13,822 research outputs found
Study to minimize hydrogen embrittlement of ultrahigh-strength steels
Hydrogen-stress cracking in high-strength steels is influenced by hydrogen content of the material and its hydrogen absorption tendency. Non-embrittling cleaning, pickling, and electroplating processes are being studied. Protection from this hydrogen embrittlement is important to the aerospace and aircraft industries
Literature review on pickling inhibitors and cadmium electroplating processes
Because introduction of hydrogen during bright-cadmium electroplating of high strength steels causes hydrogen-stress cracking, a program was undertaken to evaluate various processes and materials. Report describes effectiveness of inhibitors for reducing hydrogen absorption by steels
A review of the literature on pickling inhibitors and cadmium electroplating processes to minimize hydrogen absorption by ultrahigh-strength steels
Literature review on pickling inhibitors and cadmium electroplating processes to minimize hydrogen absorption by ultrahigh strength steel
Review of literature on hydrogen embrittlement
Hydrogen embrittlement in high strength iron-base and nickel-base alloys and titaniu
A study of hydrogen embrittlement of various alloys Annual summary report, 24 Jun. 1965 - 23 Jun. 1966
Hydrogen embrittlement of alloy cathodically charged and notched tensile metal
Same traits, different variance : Item-Level Variation Within Personality Measures
© 2014 the Author(s). This article has been published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. Without requesting permission from the Author or SAGE, you may further copy, distribute, transmit, and adapt the article, with the condition that the Author and SAGE Open are in each case credited as the source of the article. The version of record, Jamie S. Churcyard, Karen J. Pine, Shivani Sharma, Ben (C) Fletcher, ' Same Traits, Difference Variance: Item-Level Variation Within Personality Measures', SAGE Open, 2014, is available online via doi: 10.1177/2158244014522634Personality trait questionnaires are regularly used in individual differences research to examine personality scores between participants, although trait researchers tend to place little value on intra-individual variation in item ratings within a measured trait. The few studies that examine variability indices have not considered how they are related to a selection of psychological outcomes, so we recruited 160 participants (age M = 24.16, SD = 9.54) who completed the IPIP-HEXACO personality questionnaire and several outcome measures. Heterogenous within-subject differences in item ratings were found for every trait/facet measured, with measurement error that remained stable across the questionnaire. Within-subject standard deviations, calculated as measures of individual variation in specific item ratings within a trait/facet, were related to outcomes including life satisfaction and depression. This suggests these indices represent valid constructs of variability, and that researchers administering behavior statement trait questionnaires with outcome measures should also apply item-level variability indices.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
A Gemini ground-based transmission spectrum of WASP-29b: a featureless spectrum from 515 to 720nm
We report Gemini-South GMOS observations of the exoplanet system WASP-29
during primary transit as a test case for differential spectrophotometry. We
use the multi-object spectrograph to observe the target star and a comparison
star simultaneously to produce multiple light curves at varying wavelengths.
The 'white' light curve and fifteen 'spectral' light curves are analysed to
refine the system parameters and produce a transmission spectrum from 515 to
720nm. All light curves exhibit time-correlated noise, which we model using a
variety of techniques. These include a simple noise rescaling, a Gaussian
process model, and a wavelet based method. These methods all produce consistent
results, although with different uncertainties. The precision of the
transmission spectrum is improved by subtracting a common signal from all the
spectral light curves, reaching a typical precision of ~1x10^-4 in transit
depth. The transmission spectrum is free of spectral features, and given the
non-detection of a pressure broadened Na feature, we can rule out the presence
of a Na rich atmosphere free of clouds or hazes, although we cannot rule out a
narrow Na core. This indicates that Na is not present in the atmosphere, and/or
that clouds/hazes play a significant role in the atmosphere and mask the broad
wings of the Na feature, although the former is a more likely explanation given
WASP-29b's equilibrium temperature of ~970 K, at which Na can form various
compounds. We also briefly discuss the use of Gaussian process and wavelet
methods to account for time correlated noise in transit light curves.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables. Published in MNRAS. Figure 2 corrected
in version
The optical transmission spectrum of the hot Jupiter HAT-P-32b: clouds explain the absence of broad spectral features?
We report Gemini-North GMOS observations of the inflated hot Jupiter
HAT-P-32b during two primary transits. We simultaneously observed two
comparison stars and used differential spectro-photometry to produce
multi-wavelength light curves. 'White' light curves and 29 'spectral' light
curves were extracted for each transit and analysed to refine the system
parameters and produce transmission spectra from 520-930nm in ~14nm bins. The
light curves contain time-varying white noise as well as time-correlated noise,
and we used a Gaussian process model to fit this complex noise model. Common
mode corrections derived from the white light curve fits were applied to the
spectral light curves which significantly improved our precision, reaching
typical uncertainties in the transit depth of ~2x10^-4, corresponding to about
half a pressure scale height. The low resolution transmission spectra are
consistent with a featureless model, and we can confidently rule out broad
features larger than about one scale height. The absence of Na/K wings or
prominent TiO/VO features is most easily explained by grey absorption from
clouds in the upper atmosphere, masking the spectral features. However, we
cannot confidently rule out clear atmosphere models with low abundances (~10^-3
solar) of TiO, VO or even metal hydrides masking the Na and K wings. A smaller
scale height or ionisation could also contribute to muted spectral features,
but alone are unable to to account for the absence of features reported here.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
Trajectories in the Context of the Quantum Newton's Law
In this paper, we apply the one dimensional quantum law of motion, that we
recently formulated in the context of the trajectory representation of quantum
mechanics, to the constant potential, the linear potential and the harmonic
oscillator. In the classically allowed regions, we show that to each classical
trajectory there is a family of quantum trajectories which all pass through
some points constituting nodes and belonging to the classical trajectory. We
also discuss the generalization to any potential and give a new definition for
de Broglie's wavelength in such a way as to link it with the length separating
adjacent nodes. In particular, we show how quantum trajectories have as a limit
when the classical ones. In the classically forbidden regions,
the nodal structure of the trajectories is lost and the particle velocity
rapidly diverges.Comment: 17 pages, LateX, 6 eps figures, minor modifications, Title changed,
to appear in Physica Script
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