36,712 research outputs found
Gaseous He Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Probe for Cryogenic Environments
Normal nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) probes cannot be used to make high
frequency resolution measurements in a cryogenic environment because they lose
their frequency resolution when the liquid sample in the probe freezes. A
gaseous He NMR probe, designed and constructed to work naturally in such
cryogenic environments, is demonstrated at 4.2 K and 5.3 Tesla to have a
frequency resolution better than 0.4 part per billion. As a demonstration of
its usefulness, the cryogenic probe is used to shim a superconducting solenoid
with a cryogenic interior to produce a magnetic field with a high spatial
homogeneity, and to measure the magnetic field stability.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figure
Wet impregnation of a commercial low cost silica using DETA for a fast post-combustion CO2 capture process
We acknowledge EPSRC for the Grants EP/J019720/1 and EP/J019704/1.Peer reviewe
Signal enhancement of the in-plane and out-of-plane Rayleigh wave components
Several groups have reported an enhancement of the ultrasonic Rayleigh wave when scanning close to a surface-breaking defect in a metal sample. This enhancement may be explained as an interference effect where the waves passing directly between source and receiver interfere with those waves reflected back from the defect. We present finite element models of the predicted enhancement when approaching a defect, along with experiments performed using electromagnetic acoustic transducers sensitive to either in-plane or out-of-plane motion. A larger enhancement of the in-plane motion than the out-of-plane motion is observed and can be explained by considering ultrasonic reflections and mode conversion at the defect
Towards an Improved Test of the Standard Model's Most Precise Prediction
The electron and positron magnetic moments are the most precise prediction of
the standard model of particle physics. The most accurate measurement of a
property of an elementary particle has been made to test this result. A new
experimental method is now being employed in an attempt to improve the
measurement accuracy by an order of magnitude. Positrons from a "student
source" now suffice for the experiment. Progress toward a new measurement is
summarized
Han's Bijection via Permutation Codes
We show that Han's bijection when restricted to permutations can be carried
out in terms of the cyclic major code and the cyclic inversion code. In other
words, it maps a permutation with a cyclic major code to a permutation with a cyclic inversion code . We also show that the fixed points of Han's map can be characterized by
the strong fixed points of Foata's second fundamental transformation. The
notion of strong fixed points is related to partial Foata maps introduced by
Bj\"orner and Wachs.Comment: 12 pages, to appear in European J. Combi
Discovery of Two Spectroscopically Peculiar, Low-Luminosity Quasars at z~4
We report the discovery of two low-luminosity quasars at z~4, both of which
show prominent N IV] 1486A emission. This line is extremely rare in quasar
spectra at any redshift; detecting it in two out of a sample of 23 objects
(i.e., ~ 9% of the sample) is intriguing and is likely due to the
low-luminosity, high-redshift quasar sample we are studying. This is still a
poorly explored regime, where contributions from associated, early starbursts
may be significant. One interpretation of this line posits photoionization by
very massive young stars. Seeing N IV] 1486A emission in a high-redshift quasar
may thus be understood in the context of co-formation and early co-evolution of
galaxies and their supermassive black holes. Alternatively, we may be seeing a
phenomenon related to the early evolution of quasar broad emission line
regions. The non-detection (and possibly even broad absorption) of N V 1240A
line in the spectrum of one of these quasars may support that interpretation.
These two objects may signal a new faint quasar population or an early AGN
evolutionary stage at high redshifts.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, Accepted for publicated in ApJ Letter
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