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Charge injection, electroluminescence, and ageing of an epoxy resin in high divergent fields
[INTRODUCTION]Most experimental studies of electrical ageing have concentrated on semi-crystalline polymers such as those used in cable insulation and capacitors (see for example [1]). Theoretical models [2-4] for electrical ageing have been developed on the basis of these studies. The consensus is that ageing involves the formation of low-density regions, though the mechanisms responsible are disputed. For example, bond scission by high-energy electrons [2,5], and mechanical deformation have both been suggested. Both of these mechanisms are related to charge injection and the subsequent formation of high local fields. The semi-crystalline polymers studied so far have similar chemistries and almost identical morphologies. They tend, therefore, to show many similarities in, for example, the size of the energy barriers for the ageing reaction, critical ageing levels, and field dependence of ageing [4]. These similarities make it difficult to discriminate between mechanisms. Epoxy resins, however, are network polymers with a different molecular chemistry to that of the semi-crystalline polymers and are thus ideal to evaluate the proposed ageing mechanisms. We have therefore studied an epoxy resin (CY1301) under both uniform field and high divergent field conditions. Uniform field conditions were used to gain baseline characteristics for the properties of the unaged epoxy resin, and also for the effects of electrical ageing in low fields. Studies in high divergent fields were made using an electrode arrangement adapted from that of [6]. A number of wires set approximately 0.5mm apart were embedded, parallel to the flat faces, in thin (290 m ) flat samples. The radius of the wires ranged from 5 m (gold plated tungsten) to 25 m (tungsten). Relatively small voltages applied to the wires (5 kV DC) therefore produced local fields up to 170 kV/mm depending upon the wire radius chosen. These field levels are high enough to inject space-charge [6] without leading to instantaneous failure. This geometry, therefore, may both inject charge and simulate local stress enhancements arising from charge accumulation. The number of wires is large (30) so that the volume affected is big enough to allow changes on ageing to be detectable
Fabrication of minority-carrier-limited n-Si/insulator/metal diodes
A photoelectrochemical anodization technique has been used to fabricate n-Si/insulator/metal (MIS) diodes with improved electrical properties. MIS structures fabricated with Au have provided the first experimental observation of a solid-state n-Si surface barrier device whose open circuit voltage Voc is controlled by minority-carrier bulk diffusion/recombination processes. For these diodes, variation of the minority-carrier diffusion length and majority-carrier dopant density produced changes in Voc that were in accord with bulk diffusion/recombination theory. Additionally, the variation in Voc in response to changes in the work function of the metal overlayer indicated that these MIS devices were not subject to the Fermi level pinning restrictions observed for n-Si Schottky structures. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopic characterization of the anodically grown insulator indicated 8.2±0.9 Ă
of a strained SiO2 layer as the interfacial insulator resulting from the photoanodization process
The Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF) spectral library: spectral diagnostics for cool stars
The near-infrared (NIR) wavelength range offers some unique spectral
features, and it is less prone to the extinction than the optical one.
Recently, the first flux calibrated NIR library of cool stars from the NASA
Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF) have become available, and it has not been
fully exploited yet. We want to develop spectroscopic diagnostics for stellar
physical parameters based on features in the wavelength range 1-5 micron. In
this work we test the technique in the I and K bands. The study of the Y, J, H,
and L bands will be presented in the following paper. An objective method for
semi-empirical definition of spectral features sensitive to various physical
parameters is applied to the spectra. It is based on sensitivity map--i.e.,
derivative of the flux in the spectra with respect to the stellar parameters at
a fixed wavelength. New optimized indices are defined and their equivalent
widths (EWs) are measured. A number of sensitive features to the effective
temperature and surface gravity are re-identified or newly identified clearly
showing the reliability of the sensitivity map analysis. The sensitivity map
allows to identify the best bandpass limits for the line and nearby continuum.
It reliably predicts the trends of spectral features with respect to a given
physical parameter but not their absolute strengths. Line blends are easy to
recognize when blended features have different behavior with respect to some
physical stellar parameter. The use of sensitivity map is therefore
complementary to the use of indices. We give the EWs of the new indices
measured for the IRTF star sample. This new and homogeneous set of EWs will be
useful for stellar population synthesis models and can be used to get
element-by-element abundances for unresolved stellar population studies in
galaxies.Comment: 46 pages, 27 figures, accepted for publication on Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Autonomous support for microorganism research in space
A preliminary design for performing on orbit, autonomous research on microorganisms and cultured cells/tissues is presented. An understanding of gravity and its effects on cells is crucial for space exploration as well as for terrestrial applications. The payload is designed to be compatible with the Commercial Experiment Transporter (COMET) launch vehicle, an orbiter middeck locker interface, and with Space Station Freedom. Uplink/downlink capabilities and sample return through controlled reentry are available for all carriers. Autonomous testing activities are preprogrammed with in-flight reprogrammability. Sensors for monitoring temperature, pH, light, gravity levels, vibrations, and radiation are provided for environmental regulation and experimental data collection. Additional experimental data acquisition includes optical density measurement, microscopy, video, and film photography. On-board full data storage capabilities are provided. A fluid transfer mechanism is utilized for inoculation, sampling, and nutrient replenishment of experiment cultures. In addition to payload design, representative experiments were developed to ensure scientific objectives remained compatible with hardware capabilities. The project is defined to provide biological data pertinent to extended duration crewed space flight including crew health issues and development of a Controlled Ecological Life Support System (CELSS). In addition, opportunities are opened for investigations leading to commercial applications of space, such as pharmaceutical development, modeling of terrestrial diseases, and material processing
Forcing function control of Faraday wave instabilities in viscous shallow fluids
We investigate the relationship between the linear surface wave instabilities
of a shallow viscous fluid layer and the shape of the periodic,
parametric-forcing function (describing the vertical acceleration of the fluid
container) that excites them. We find numerically that the envelope of the
resonance tongues can only develop multiple minima when the forcing function
has more than two local extrema per cycle. With this insight, we construct a
multi-frequency forcing function that generates at onset a non-trivial harmonic
instability which is distinct from a subharmonic response to any of its
frequency components. We measure the corresponding surface patterns
experimentally and verify that small changes in the forcing waveform cause a
transition, through a bicritical point, from the predicted harmonic
short-wavelength pattern to a much larger standard subharmonic pattern. Using a
formulation valid in the lubrication regime (thin viscous fluid layer) and a
WKB method to find its analytic solutions, we explore the origin of the
observed relation between the forcing function shape and the resonance tongue
structure. In particular, we show that for square and triangular forcing
functions the envelope of these tongues has only one minimum, as in the usual
sinusoidal case.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure
A Revitalized Role for Library Media Specialists in School Reading Programs
At 8:00 a.m., while children are arriving at school, Mrs.Beasley, the elementary school library media specialist, is busy shelving the books returned yesterday. She has new books to catalog, newspaper and magazines to display and audio visual equipment to distribute to teachers. Before she completes any of this, her first group of children arrives for their regularly scheduled 30 minutes library visit. Mrs. Beasley attempts to help a few children in their selection of appropriate books, but finds that she spends most of her time checking books in and out. To Mrs. Beasley\u27s dismay, there is little time to share her love of books and reading with the children who visit her at the library. As this class leaves, another group of children arrives at the library, and the same scenario continues throughout the day
Goals and their associations with beliefs about success in and perceptions of the purpose of physical education
This is the publisher's version, also found at http://ehis.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail?vid=3&sid=f2fadc72-30ec-4818-a6be-17c24af97fd1%40sessionmgr13&hid=2&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZQ%3d%3d#db=s3h&AN=SPH367545This study examined the relationship of students' goal orientation to their
beliefs about what leads to success in physical education and perceptions of
the purposes of physical education. High school students {N = 144,78 females
and 66 males) completed a modified version of the Task and Ego Orientation
in Sport Questionnaire and measures of beliefs and perceived purposes specific
to physical education class. Results indicated that students high in task
orientation were significantly more likely to believe that success is achieved
through intrinsic interest/effort/cooperation than were those low in task orientation.
High ego-oriented students believed that success is achieved when
students possess high ability more so than low ego-oriented students. The
high task/low ego students were most likely to reject the notion that success
in physical education occurs when students know how to use deceptive
tactics and were less likely to perceive that an important function of physical
education is to provide an easy class
DIRECT ESTIMATION OF ABOVEGROUND FOREST PRODUCTIVITY THROUGH HYPERSPECTRAL REMOTE SENSING OF CANOPY NITROGEN
The concentration of nitrogen in foliage has been related to rates of net photosynthesis across a wide range of plant species and functional groups and thus represents a simple and biologically meaningful link between terrestrial cycles of carbon and nitrogen. Although foliar N is used by ecosystem models to predict rates of leafâlevel photosynthesis, it has rarely been examined as a direct scalar to standâlevel carbon gain. Establishment of such relationships would greatly simplify the nature of forest C and N linkages, enhancing our ability to derive estimates of forest productivity at landscape to regional scales. Here, we report on a highly predictive relationship between wholeâcanopy nitrogen concentration and aboveground forest productivity in diverse forested stands of varying age and species composition across the 360â000âha White Mountain National Forest, New Hampshire, USA. We also demonstrate that hyperspectral remote sensing can be used to estimate foliar N concentration, and hence forest production across a large number of contiguous images. Together these data suggest that canopyâlevel N concentration is an important correlate of productivity in these forested systems, and that imaging spectrometry of canopy N can provide direct estimates of forest productivity across large landscapes
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