236 research outputs found
Force-directed control with a strong hydraulic manipulator
Thesis (M.Eng.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, 1999.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 68-73).by Peter Carl Lefren Jaffe.M.Eng
Space-charge mechanism of aging in ferroelectrics: an exactly solvable two-dimensional model
A mechanism of point defect migration triggered by local depolarization
fields is shown to explain some still inexplicable features of aging in
acceptor doped ferroelectrics. A drift-diffusion model of the coupled charged
defect transport and electrostatic field relaxation within a two-dimensional
domain configuration is treated numerically and analytically. Numerical results
are given for the emerging internal bias field of about 1 kV/mm which levels
off at dopant concentrations well below 1 mol%; the fact, long ago known
experimentally but still not explained. For higher defect concentrations a
closed solution of the model equations in the drift approximation as well as an
explicit formula for the internal bias field is derived revealing the plausible
time, temperature and concentration dependencies of aging. The results are
compared to those due to the mechanism of orientational reordering of defect
dipoles.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. accepted to Physical Review
Some New Results on the H Dibaryon in the Quark Cluster Model
The H dibaryon channel, (I=0,J=0,S=-2), is revisited in the non-relativistic
quark cluster model (NRQCM) using a basis extended beyond the usual set of
baryon cluster pairs to include an explicit spatially symmetric 6q state,
analogous in structure to the MIT bag model H. We find that the binding
predicted using the two-baryon basis alone is significantly deepened by the
addition of the additional 6q configuration. The NRQCM thus appears, contrary
to earlier findings, to be incompatible with the experimental information
available for this channel.Comment: 11 pages, REVTE
Phenomenology of the Pentaquark Antidecuplet
We consider the mass splittings and strong decays of members of the
lowest-lying pentaquark multiplet, which we take to be a parity-odd
antidecuplet. We derive useful decompositions of the quark model wave functions
that allow for easy computation of color-flavor-spin matrix elements. We
compute mass splittings within the antidecuplet including spin-color and
spin-isospin interactions between constituents and point out the importance of
hidden strangeness in rendering the nucleon-like states heavier than the S=1
state. Using recent experimental data on a possible S=1 pentaquark state, we
make decay predictions for other members of the antidecuplet.Comment: 12 pages LaTeX, 1 eps figur
The Demography of Massive Dark Objects in Galaxy Centres
We construct dynamical models for a sample of 36 nearby galaxies with Hubble
Space Telescope photometry and ground-based kinematics. The models assume that
each galaxy is axisymmetric, with a two-integral distribution function,
arbitrary inclination angle, a position-independent stellar mass-to-light ratio
Upsilon, and a central massive dark object (MDO) of arbitrary mass M_bh. They
provide acceptable fits to 32 of the galaxies for some value of M_bh and
Upsilon; the four galaxies that cannot be fit have kinematically decoupled
cores. The mass-to-light ratios inferred for the 32 well-fit galaxies are
consistent with the fundamental plane correlation Upsilon \propto L^0.2, where
L is galaxy luminosity. In all but six galaxies the models require at the 95%
confidence level an MDO of mass M_bh ~ 0.006 M_bulge = 0.006 Upsilon L. Five of
the six galaxies consistent with M_bh=0 are also consistent with this
correlation. The other (NGC 7332) has a much stronger upper limit on M_bh. We
consider various parameterizations for the probability distribution describing
the correlation of the masses of these MDOs with other galaxy properties. One
of the best models can be summarized thus: a fraction f ~0.97 of galaxies have
MDOs, whose masses are well described by a Gaussian distribution in log
(M_bh/M_bulge) of mean -2.27 and width ~0.07.Comment: 28 pages including 13 figures and 4 tables. Submitted to A
A Raman Study of Morphotropic Phase Boundary in PbZr1-xTixO3 at low temperatures
Raman spectra of PbZr1-xTixO3 ceramics with titanium concentration varying
between 0.40 and 0.60 were measured at 7 K. By observing the
concentration-frequency dependence of vibrational modes, we identified the
boundaries among rhombohedral, monoclinic, and tetragonal ferroelectric phases.
The analysis of the spectra was made in the view of theory group analysis
making possible the assignment of some modes for the monoclinic phase.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Safety and Short-Term Toxicity of a Novel Cationic Lipid Formulation for Human Gene Therapy
Overview summary Although several viral vectors have been widely applied to the treatment of human disease, the development of nonviral vectors is still in their infancy. In this report, a novel cationic lipid, DMRIE/DOPE, has been incorporated into the DNAâliposome formulation that improves transfection efficiencies and allows up to 1,000-fold higher concentrations of DNA to be administered in vivo. In this paper, the safety and toxicity of this formulation is described in two species, mice and pigs, suggesting that it may prove useful for human gene therapy.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/63224/1/hum.1993.4.6-781.pd
Lead-free piezoceramics - Where to move on?
Lead-free piezoceramics aiming at replacing the market-dominant lead-based ones have been extensively searched for more than a decade worldwide. Some noteworthy outcomes such as the advent of commercial products for certain applications have been reported, but the goal, i.e., the invention of a lead-free piezocermic, the performance of which is equivalent or even superior to that of PZT-based piezoceramics, does not seem to be fulfilled yet. Nevertheless, the academic effort already seems to be culminated, waiting for a guideline to a future research direction. We believe that a driving force for a restoration of this research field needs to be found elsewhere, for example, intimate collaborations with related industries. For this to be effectively realized, it would be helpful for academic side to understand the interests and demands of the industry side as well as to provide the industry with new scientific insights that would eventually lead to new applications. Therefore, this review covers some of the issues that are to be studied further and deeper, so-to-speak, lessons from the history of piezoceramics, and some technical issues that could be useful in better understanding the industry demands. As well, the efforts made in the industry side will be briefly introduced for the academic people to catch up with the recent trends and to be guided for setting up their future research direction effectively.ope
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