95,520 research outputs found
Chromium ion plating studies for enhancement of bearing lifetime
Six 440-C hardened stainless steel roller bearing test rods were ion plated with various chromium films of thicknesses from .2 microns to 7 microns. The thinner (approximately .2 microns) coating sample had 3 times the fatigue life of the unplated (standard) specimens. Contrastingly, the samples having thicker coatings (several microns) had short fatigue lives (about 3% of the unplated standard)
Pointing of the 16 foot antenna
Comprehensive pointing theory for 16 ft antenna including servo encoder reading
C.V.D. annual report: November 1965 research project RU27-1 :an analogue method for the determination of potential distributions in semiconductor systems
A general method for the solution of the nonlinear
Shockley-Poisson differential equation which
governs the potential distribution in non-degenerate
semiconductor systems is described which can be applied
to the evaluation of depletion layer widths, carrier
densities and capacitance bias relationships of p-n
junction structures.
The method is based upon the use of a particular
type of resistance network analogue and results obtained
for several one and two dimensional configurations are
discussed
Space environmental effects: Construction and utilization of a system to measure low thermal strain in one meter graphite epoxy tubes
A system for measuring the expansion of low coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) materials was constructed around a H.P. 5526-A laser measuring system. The vacuum CTE measurements in the -150 F to +120 F range were made over a 6 month period on a graphite epoxy tube yielding CTE values of 2.5 to one fifty-millionth/F above ambient and 2 + or - one ten-millionth F below ambient temperature. To assure that the below ambient, approximately 10 microns high open loop nature of the delta L/L vs. T curves was not apparatus related, similar size quartz tubes (A and B) were checked and found to have only a 2 micron (negligable for quartz) open loop component. These two quartz tubes, A and B, had ambient CTE values 20% and 45% respectively higher than the average handbook value. The overnight microcreep diminished an order of magnitude during the first several cycles after the system had been reopened
Acoustic Spectroscopy of Superfluid 3He in Aerogel
We have designed an experiment to study the role of global anisotropic
quasiparticle scattering on the dirty aerogel superfluid 3He system. We observe
significant regions of two stable phases at temperatures below the superfluid
transition at a pressure of 25 bar for a 98% aerogel.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in proceedings of Low
Temperature Conference 2
Blood pressure and indices of glomerular filtration area in hypertensive and normotensive Prague rats
The involvement of the kidney in the pathogenesis of hypertension has long been recognised, although the specific renal mechanisms underlying this phenomenon are still unknown. A current hypothesis attributes hyper tension to a reduction in glomerular filtration area by glomerular loss, The present study analyses the relationship between glomerular number and volume and conscious systolic blood pressure (SBP) in 4- to 53-week-old hypertensive (PHR) and normotensive (PNR) rats of the Prague strain. Adult PHRs had higher SEP, were larger and had larger kidneys than PNRs, but 20% fewer glomeruli, A significant negative correlation between SEP and glomerular number was found in PHR males, but not in PHR females or PNRs. There was no correlation at all between glomerular volume and SEP and, in young animals, both SEP and glomerular number were higher in PHRs than in PNRs. In addition, in adult PHRs, glomerular volume and SEP were higher in males than in females. In summary, a generally valid, causal relation-ship linking raised blood pressure to decreased glomerular number or volume could not be demonstrated in the Prague rat model of genetically determined hypertension. The nature of the renal mechanism(s) determining the hypertension in this model remains unknown. Copyright (C) 2000 S. Karger AG, Basel
The application of acoustic emission technique to fatigue crack measurement
The applicability of acoustic emission technique to measure fatigue cracks in aluminum alloy specimens was investigated. There are several variables, such as the metallurgical and the physical treatment of the specimen, that can affect the level of acoustic activity of a fatigue specimen. It is therefore recommended that the acoustic emission technique be supplemented by other nondestructive evaluation methods to obtain quantitative data on crack growth
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