128,474 research outputs found
Indium foil with beryllia washer improves transistor heat dissipation
Indium foil, used as an interface material in transistor mountings, greatly reduces the thermal resistance of beryllia washers. This method improves the heat dissipation of power transistors in a vacuum environment
Excitations of the Fractional Quantum Hall State and the Generalized Composite Fermion Picture
We present a generalization of the composite Fermion picture for a
muticomponent quantum Hall plasma which contains particle with different
effective charges. The model predicts very well the low-lying states of a
quantum Hall state found in numerical diagonalization.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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Nuclear Energy in the UK: Safety Culture and Industrial Organisation
In this paper we seek to explore the relationship between professionalism and nuclear safety in the UK. We consider the history of civil nuclear energy in Britain and the near complete shift in emphasis from state owned enterprises to the private sector. We show how in recent years government has acknowledged that a truly liberalised electricity industry is unable to deliver the construction of new nuclear power stations as part of a future low carbon electricity system. Throughout, however, the intention has been for policy merely to incentivise the private sector rather than to steer industry strategy directly. Having said that, the line between strong incentives and weak control can be hard to see. We present illustrative examples, real and fictional, that give insight into the UK nuclear safety culture and we discuss the wider nature of UK society with respect to corruption. We conclude that the unique basis of safety regulation in the UK, essentially permissive rather than prescriptive, has a key role to play in promoting and maintaining nuclear professionalism
Snake eels (Ophichthidae) of the remote St. Peter and St. Paul’s Archipelago (Equatorial Atlantic) : Museum records after 37 years of shelf life
Despite of its major zoogeographical interest, the biological diversity of central Atlantic oceanic islands are still poorly known because of its remoteness. Incomplete species inventories are a hindrance to macroecology and conservation because knowledge on species distribution are important for identifying patterns and processes in biodiversity and for conservation planning. Records of the snake-eel family Ophichthidae for the St. Peter and St. Paul’s Archipelago, Brazil, are presented for the first time after revision of material collected and deposited in a museum collection 37 yrs ago. Specimens of Apterichtus kendalli and Herpetoichthys regius were collected using rotenone on sand bottoms and one Myrichthys sp. was observed and photographed swimming over a rocky reef. Remarkably, these species were not seen or collected in the St. Peter and St. Paul’s Archipelago ever since despite the substantial increase of biological expeditions over the past two decades, suggesting that the unjustified rotenone sampling prohibition in Brazil is hindering advancement of the nation’s biological diversity knowledge.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Control surface spanwise placement in active flutter suppression systems
A method is developed that determines the placement of an active control surface for maximum effectiveness in suppressing flutter. No specific control law is required by this method which is based on the aerodynamic energy concept. It is argued that the spanwise placement of the active controls should coincide with the locations where maximum energy per unit span is fed into the system. The method enables one to determine the distribution, over the different surfaces of the aircraft, of the energy input into the system as a result of the unstable fluttering mode. The method is illustrated using three numerical examples
The epiphyllous habit in the hepatic genus Frullania
We report for the first time 11 species of Frullania growing as epiphylls in New Zealand, New Caledonia, and Colombia . Also listed are 29 Frullania species that have previously been recorded growing as epiphylls in other regions of the world. The highest diversity of Frullania epiphyllous species are in the floristic regions of New Zealand, New Caledonia, Macraonesia, and Madagascar. Frullania epiphylls range in altitude from sea-level to 2500m and can be categorised into facultative or accidental epiphylls. The number of Frullania species currently recorded growing as epiphylls will no doubt increase as more revisions of the genus in different floristic regions take place. This number may also increase if botanists were to explore leaf surfaces as a potential substrate for Frullania species, in addition to bark and rock habitats that have traditionally been described as microhabitats for the genus
VPI-7: The First Zincosilicate Molecular Sieve Containing Three-membered T-Atom Rings
VPI-7: the first microporous zincosilicate to contain 3-membered rings (3MR) is reported
A Caratheodory theorem for the bidisk via Hilbert space methods
If \ph is an analytic function bounded by 1 on the bidisk \D^2 and
\tau\in\tb is a point at which \ph has an angular gradient
\nabla\ph(\tau) then \nabla\ph(\la) \to \nabla\ph(\tau) as \la\to\tau
nontangentially in \D^2. This is an analog for the bidisk of a classical
theorem of Carath\'eodory for the disk.
For \ph as above, if \tau\in\tb is such that the of
(1-|\ph(\la)|)/(1-\|\la\|) as \la\to\tau is finite then the directional
derivative D_{-\de}\ph(\tau) exists for all appropriate directions
\de\in\C^2. Moreover, one can associate with \ph and an analytic
function in the Pick class such that the value of the directional
derivative can be expressed in terms of
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