420 research outputs found
Measurement of the complex Faraday angle in thin-film metals and high temperature superconductors
A sensitive polarization modulation technique uses photoelastic modulation
and hetrodyne detection to simultaneously measure the Faraday rotation and
induced ellipticity in light transmitted by semiconducting and metallic
samples. The frequencies measured are in the mid-infrared and correspond to the
spectral lines of a CO2 laser. The measured temperature range is continuous and
extends from 35 to 330K. Measured samples include GaAs and Si substrates, gold
and copper films, and YBCO and BSCCO high temperature superconductors.Comment: 12 pages of text, 6 figures, fixed typos in formulas, added figur
FEATURE-BASED GEOMETRIC MODELLING AND ANALYSIS OF MULTIBODY MECHANICAL SYSTEM BEHAVIOUR
The aim of this paper is to present a modelling system and an application to analyse
the mechanical behaviour of a gear-box. Designing a new type of gear-box, there is a
real need for the concurrent engineering activities of the designers of geometric modelling,
mesh generation and mechanical analysis. In this system own developed contact types of
finite elements (FEM) have been used.
The new system contains some programs of the earlier system ASSYM (CASM
Lab.) for modelling the casing as the superstructure of a gear-box and its bearings as
FEM contact-macroelements. In the proposed system the designers can use the modeller
CAEDS (IBM Corp.) for feature-based geometric modelling and for generating the global
mesh model of casing, the FEM analysis processor Mac/NASTRAN (MacNeal-Schwendler
Corp.) and the new version of the N_SIM program (CASM Lab.) for modelling the pairs
of gears and the bearings, furthermore the New Grid (N.G.) preprocessor (CASM Lab.).
The N.G. can introduce the local mesh models of macroelements to the global mesh of
gear-box casing
Magneto-optical evidence for a gapped Fermi surface in underdoped YBa2Cu3O6+x
The infrared (900-1100 cm-1) Faraday rotation and circular dichroism are
measured in the normal state of underdoped High Tc superconductors and used to
study the magneto-transport. YBa2Cu3O6+x thin films are investigated in the
temperature range 10-300 K in magnetic fields up to 8 Tesla and as a function
of oxygen concentration. A dramatic increase of the Hall frequency is observed
for underdoped samples which is not consistent with the approach to a Mott
transition but is consistent with a partial gapping of the Fermi surface as
predicted in charge density wave models.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
In situ relationships between microbiota and potential pathobiota in Arabidopsis thaliana.
A current challenge in microbial pathogenesis is to identify biological control agents that may prevent and/or limit host invasion by microbial pathogens. In natura, hosts are often infected by multiple pathogens. However, most of the current studies have been performed under laboratory controlled conditions and by taking into account the interaction between a single commensal species and a single pathogenic species. The next step is therefore to explore the relationships between host-microbial communities (microbiota) and microbial members with potential pathogenic behavior (pathobiota) in a realistic ecological context. In the present study, we investigated such relationships within root-associated and leaf-associated bacterial communities of 163 ecologically contrasted Arabidopsis thaliana populations sampled across two seasons in southwest of France. In agreement with the theory of the invasion paradox, we observed a significant humped-back relationship between microbiota and pathobiota α-diversity that was robust between both seasons and plant organs. In most populations, we also observed a strong dynamics of microbiota composition between seasons. Accordingly, the potential pathobiota composition was explained by combinations of season-specific microbiota operational taxonomic units. This result suggests that the potential biomarkers controlling pathogen\u27s invasion are highly dynamic
Strong, Ultra-narrow Peaks of Longitudinal and Hall Resistances in the Regime of Breakdown of the Quantum Hall Effect
With unusually slow and high-resolution sweeps of magnetic field, strong,
ultra-narrow (width down to ) resistance peaks are observed in
the regime of breakdown of the quantum Hall effect. The peaks are dependent on
the directions and even the history of magnetic field sweeps, indicating the
involvement of a very slow physical process. Such a process and the sharp peaks
are, however, not predicted by existing theories. We also find a clear
connection between the resistance peaks and nuclear spin polarization.Comment: 5 pages with 3 figures. To appear in PR
Calorie Restriction in Adulthood Reduces Hepatic Disorders Induced by Transient Postnatal Overfeeding in Mice.
Impaired early nutrition influences the risk of developing metabolic disorders in later life. We observed that transient postnatal overfeeding (OF) in mice induces long-term hepatic alterations, characterized by microsteatosis, fibrosis associated with oxidative stress (OS), and stress-induced premature senescence (SIPS). In this study, we investigated whether such changes can be reversed by moderate calorie restriction (CR). C57BL/6 male mice pups were maintained during lactation in litters adjusted to nine pups in the normal feeding (NF) group and three pups in the transient postnatal OF group. At six months of age, adult mice from the NF and OF groups were randomly assigned to an ad libitum diet or CR (daily energy supply reduced by 20%) for one month. In each group, at the age of seven months, analysis of liver structure, liver markers of OS (superoxide anion, antioxidant defenses), and SIPS (lipofuscin, p53, p21, p16, pRb/Rb, Acp53, sirtuin-1) were performed. CR in the OF group reduced microsteatosis, decreased levels of superoxide anion, and increased protein expression of catalase and superoxide dismutase. Moreover, CR decreased lipofuscin staining, p21, p53, Acp53, and p16 but increased pRb/Rb and sirtuin-1 protein expression. CR did not affect the NF group. These results suggest that CR reduces hepatic disorders induced by OF
Biodiesel production from jatropha seeds: Solvent extraction and in situ transesterification in a single step
The objective of this study was to investigate solvent extraction and in situ transesterification in a single step to allow direct production of biodiesel from jatropha seeds. Experiments were conducted using milled jatropha seeds, and n-hexane as extracting solvent. The influence of methanol to seed ratio (2:1–6:1), amount of alkali (KOH) catalyst (0.05–0.1 mol/L in methanol), stirring speed (700–900 rpm), temperature (40–60 °C) and reaction time (3–5 h) was examined to define optimum biodiesel yield and biodiesel quality after water washing and drying. When stirring speed, temperature and reaction time were fixed at 700 rpm, 60 °C and 4 h respectively, highest biodiesel yield (80% with a fatty acid methyl ester purity of 99.9%) and optimum biodiesel quality were obtained with a methanol to seed ratio of 6:1 and 0.075 mol/L KOH in methanol. Subsequently, the influence of stirring speed, temperature and reaction time on biodiesel yield and biodiesel quality was studied, by applying the randomized factorial experimental design with ANOVA (F-test at p = 0.05), and using the optimum values previously found for methanol to seed ratio and KOH catalyst level. Most experimental runs conducted at 50 °C resulted to high biodiesel yields, while stirring speed and reaction time did not give significantly effect. The highest biodiesel yield (87% with a fatty acid methyl ester purity of 99.7%) was obtained with a methanol to seed ratio of 6:1, KOH catalyst of 0.075 mol/L in methanol, a stirring speed of 800 rpm, a temperature of 50 °C, and a reaction time of 5 h. The effects of stirring speed, temperature and reaction time on biodiesel quality were not significant. Most of the biodiesel quality obtained in this study conformed to the Indonesian Biodiesel Standard
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