11,050 research outputs found
Effect of viscosity on rolling-element fatigue life at cryogenic temperature with fluorinated ether lubricants
Rolling-element fatigue tests were conducted with 12.7-mm-(1/2-in.-) diameter AISI 52100 steel balls in the NASA five-ball fatigue tester, with a maximum hertz stress of 5500 mN/m2 (800 000 psi), a shaft speed of 4750 rpm, lubricant temperature of 200 K (360 R), a contact angle of 20 deg, using four fluorinated ether lubricants of varying viscosities. No statistically significant differences in rolling-element fatigue life occurred using the four viscosity levels. Elastohydrodynamic calculations indicate that values of the lubricant film parameter were approximately 2 or greater
Study of hot hardness characteristics of tool steels
Hardness measurements of tool steel materials in electric furnace at elevated temperatures and low oxygen environment are discussed. Development of equation to predict short term hardness as function of intial room temperature hardness of steel is reported. Types of steel involved in the process are identified
Common bearing material has highest fatigue life at moderate temperature
AISI 52100, a high carbon chromium steel, has the longest fatigue life of eight bearing materials tested. Fatigue lives of the other materials ranged from 7 to 78 percent of the fatigue life of AISI 52100 at a temperature of 340 K (150 F)
Liquid cryogenic lubricant
Fluorinated polyethers are suitable lubricants for rolling-element bearings in cryogenic systems. Lubrication effectiveness is comparable to that of super-refined mineral oil lubricants operating at room temperature
Quasiconformality and mass
We identify universal quasiconformal (walking) behaviour in non-Abelian gauge
field theories based on the mass-dependent all-order beta-function introduced
in arXiv:0908.1364. We find different types of walking behaviour in the
presence of (partially) massive species. We employ our findings to the
construction of candidate theories for dynamical electroweak symmetry breaking
by walking technicolour.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures
Current-mediated synchronization of a pair of beating non-identical flagella
The basic phenomenology of experimentally observed synchronization (i.e., a
stochastic phase locking) of identical, beating flagella of a biflagellate alga
is known to be captured well by a minimal model describing the dynamics of
coupled, limit-cycle, noisy oscillators (known as the noisy Kuramoto model). As
demonstrated experimentally, the amplitudes of the noise terms therein, which
stem from fluctuations of the rotary motors, depend on the flagella length.
Here we address the conceptually important question which kind of synchrony
occurs if the two flagella have different lengths such that the noises acting
on each of them have different amplitudes. On the basis of a minimal model,
too, we show that a different kind of synchrony emerges, and here it is
mediated by a current carrying, steady-state; it manifests itself via
correlated "drifts" of phases. We quantify such a synchronization mechanism in
terms of appropriate order parameters and - for an ensemble of
trajectories and for a single realization of noises of duration ,
respectively. Via numerical simulations we show that both approaches become
identical for long observation times . This reveals an ergodic
behavior and implies that a single-realization order parameter is
suitable for experimental analysis for which ensemble averaging is not always
possible.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Antimicrobial susceptibility testing of dermatophytes - Comparison of the agar macrodilution and broth microdilution tests
Fifty dermatophyte strains, recently obtained from clinical material, belonging to 4 different species were examined for their susceptibility to 5 systemic or topical antimycotic agents using both an agar macrodilution and a broth microdilution test. Antimycotics compared were griseofulvin, itraconazole, sertaconazole, terbinafine and ciclopiroxolamine. A comparison of the minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) clearly showed differences between the two test methods applied. For all 5 antimycotics, MIC data were three- to seventyfold lower in the microdilution test system. These differences, depending on the test method, have to be taken into account when comparing MIC data in the literature or when relating the in vitro data to the tissue concentrations determined in vivo
Quark-antiquark pair production in space-time dependent fields
Fermion-antifermion pair-production in the presence of classical fields is
described based on the retarded and advanced fermion propagators. They are
obtained by solving the equation of motion for the Dirac Green's functions with
the respective boundary conditions to all orders in the field. Subsequently,
various approximation schemes fit for different field configurations are
explained. This includes longitudinally boost-invariant forms. Those occur
frequently in the description of ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions in the
semiclassical limit. As a next step, the gauge invariance of the expression for
the expectation value of the number of produced fermion-antifermion pairs as a
functional of said propagators is investigated in detail. Finally, the
calculations are carried out for a longitudinally boost-invariant model-field,
taking care of the last issue, especially.Comment: 32 pages, 8 figures, revised versio
Short-term hot hardness characteristics of rolling-element steels
Short-term hot hardness studies were performed with five vacuum-melted steels at temperatures from 294 to 887 K (70 to 1140 F). Based upon a minimum Rockwell C hardness of 58, the temperature limitation on all materials studied was dependent on the initial room temperature hardness and the tempering temperature of each material. For the same room temperature hardness, the short-term hot hardness characteristics were identical and independent of material composition. An equation was developed to predict the short-term hardness at temperature as a function of initial room temperature hardness for AISI 52100, as well as the high-speed tool steels
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