27,124 research outputs found
Gallium phosphide high temperature diodes
High temperature (300 C) diodes for geothermal and other energy applications were developed. A comparison of reverse leakage currents of Si, GaAs, and GaP was made. Diodes made from GaP should be usable to 500 C. A Liquid Phase Epitaxy (LPE) process for producing high quality, grown junction GaP diodes is described. This process uses low vapor pressure Mg as a dopant which allows multiple boat growth in the same LPE run. These LPE wafers were cut into die and metallized to make the diodes. These diodes produce leakage currents below ten to the -9th power A/sq cm at 400 C while exhibiting good high temperature rectification characteristics. High temperature life test data is presented which shows exceptional stability of the V-I characteristics
A gallium phosphide high-temperature bipolar junction transistor
Preliminary results are reported on the development of a high temperature (350 C) gallium phosphide bipolar junction transistor (BJT) for geothermal and other energy applications. This four-layer p(+)n(-)pp(+) structure was formed by liquid phase epitaxy using a supercooling technique to insure uniform nucleation of the thin layers. Magnesium was used as the p-type dopant to avoid excessive out-diffusion into the lightly doped base. By appropriate choice of electrodes, the device may also be driven as an n-channel junction field-effect transistor. The initial design suffers from a series resistance problem which limits the transistor's usefulness at high temperatures
High-shock FM transmitter Final report, phase I
Electronic component testing of high-shock FM TRANSMITTER
A Complete Atlas of HI Absorption toward HII Regions in the Southern Galactic Plane Survey (SGPS1)
We present a complete catalog of H I emission and absorption spectrum pairs,
toward H II regions, detectable within the boundaries of the Southern Galactic
Plane Survey (SGPS I), a total of 252 regions. The catalog is presented in
graphical, numerical and summary formats. We demonstrate an application of this
new dataset through an investigation of the locus of the Near 3kpc Arm.Comment: Accepted for publication by ApJS Feb 6, 2014. Data files and Figure
Set (252 images) to appear in the on-line version of the journa
Isolation of Psoroptes scab mite microsatellite markers (Acari: Psoroptidae)
Nine microsatellite markers have been isolated from the scab mite,Psoroptes ovis. These markers have been tested for polymorphism in individual Psoroptes
mites originating from two hosts, the European rabbit,
Oryctolagus cuniculus, and sheep, Ovis aries. No
definitive picture of Psoroptes species’ status or interrelationships exists. This study provides the basis for a new molecular system to elucidate the systematics of groupings within the genus Psoroptes, allowing us to clarify the population dynamics and epidemiology of
the mites causing sheep scab world wide
The Carina Flare: What can fragments in the wall tell us?
CO(J=2--1) and CO(J=2--1) observations of the molecular cloud
G285.90+4.53 (Cloud~16) in the Carina Flare supershell (GSH287+04-17) with the
APEX telescope are presented. With an algorithm DENDROFIND we identify 51
fragments and compute their sizes and masses. We discuss their mass spectrum
and interpret it as being the result of the shell fragmentation process
described by the pressure assisted gravitational instability - PAGI. We
conclude that the explanation of the clump mass function needs a combination of
gravity with pressure external to the shell.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, accepted by A&
Vector form factor in K_l3 semileptonic decay with two flavors of dynamical domain-wall quarks
We calculate the vector form factor in K \to \pi l \nu semileptonic decays at
zero momentum transfer f_+(0) from numerical simulations of two-flavor QCD on
the lattice. Our simulations are carried out on 16^3 \times 32 at a lattice
spacing of a \simeq 0.12 fm using a combination of the DBW2 gauge and the
domain-wall quark actions, which possesses excellent chiral symmetry even at
finite lattice spacings. The size of fifth dimension is set to L_s=12, which
leads to a residual quark mass of a few MeV. Through a set of double ratios of
correlation functions, the form factor calculated on the lattice is accurately
interpolated to zero momentum transfer, and then is extrapolated to the
physical quark mass. We obtain f_+(0)=0.968(9)(6), where the first error is
statistical and the second is the systematic error due to the chiral
extrapolation. Previous estimates based on a phenomenological model and chiral
perturbation theory are consistent with our result. Combining with an average
of the decay rate from recent experiments, our estimate of f_+(0) leads to the
Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa (CKM) matrix element |V_{us}|=0.2245(27), which is
consistent with CKM unitarity. These estimates of f_+(0) and |V_{us}| are
subject to systematic uncertainties due to the finite lattice spacing and
quenching of strange quarks, though nice consistency in f_+(0) with previous
lattice calculations suggests that these errors are not large.Comment: 23 pages, 11 figures, 7 tables, RevTeX4; v3: one table added, results
and conclusions unchanged, final version to appear in Phys.Rev.
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Radiative transfer modelling for the NOMAD-UVIS instrument on the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter mission
The NOMAD (Nadir and Occultation for MArs Discovery) instrument is a 3-channel (2 IR, 1 UV/Vis) spectrometer due to fly on the 2016 ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter mission. A radiative transfer model for Mars has been developed providing synthetic spectra to simulate observations of the UVIS channel in both solar occultation and nadir viewing geometries. This will allow for the characterization and mitigation of the influence of dust on retrievals of ozone abundance
Catalogue of 12CO(J=1-0) and 13CO(J=1-0) Molecular Clouds in the Carina Flare Supershell
We present a catalogue of 12CO(J=1-0) and 13CO(J=1-0) molecular clouds in the
spatio-velocity range of the Carina Flare supershell, GSH 287+04-17. The data
cover a region of ~66 square degrees and were taken with the NANTEN 4m
telescope, at spatial and velocity resolutions of 2.6' and 0.1 km/s.
Decomposition of the emission results in the identification of 156 12CO clouds
and 60 13CO clouds, for which we provide observational and physical parameters.
Previous work suggests the majority of the detected mass forms part of a
comoving molecular cloud complex that is physically associated with the
expanding shell. The cloud internal velocity dispersions, degree of
virialization and size-linewidth relations are found to be consistent with
those of other Galactic samples. However, the vertical distribution is heavily
skewed towards high-altitudes. The robust association of high-z molecular
clouds with a known supershell provides some observational backing for the
theory that expanding shells contribute to the support of a high-altitude
molecular layer.Comment: To be published in PASJ Vol. 60, No. 6. (Issued on December 25th
2008). 35 pages (including 13 pages of tables), 7 figures. Please note that
formatting problems with the journal macro result in loss of rightmost data
columns in some long tables. These will be fixed in the final published
issue. In the meantime, please contact the authors for missing dat
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