665 research outputs found
Characteristics of Phenol-Formaldehyde Adhesive Bonds in Steam Injection Pressed Flakeboard
A better understanding of the mechanisms involved in phenol-formaldehyde resin-wood bonding is needed to design adhesive systems that can adequately develop bond strength in a humid environment. This study was performed to determine how the molecular weight distribution of a liquid resole phenol-formaldehyde adhesive affects mechanical properties and adhesive flow in flakeboard bonded during steam injection pressing. The performance of three adhesives, differing only in molecular weight distribution, was studied. For all adhesives, mechanical properties of specimens located on the edge of the panel were found to be superior to those located in the center of the board. Excessive moisture present in the center of the mat was believed to be responsible for poor bonding. Edge internal bond strength improved with higher weight average molecular weight adhesive. Fluorescence microscopy and image analysis techniques were used to measure flow of adhesive into the wood substrate before and after exposure to a steam injection pressing environment. Flakes wetted with adhesive and not exposed to a pressing environment had more adhesive penetration with the lowest weight average molecular weight adhesive. Deeper and less concentrated adhesive penetration was measured in flakes exposed to a steam injection environment, with a smaller apparent difference between the three adhesives
Evolution of spherical cavitation bubbles: parametric and closed-form solutions
We present an analysis of the Rayleigh-Plesset equation for a three
dimensional vacuous bubble in water. In the simplest case when the effects of
surface tension are neglected, the known parametric solutions for the radius
and time evolution of the bubble in terms of a hypergeometric function are
briefly reviewed. By including the surface tension, we show the connection
between the Rayleigh-Plesset equation and Abel's equation, and obtain the
parametric rational Weierstrass periodic solutions following the Abel route. In
the same Abel approach, we also provide a discussion of the nonintegrable case
of nonzero viscosity for which we perform a numerical integrationComment: 9 pages, 5 figures, 14 references, version accepted for publication
at Phys. Fluid
The two-level atom laser: analytical results and the laser transition
The problem of the two-level atom laser is studied analytically. The
steady-state solution is expressed as a continued fraction, and allows for
accurate approximation by rational functions. Moreover, we show that the abrupt
change observed in the pump dependence of the steady-state population is
directly connected with the transition to the lasing regime. The condition for
a sharp transition to Poissonian statistics is expressed as a scaling limit of
vanishing cavity loss and light-matter coupling, , ,
such that stays finite and , where
is the rate of atomic losses. The same scaling procedure is also shown to
describe a similar change to Poisson distribution in the Scully-Lamb laser
model too, suggesting that the low-, low- asymptotics is of a more
general significance for the laser transition.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures. Extended discussion of the paper aim (in the
Introduction) and of the results (Conclusions and Discussion). Results
unchange
The functional integral with unconditional Wiener measure for anharmonic oscillator
In this article we propose the calculation of the unconditional Wiener
measure functional integral with a term of the fourth order in the exponent by
an alternative method as in the conventional perturbative approach. In contrast
to the conventional perturbation theory, we expand into power series the term
linear in the integration variable in the exponent. In such a case we can
profit from the representation of the integral in question by the parabolic
cylinder functions. We show that in such a case the series expansions are
uniformly convergent and we find recurrence relations for the Wiener functional
integral in the - dimensional approximation. In continuum limit we find
that the generalized Gelfand - Yaglom differential equation with solution
yields the desired functional integral (similarly as the standard Gelfand -
Yaglom differential equation yields the functional integral for linear harmonic
oscillator).Comment: Source file which we sent to journa
Excitons in narrow-gap carbon nanotubes
We calculate the exciton binding energy in single-walled carbon nanotubes
with narrow band gaps, accounting for the quasi-relativistic dispersion of
electrons and holes. Exact analytical solutions of the quantum relativistic
two-body problem are obtain for several limiting cases. We show that the
binding energy scales with the band gap, and conclude on the basis of the data
available for semiconductor nanotubes that there is no transition to an
excitonic insulator in quasi-metallic nanotubes and that their THz applications
are feasible.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures. Several references and an additional appendix
adde
Drowsy Cheetah Hunting Antelopes: A Diffusing Predator Seeking Fleeing Prey
We consider a system of three random walkers (a `cheetah' surrounded by two
`antelopes') diffusing in one dimension. The cheetah and the antelopes diffuse,
but the antelopes experience in addition a deterministic relative drift
velocity, away from the cheetah, proportional to their distance from the
cheetah, such that they tend to move away from the cheetah with increasing
time. Using the backward Fokker-Planck equation we calculate, as a function of
their initial separations, the probability that the cheetah has caught neither
antelope after infinite time.Comment: 5 page
Asymptotically self-similar propagation of the spherical ionization waves
It is shown that a new type of the self-similar spherical ionization waves
may exist in gases. All spatial scales and the propagation velocity of such
waves increase exponentially in time. Conditions for existence of these waves
are established, their structure is described and approximate analytical
relationships between the principal parameters are obtained. It is notable that
spherical ionization waves can serve as the simplest, but structurally complete
and physically transparent model of streamer in homogeneous electric field.Comment: Corrected typos, the more precise formulas are obtaine
Parietal disruption alters audiovisual binding in the sound-induced flash illusion
Selective attention and multisensory integration are fundamental to perception, but little is known about whether, or under what circumstances, these processes interact to shape conscious awareness. Here, we used transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to investigate the causal role of attention-related brain networks in multisensory integration between visual and auditory stimuli in the sound-induced flash illusion. The flash illusion is a widely studied multisensory phenomenon in which a single flash of light is falsely perceived as multiple flashes in the presence of irrelevant sounds. We investigated the hypothesis that extrastriate regions involved in selective attention, specifically within the right parietal cortex, exert an influence on the multisensory integrative processes that cause the flash illusion. We found that disruption of the right angular gyrus, but not of the adjacent supramarginal gyrus or of a sensory control site, enhanced participants' veridical perception of the multisensory events, thereby reducing their susceptibility to the illusion. Our findings suggest that the same parietal networks that normally act to enhance perception of attended events also play a role in the binding of auditory and visual stimuli in the sound-induced flash illusion
Exact Perturbations for inflation with smooth exit
Toy models for the Hubble rate or the scalar field potential have been used
to analyze the amplification of scalar perturbations through a smooth
transition from inflation to the radiation era. We use a Hubble rate that
arises consistently from a decaying vacuum cosmology, which evolves smoothly
from nearly de Sitter inflation to radiation domination. We find exact
solutions for super-horizon perturbations (scalar and tensor), and for
sub-horizon perturbations in the vacuum- and radiation-dominated eras. The
standard conserved quantity for super-horizon scalar perturbations is exactly
constant for growing modes, and zero for the decaying modes.Comment: Minor errors correcte
Classical Noncommutative Electrodynamics with External Source
In a -noncommutative (NC) gauge field theory we extend the
Seiberg-Witten (SW) map to include the (gauge-invariance-violating) external
current and formulate - to the first order in the NC parameter -
gauge-covariant classical field equations. We find solutions to these equations
in the vacuum and in an external magnetic field, when the 4-current is a static
electric charge of a finite size , restricted from below by the elementary
length. We impose extra boundary conditions, which we use to rule out all
singularities, included, from the solutions. The static charge proves to
be a magnetic dipole, with its magnetic moment being inversely proportional to
its size . The external magnetic field modifies the long-range Coulomb field
and some electromagnetic form-factors. We also analyze the ambiguity in the SW
map and show that at least to the order studied here it is equivalent to the
ambiguity of adding a homogeneous solution to the current-conservation
equation
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