17,422 research outputs found
Long-Wavelength Excesses in Two Highly Obscured High-Mass X-Ray Binaries: IGR J16318â4848 and GX 301â2
We present evidence for excess long-wavelength emission from two high-mass X-ray binaries, IGR J16318-4848 and GX 301-2, that show enormous obscuration (N_H â 10^(23)-10^(24) cm^(-2)) in their X-ray spectra. Using archival near- and mid-infrared data, we show that the spectral energy distributions of IGR J16318-4848 and GX 301-2 are substantially higher in the mid-infrared than their expected stellar emission. We successfully fit the excesses with ~1000 K blackbodies, which suggests that they are due to warm circumstellar dust that also gives rise to the X-ray absorption. However, we need further observations to constrain the detailed properties of the excesses. This discovery highlights the importance of mid-infrared observations for understanding highly obscured X-ray binaries
Dislocation Velocity in Single and Polycrystalline Silicon Iron
The stress dependence of screw dislocation velocity single and
polycrystalline specimens of an iron-3.14% silicon alloy was measured by observation of slip band growth. An electrolytic etching technique was used to reveal dislocation intersections with the specimen surface, and slip bands were observed to form from fresh scratches and from grain boundaries as a result of pulse loading. Screw dislocation
velocity on the {110} ă111ăsystem in single crystals at room
temperature followed the relation ν = (Ď/Ď_0)^n where n = 30.1. A
plot of screw dislocation velocity vs. nominal resolved shear stress in
individual grains of polycrystalline specimens shows considerable
scatter which is attributed to the effects of stress variations due to
elastic anisotropy. Observation of slip band growth in scratched and
unscratched grains indicates that the stress required to activate grain
boundary sources is greater than the stress required to propagate fresh
dislocations
The initiation of yielding in silicon-iron
An experimental program was conducted in which the etch pit technique was used for the direct observation of dislocation configurations at various stages of yielding. Poly-crystalline tensile specimens of 3 per cent silicon-iron were loaded in tension at constant strain rate and by load pulses.
A new model of the delay-time for yielding at constant applied stress is presented. Three assumptions used are (a) no dislocation motion occurs below a critical resolved shear stress, (b) the yielding rate is dependent upon the velocity of mobile dislocations, and (c) the end of the delay period occurs when yielding of the grains has spread continuously through the thickness of the specimen. This model is consistent with the experimental observations and explains the true static upper yield point and the shape of the strain vs. time curve at constant applied stress. The model also yields reasonable values for the stress concentration factor on grains in the critical cross-section that are least favorably oriented for slip
Dislocation velocity in single and polycrystalline silicon-iron
The stress dependence of screw-dislocation velocity in single and polycrystalline specimens of an iron-3.14% silicon alloy was measured by observation of slip-band growth. An electrolytic etching technique was used to reveal dislocation intersections with the specimen surface, and slip bands were observed to form from fresh scratches and from grain boundaries as a result of pulse loading. Screw dislocation velocity on the {110} 111 system in single crystals at room temperature followed the relation ΰ = (Ď/Ď0)n, where n = 30.1. A plot of screw-dislocation velocity vs nominal resolved shear stress in individual grains of polycrystalline specimens shows considerable scatter which is attributed to the effects of stress variations due to elastic anisotropy. Observation of slip-band growth in scatched and unscratched grains indicates that the stress required to activate grain boundary sources is greater than the stress required to propagate fresh dislocations
Quantum Hall Ferromagnets: Induced Topological term and electromagnetic interactions
The quantum Hall ground state in materials like GaAs is well known
to be ferromagnetic in nature. The exchange part of the Coulomb interaction
provides the necessary attractive force to align the electron spins
spontaneously. The gapless Goldstone modes are the angular deviations of the
magnetisation vector from its fixed ground state orientation. Furthermore, the
system is known to support electrically charged spin skyrmion configurations.
It has been claimed in the literature that these skyrmions are fermionic owing
to an induced topological Hopf term in the effective action governing the
Goldstone modes. However, objections have been raised against the method by
which this term has been obtained from the microscopics of the system. In this
article, we use the technique of the derivative expansion to derive, in an
unambiguous manner, the effective action of the angular degrees of freedom,
including the Hopf term. Furthermore, we have coupled perturbative
electromagnetic fields to the microscopic fermionic system in order to study
their effect on the spin excitations. We have obtained an elegant expression
for the electromagnetic coupling of the angular variables describing these spin
excitations.Comment: 23 pages, Plain TeX, no figure
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