2,434 research outputs found

    Dynamics of Phase Behavior of a Polymer Blend Under Shear Flow

    Full text link
    We study the dynamics of the phase behavior of a polymer blend in the presence of shear flow. By adopting a two fluid picture and using a generalization of the concept of material derivative, we construct kinetic equations that describe the phase behavior of polymer blends in the presence of external flow. A phenomenological form for the shear modulus for the blend is proposed. The study indicates that a nonlinear dependence of the shear modulus of the blend on the volume fraction of one of the species is crucial for a shift in the stability line to be induced by shear flow.Comment: 16 pages, late

    A comparision of saccadic eye movements by keyboard musicians when reading music versus text

    Get PDF
    Many studies have been done on saccadic eye movements while reading text, but none have been done to see how reading music differs from reading text. The saccade is one of the major components of eye movements that has been observed in previous studies, and the EYE TRAC has been used to obtain a quantitative measurement of the number of saccades while reading. The intent of this study was to determine the difference in the number of saccadic eye movements between reading music and reading text, thereby indirectly measuring the difference in visual demand between these two tasks. We used the Eye Trac to measure the number of saccades made by keyboard musicians first while reading the standard Eye Trac text, and secondly by reading musical notes which have been reproduced to simulate the standard text as closely as possible. Both graphical and statistical analyses were performed on the data obtained during testing, and both dramatically show the difference in visual demand. The mean number of saccades per second was significantly higher for reading music (5.032) as compared to reading text (3.529), and the overall time required to complete each task also was very different (16.4 seconds for text, 120 seconds for music). Statistical analysis predicted that the probability that the data occurred by chance was .0001

    High-frequency performance of Schottky source/drain silicon pMOS devices

    Get PDF
    A radio-frequency performance of 85-nm gate-length p-type Schottky barrier (SB) with PtSi source/drain materials is investigated. The impact of silicidation annealing temperature on the high-frequency behavior of SB MOSFETs is analyzed using an extrinsic small-signal equivalent circuit. It is demonstrated that the current drive and the gate transconductance strongly depend on the silicidation anneal temperature, whereas the unity-gain cutoff frequency of the measured devices remains nearly unchanged

    Shapes of Molecular Cloud Cores and the Filamentary Mode of Star Formation

    Full text link
    Using recent dust continuum data, we generate the intrinsic ellipticity distribution of dense, starless molecular cloud cores. Under the hypothesis that the cores are all either oblate or prolate randomly-oriented spheroids, we show that a satisfactory fit to observations can be obtained with a gaussian prolate distribution having a mean intrinsic axis ratio of 0.54. Further, we show that correlations exist between the apparent axis ratio and both the peak intensity and total flux density of emission from the cores, the sign of which again favours the prolate hypothesis. The latter result shows that the mass of a given core depends on its intrinsic ellipticity. Monte Carlo simulations are performed to find the best-fit power law of this dependence. Finally, we show how these results are consistent with an evolutionary scenario leading from filamentary parent clouds to increasingly massive, condensed, and roughly spherical embedded cores.Comment: 16 pages, incl. 11 Postscript figures. Accepted by Ap

    Promotion of retroviral entry in the absence of envelope protein by chlorpromazine

    Get PDF
    AbstractRetrovirus packaging cell lines that express the Moloney murine leukemia virus gag, pol, and env genes and a retroviral vector genome can produce virus particles that are capable of transducing cells. Normally if the packaging cell line does not produce a functional viral fusion glycoprotein, such as the retroviral envelope protein or a foreign viral glycoprotein, then the viruses will be incapable of transducing cells. We have found that incubating envelope protein-deficient virus particles bound to cells with chlorpromazine leads to transduction. Chlorpromazine (CPZ) is a membrane-active reagent that is commonly used to induce the hemifusion to fusion transition when membrane fusion is mediated by partially defective viral glycoproteins. The concentration and pH dependence of the promotion of transduction by CPZ is consistent with a role for CPZ micelle formation in viral entry. These data indicate that caution is warranted when experiments concerning membrane fusion completion promoted by CPZ are analyzed
    • 

    corecore