18,295 research outputs found
Magnetohydrodynamic normal mode analysis of plasma with equilibrium pressure anisotropy
In this work, we generalise linear magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) stability theory
to include equilibrium pressure anisotropy in the fluid part of the analysis. A
novel 'single-adiabatic' (SA) fluid closure is presented which is complementary
to the usual 'double-adiabatic' (CGL) model and has the advantage of naturally
reproducing exactly the MHD spectrum in the isotropic limit. As with MHD and
CGL, the SA model neglects the anisotropic perturbed pressure and thus loses
non-local fast-particle stabilisation present in the kinetic approach. Another
interesting aspect of this new approach is that the stabilising terms appear
naturally as separate viscous corrections leaving the isotropic SA closure
unchanged. After verifying the self-consistency of the SA model, we re-derive
the projected linear MHD set of equations required for stability analysis of
tokamaks in the MISHKA code. The cylindrical wave equation is derived
analytically as done previously in the spectral theory of MHD and clear
predictions are made for the modification to fast-magnetosonic and slow ion
sound speeds due to equilibrium anisotropy.Comment: 19 pages. This is an author-created, un-copyedited version of an
article submitted for publication in Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion.
IOP Publishing Ltd is not responsible for any errors or omissions in this
version of the manuscript or any version derived from i
An analysis of new techniqes for radiometric correction of LANDSAT-4 Thematic Mapper images
The utility of methods for generating TM RLUTS which can improve the quality of the resultant images was investigated. The TM-CCT-ADDS tape was changed to account for a different collection window for the calibration data. Several scenes of Terrebonne Bay, Louisiana and the Grand Bahamas were analyzed to evaluate the radiometric corrections operationally applied to the image data and to investigate several techniques for reducing striping in the images. Printer plots for the TM shutter data were produced and detector statistics were compiled and plotted. These statistics included various combinations of the average shutter counts for each scan before and after DC restore for forward and reverse scans. Results show that striping is caused by the detectors becoming saturated when they view a bright cloud and depress the DC restore level
Cortical activity evoked by inoculation needle prick in infants up to one-year old
Inoculation is one of the first and most common experiences of procedural pain in infancy. However, little is known about how needle puncture pain is processed by the central nervous system in children. In this study, we describe for the first time the event-related activity in the infant brain during routine inoculation using electroencephalography. Fifteen healthy term-born infants aged 1 to 2 months (n = 12) or 12 months (n = 5) were studied in an outpatient clinic. Pain behavior was scored using the Modified Behavioral Pain Scale. A distinct inoculation event-related vertex potential, consisting of 2 late negative-positive complexes, was observable in single trials after needle contact with the skin. The amplitude of both negative-positive components was significantly greater in the 12-month group. Both inoculation event-related potential amplitude and behavioral pain scores increased with age but the 2 measures were not correlated with each other. These components are the first recordings of brain activity in response to real-life needle pain in infants up to a year old. They provide new evidence of postnatal nociceptive processing and, combined with more traditional behavioral pain scores, offer a potentially more sensitive measure for testing the efficacy of analgesic protocols in this age group
Accelerated HIV testing for PMTCT in maternity and labour wards is vital to capture mothers at a critical point in the programme at district level
TORONTO AIDS Conference 200
A Corrosion Control Manual for Rail Rapid Transit
This manual addresses corrosion problems in the design, contruction, and maintenance of rapid transit systems. Design and maintenance solutions are provided for each problem covered. The scope encompasses all facilities of urban rapid transit systems: structures and tracks, platforms and stations, power and signals, and cars. The types of corrosion and their causes as well as rapid transit properties are described. Corrosion control committees, and NASA, DOD, and ASTM specifications and design criteria to which reference is made in the manual are listed. A bibliography of papers and excerpts of reports is provided and a glossary of frequently used terms is included
Ferromagnetism in substituted zinc oxide
Room-temperature ferromagnetism is observed in (110) oriented ZnO films
containing 5 at % of Sc, Ti, V, Fe, Co or Ni, but not Cr, Mn or Cu ions. There
are large moments, 1.9 and 0.5 muB/atom for Co- and Ti-substituted oxides,
respectively. Sc-substituted ZnO shows also a moment of 0.3 muB/Sc.
Magnetization is very anisotropic, with variations of up to a factor three
depending on the orientation of the applied field relative to the R-cut
sapphire substrates. Results are interpreted in terms of a spin-split donor
impurity band model, which can account for ferromagnetism in insulating or
conducting high-k oxides with concentrations of magnetic ions that lie far
below the percolation threshold. The variation of the ferromagnetism with
oxygen pressure used during film growth is evidence of a link between
ferromagnetism and defect concentration.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
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