10,938 research outputs found

    Apparatus for measuring thermal conductivity Patent

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    Development of apparatus for measuring thermal conductivit

    Elastic Behavior of a Two-dimensional Crystal near Melting

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    Using positional data from video-microscopy we determine the elastic moduli of two-dimensional colloidal crystals as a function of temperature. The moduli are extracted from the wave-vector-dependent normal mode spring constants in the limit q→0q\to 0 and are compared to the renormalized Young's modulus of the KTHNY theory. An essential element of this theory is the universal prediction that Young's modulus must approach 16π16 \pi at the melting temperature. This is indeed observed in our experiment.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Graduate dress code: How undergraduates are planning to use hair, clothes and make-up to smooth their transition to the workplace

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    This article explores the relationship between students’ identities, their ideas about professional appearance and their anticipated transition to the world of work. It is based on a series of semi-structured interviews with 13 students from a vocationally-focused university in England. It was found that participants viewed clothing and appearance as an important aspect of their transition to the workplace. They believed that, if carefully handled, their appearance could help them to fit in and satisfy the expectations of employers, although some participants anticipated that this process of fitting in might compromise their identity and values. The article addresses students’ anticipated means of handling the tension between adapting to a new environment and ‘being themselves’. It is argued that the way this process is handled is intertwined with wider facets of identity – most notably those associated with gender.The article is based on research funded by the University of Derby. © 2015 IP Publishing Ltd. ((http://www.ippublishing.com). Reproduced by permission

    The Glassy Wormlike Chain

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    We introduce a new model for the dynamics of a wormlike chain in an environment that gives rise to a rough free energy landscape, which we baptise the glassy wormlike chain. It is obtained from the common wormlike chain by an exponential stretching of the relaxation spectrum of its long-wavelength eigenmodes, controlled by a single stretching parameter. Predictions for pertinent observables such as the dynamic structure factor and the microrheological susceptibility exhibit the characteristics of soft glassy rheology and compare favourably with experimental data for reconstituted cytoskeletal networks and live cells. We speculate about the possible microscopic origin of the stretching, implications for the nonlinear rheology, and the potential physiological significance of our results.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures. Minor correction

    Study of the evolution ot the active volume in irradiated silicon detectors

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    Red (670 nm) LED light was used to study the charge collection properties of non-irradiated and irradiated n-type silicon detectors. The advantages of red LED, compared to low-range alpha particles, are the availability of an external trigger, and a very shallow distribution of the created electron-hole pairs (< 10 µm). These features, combined with the use of a fast current amplifier and a 2.5 G s/s sampling oscilloscope, allow the electric field evolution in irradiated detectors to be studied. Evidence of a sensitive region on both sides of the detector was observed. The model of the diode d epletion volume from the n+ junction side after conduction-type inversion is discussed, and the electric field distribution in the inverted detector is presented. A first evaluation of the strength of the electric field in the undepleted bulk of the detector is proposed

    An exploration into the client at the heart of therapy : a qualitative perspective

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    Over 50 years ago Eysenck challenged the existing base of research into psychotherapy. Since that time, a large number of investigations have been conducted to verify the efficacy of therapy. Recently however, an increasing number of studies have cast new doubts on this research base. Instead of therapy being a function of the therapist, it is now becoming ever more apparent that the client plays a prime role in the therapeutic process. The qualitative studies presented in this paper provide some examples of research that demonstrates that clients are actively involved in their therapy, even making counselling work despite their counsellor. These studies suggest that clients may not experience therapy as beneficially as traditional outcome studies indicate. This raises a new challenge to researchers to more fully explore the client's experience of therapy, a challenge to which qualitative methods of inquiry would appear well suited

    Dispersity-Driven Melting Transition in Two Dimensional Solids

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    We perform extensive simulations of 10410^4 Lennard-Jones particles to study the effect of particle size dispersity on the thermodynamic stability of two-dimensional solids. We find a novel phase diagram in the dispersity-density parameter space. We observe that for large values of the density there is a threshold value of the size dispersity above which the solid melts to a liquid along a line of first order phase transitions. For smaller values of density, our results are consistent with the presence of an intermediate hexatic phase. Further, these findings support the possibility of a multicritical point in the dispersity-density parameter space.Comment: In revtex format, 4 pages, 6 postscript figures. Submitted to PR

    Organizational professionalism in globalizing law firms.

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    Are the challenges of globalization, technology and competition exercising a dramatic impact on professional practice whilst, in the process, compromising traditional notions of professionalism, autonomy and discretion? This paper engages with these debates and uses original, qualitative empirical data to highlight the vast areas of continuity that exist even the largest globalizing law firms. Whilst it is undoubted that growth in the size of firms and their globalization bring new challenges, these are resolved in ways that are sensitive to professional values and interests. In particular, a commitment to professional autonomy and discretion still characterises the way in which these firms operate and organize themselves. This situation is explained in terms of the development of an organizational model of professionalism, whereby the large organization is increasingly emerging as a primary locus of professionalization and whereby professional priorities and objectives are increasingly supported by organizational logics, systems and initiatives

    Charge Transport in Non-Irradiated and Irradiated Silicon Diodes

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    A model describing the transport of charge carriers generated in silicon detectors (standard planar float zone and MESA diodes) by ionizing particles is presented. The current pulse response induced by α\alpha and β\beta particles in non-irradiated detectors and detectors irradiated up to fluences Φ≈3⋅1014\Phi \approx 3 \cdot 10^{14} particles/cm2^2 is reproduced through this model: i) by adding a small n-type region 15 μ\mum deep on the p+p^+ side for the standard planar float zone detectors at fluences beyond the n to p-type inversion and ii) for the MESA detectors, by considering one dead layer 14 μ\mum deep (observed experimentally) on each side, and introducing a second (delayed) component. For both types of detectors, the model gives mobilities decreasing linearily up to fluences of about 5⋅10135 \cdot 10^{13} particles/cm2^2 and converging, beyond, to saturation values of about 1000 cm2^2/Vs and 455 cm2^2/Vs for electrons and holes, respectively. At a fluence Φ≈1014\Phi \approx 10^{14} particles/cm2^2, charge collection deficits of about 13\% for β\beta particles, 25\% for α\alpha particles incident on the front and 35\% for α\alpha particles incident on the back of the detector are found for both type of diodes

    Study of charge Transport in Silicon Detectors: Non-Irradiated and Irradiated

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    The electrical characteristics of silicon detectors (standard planar float zone and MESA detectors) as a function of the particle fluence can be extracted by the application of a model describing the transport of charge carriers generated in the detectors by ionizing particles. The current pulse response induced by α\alpha and β\beta particles in non-irradiated detectors and detectors irradiated up to fluences Φ≈3⋅1014\Phi \approx 3 \cdot 10^{14} particles/cm2^2 is reproduced via this model: i) by adding a small n-type region 15 μ\mum deep on the p+p^+ side for the detectors at fluences beyond the n to p-type inversion and ii) for the MESA detectors, by considering one additional dead layer of 14 μ\mum (observed experimentally) on each side of the detector, and introducing a second (delayed) component to the current pulse response. For both types of detectors, the model gives mobilities decreasing linearily up to fluences of about 5⋅10135 \cdot 10^{13} particles/cm2^2 and converging, beyond, to saturation values of about 1050 cm2^2/Vs and 450 cm2^2/Vs for electrons and holes, respectively. At a fluence Φ≈1014\Phi \approx 10^{14} particles/cm2^2 (corresponding to about ten years of operation at the CERN-LHC), charge collection deficits of about 14\% for β\beta particles, 25\% for α\alpha particles incident on the front and 35\% for α\alpha particles incident on the back of the detector are found for both type of detectors
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