice of the child, contemporary perspectives are made explicit
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Multi-Material Ultrasonic Consolidation
Ultrasonic consolidation (UC) is a recently developed direct metal solid freeform
fabrication process. While the process has been well-demonstrated for part fabrication in Al alloy
3003 H18, including with intricate cooling channels, some of the potential strengths of the
process have not been fully exploited. One of them is its flexibility with build materials and the
other is its suitability for fabrication of multi-material and functionally graded material parts with
enhanced functional or mechanical properties. Capitalizing on these capabilities is critical for
broadening the application range and commercial utilization of the process. In the current work,
UC was used to investigate ultrasonic bonding of a broad range of engineering materials, which
included stainless steels, Ni-base alloys, brass, Al alloys, and Al alloy composites. UC multimaterial part fabrication was examined using Al alloy 3003 as the bulk part material and the
above mentioned materials as performance enhancement materials. Studies were focused on
microstructural aspects to evaluate interface characteristics between dissimilar material layers.
The results showed that most of these materials can be successfully bonded to Al alloy 3003 and
vice versa using the ultrasonic consolidation process. Bond formation and interface
characteristics between various material combinations are discussed based on oxide layer
characteristics, material properties, and others.Mechanical Engineerin
Some Physical Consequences of Abrupt Changes in the Multipole Moments of a Gravitating Body
The Barrab\`es-Israel theory of light-like shells in General Relativity is
used to show explicitly that in general a light-like shell is accompanied by an
impulsive gravitational wave. The gravitational wave is identified by its
Petrov Type N contribution to a Dirac delta-function term in the Weyl conformal
curvature tensor (with the delta-function singular on the null hypersurface
history of the wave and shell). An example is described in which an
asymptotically flat static vacuum Weyl space-time experiences a sudden change
across a null hypersurface in the multipole moments of its isolated axially
symmetric source. A light-like shell and an impulsive gravitational wave are
identified, both having the null hypersurface as history. The stress-energy in
the shell is dominated (at large distance from the source) by the jump in the
monopole moment (the mass) of the source with the jump in the quadrupole moment
mainly responsible for the stress being anisotropic. The gravitational wave
owes its existence principally to the jump in the quadrupole moment of the
source confirming what would be expected.Comment: 26 pages, tex, no figures, to appear in Phys.Rev.
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An Evaluation of a Battery of Functional and Structural Tests as Predictors of Likely Risk of Progression of Age-Related Macular Degeneration.
Purpose: To evaluate the ability of visual function and structural tests to identify the likely risk of progression from early/intermediate to advanced AMD, using the Age-Related Eye Disease Study (AREDS) simplified scale as a surrogate for risk of progression. The secondary aim was to determine the relationship between disease severity grade and the observed functional and structural deficits. Methods: A total of 100 participants whose AMD status varied from early to advanced were recruited. Visual function was assessed using cone dark adaptation, 14 Hz flicker and chromatic threshold tests and retinal structure was assessed by measuring drusen volume and macular thickness. The predictive value of the tests was estimated using ordinal regression analysis. Group comparisons were assessed using analysis of covariance. Results: Change in cone dark adaptation (cone Ï„) and yellow-blue (YB) chromatic sensitivity were independent predictors for AMD progression risk (cone Ï„, pseudo R2 = 0.35, P < 0.001; YB chromatic threshold, pseudo R2 = 0.16, P < 0.001). The only structural predictor was foveal thickness (R2 = 0.05, P = 0.047). Chromatic sensitivity and cone dark adaptation were also the best functional tests at distinguishing between severity groups. Drusen characteristics clearly differentiated between participants with early and advanced disease, but were not able to differentiate between those with early AMD and controls. Mean differences in retinal thickness existed between severity groups at the foveal (P = 0.040) and inner (P = 0.001) subfields. Conclusions: This study indicates that cone Ï„, YB chromatic threshold and foveal thickness are independent predictors of likely risk of AMD progression
Gas Dynamics in the Barred Seyfert Galaxy NGC4151 - II. High Resolution HI Study
We present sensitive, high angular resolution (6" x 5") 21-cm observations of
the neutral hydrogen in the nearby barred Seyfert galaxy, NGC4151. These HI
observations, obtained using the VLA in B-configuration, are the highest
resolution to date of this galaxy, and reveal hitherto unprecedented detail in
the distribution and kinematics of the HI on sub-kiloparsec scales. A complete
analysis and discussion of the HI data are presented and the global properties
of the galaxy are related to the bar dynamics presented in Paper I.Comment: 13 pages including 9 figures and 3 tables; accepted for publication
in MNRA
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