1,422 research outputs found
Fibre optic sensors for high speed hypervelocity impact studies and low velocity drop tests
The initial aim of this project was to develop a non-contact fibre optic based displacement sensor to operate in the harsh environment of a 'Light Gas Gun' (LGG), which can 'fire' small particles at velocities ranging from 1-8.4 km/s. The LGG is used extensively for research in aerospace to analyze the effects of high speed impacts on materials. Ideally the measurement should be made close to the centre of the impact to minimise corruption of the data from edge effects and survive the impact. A further requirement is that it should operate at a stand-off distance of ~ 8cm. For these reasons we chose to develop a pseudo con-focal intensity sensor, which demonstrated resolution comparable with conventional PVDF sensors combined with high survivability and low cost. A second sensor was developed based on 'Fibre Bragg Gratings' (FBG) which although requiring contact with the target the low weight and very small contact area had minimal effect on the dynamics of the target. The FBG was mounted either on the surface of the target or tangentially between a fixed location. The output signals from the FBG were interrogated in time by a new method. Measurements were made on composite and aluminium plates in the LGG and on low speed drop tests. The particle momentum for the drop tests was chosen to be similar to that of the particles used in the LGG
Dyson Pairs and Zero-Mass Black Holes
It has been argued by Dyson in the context of QED in flat spacetime that
perturbative expansions in powers of the electric charge e cannot be convergent
because if e is purely imaginary then the vacuum should be unstable to the
production of charged pairs. We investigate the spontaneous production of such
Dyson pairs in electrodynamics coupled to gravity. They are found to consist of
pairs of zero-rest mass black holes with regular horizons. The properties of
these zero rest mass black holes are discussed. We also consider ways in which
a dilaton may be included and the relevance of this to recent ideas in string
theory. We discuss accelerating solutions and find that, in certain
circumstances, the `no strut' condition may be satisfied giving a regular
solution describing a pair of zero rest mass black holes accelerating away from
one another. We also study wormhole and tachyonic solutions and how they affect
the stability of the vacuum.Comment: 41 pages LaTex, 5 figure
Minimal Steiner Trees for 2k×2kSquare Lattices
AbstractWe prove a conjecture of Chung, Graham, and Gardner (Math. Mag.62(1989), 83–96), giving the form of the minimal Steiner trees for the set of points comprising the vertices of a 2k×2ksquare lattice. Each full component of these minimal trees is the minimal Steiner tree for the four vertices of a square
Aspects of the Noisy Burgers Equation
The noisy Burgers equation describing for example the growth of an interface
subject to noise is one of the simplest model governing an intrinsically
nonequilibrium problem. In one dimension this equation is analyzed by means of
the Martin-Siggia-Rose technique. In a canonical formulation the morphology and
scaling behavior are accessed by a principle of least action in the weak noise
limit. The growth morphology is characterized by a dilute gas of nonlinear
soliton modes with gapless dispersion law with exponent z=3/2 and a superposed
gas of diffusive modes with a gap. The scaling exponents and a heuristic
expression for the scaling function follow from a spectral representation.Comment: 23 pages,LAMUPHYS LaTeX-file (Springer), 13 figures, and 1 table, to
appear in the Proceedings of the XI Max Born Symposium on "Anomalous
Diffusion: From Basics to Applications", May 20-24, 1998, Ladek Zdroj, Polan
A preliminary investigation of the molten salt mediated synthesis of Gd2TiO5 ‘stuffed’ pyrochlore
Refractory ‘stuffed’ pyrochlores such as Gd2TiO5 are of interest for nuclear applications, including as matrices for actinide disposition and as neutron absorbers in control rods. Here, we report the results of a preliminary comparative investigation of the synthesis of Gd2TiO5 by molten salt and conventional solid-state synthesis. We show that synthesis of Gd2TiO5 proceeds from the pyrochlore phase Gd2Ti2O7 which is first formed as a kinetic product. Molten salt synthesis afforded single phase Gd2TiO5 at 1300 °C in 2 h, via a template growth mechanism, and is effective for the synthesis of these refractory materials. This work demonstrates molten salt mediated synthesis of ‘stuffed’ pyrochlore for the first time
What fraction of stars formed in infrared galaxies at high redshift?
Star formation happens in two types of environment: ultraviolet-bright
starbursts (like 30 Doradus and HII galaxies at low redshift and Lyman-break
galaxies at high redshift) and infrared-bright dust-enshrouded regions (which
may be moderately star-forming like Orion in the Galaxy or extreme like the
core of Arp 220). In this work I will estimate how many of the stars in the
local Universe formed in each type of environment, using observations of
star-forming galaxies at all redshifts at different wavelengths and of the
evolution of the field galaxy population.Comment: 7 pages, 0 figs, to appear in proceedings of "Starbursts - From 30
Doradus to Lyman break galaxies", edited by Richard de Grijs and Rosa M.
Gonzalez Delgado, published by Kluwe
Observable Effects of Scalar Fields and Varying Constants
We show by using the method of matched asymptotic expansions that a
sufficient condition can be derived which determines when a local experiment
will detect the cosmological variation of a scalar field which is driving the
spacetime variation of a supposed constant of Nature. We extend our earlier
analyses of this problem by including the possibility that the local region is
undergoing collapse inside a virialised structure, like a galaxy or galaxy
cluster. We show by direct calculation that the sufficient condition is met to
high precision in our own local region and we can therefore legitimately use
local observations to place constraints upon the variation of "constants" of
Nature on cosmological scales.Comment: Invited Festscrift Articl
The glassy response of solid He-4 to torsional oscillations
We calculated the glassy response of solid He-4 to torsional oscillations
assuming a phenomenological glass model. Making only a few assumptions about
the distribution of glassy relaxation times in a small subsystem of otherwise
rigid solid He-4, we can account for the magnitude of the observed period shift
and concomitant dissipation peak in several torsion oscillator experiments. The
implications of the glass model for solid He-4 are threefold: (1) The dynamics
of solid He-4 is governed by glassy relaxation processes. (2) The distribution
of relaxation times varies significantly between different torsion oscillator
experiments. (3) The mechanical response of a torsion oscillator does not
require a supersolid component to account for the observed anomaly at low
temperatures, though we cannot rule out its existence.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, presented at QFS200
Mucolipidosis II presenting as severe neonatal hyperparathyroidism.
UNLABELLED: Mucolipidosis II (ML II or I-cell disease ) (OMIM 252500) is an autosomal recessive lysosomal enzyme targeting disorder that usually presents between 6 and 12 months of age with a clinical phenotype resembling Hurler syndrome and a radiological picture of dysostosis multiplex. When ML II is severe enough to be detected in the newborn period, the radiological changes have been described as similar to hyperparathyroidism or rickets. The biological basis of these findings has not been explored and few biochemical measurements have been recorded. We describe three unrelated infants with ML II who had radiological features of intrauterine hyperparathyroidism and biochemical findings consistent with severe secondary neonatal hyperparathyroidism (marked elevation of serum parathyroid hormone and alkaline phosphatase levels). The vitamin D metabolites were not substantially different from normal and repeatedly normal calcium concentrations excluded vitamin D deficiency rickets and neonatal severe hyperparathyroidism secondary to calcium-sensing receptor gene mutations (OMIM 239200). The pathogenesis of severe hyperparathyroidism in the fetus and newborn with ML II is unexplained. We hypothesize that the enzyme targeting defect of ML II interferes with transplacental calcium transport leading to a calcium starved fetus and activation of the parathyroid response to maintain extracellular calcium concentrations within the normal range.
CONCLUSION: Newborns with mucolipidosis II can present with radiological and biochemical signs of hyperparathyroidism. Awareness of this phenomenon may help in avoiding diagnostic pitfalls and establishing a proper diagnosis and therapy
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