3,696 research outputs found

    Tensile test of pressureless-sintered silicon nitride at elevated temperature

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    Uniaxial tensile strength tests of pressureless sintered silicon nitride were carried out in air at temperatures ranging from room temperature up to 1600 C. Silicon nitrides containing Y2O3, Al2O3, Al2O3-MgO, or MgO-CeO2 additives were tested. The results show that the composition of the additive used influences the strength characteristics of the silicon nitride. The tensile strength rapidly decreased at temperatures above 1000 C for the materials containing MgO as the additive and above 1000 C for the material with Y2O3. When the temperature increased to as high as 1300 C, the strength decreased to about 10 percent of the room temperature strength in each case. Observations of the fracture origin and of the crack propagation on the fracture surfaces are discussed

    Backbone colorings along perfect matchings

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    Given a graph G=(V,E)G=(V,E) and a spanning subgraph HH of GG (the backbone of GG), a backbone coloring for GG and HH is a proper vertex coloring V→{1,2,…}V\rightarrow \{1,2,\ldots\} of GG in which the colors assigned to adjacent vertices in HH differ by at least two. In a recent paper, backbone colorings were introduced and studied in cases were the backbone is either a spanning tree or a spanning path. Here we study the case where the backbone is a perfect matching. We show that for perfect matching backbones of GG the number of colors needed for a backbone coloring of GG can roughly differ by a multiplicative factor of at most 43\frac{4}{3} from the chromatic number χ(G)\chi(G). We show that the computational complexity of the problem ``Given a graph GG with a perfect matching MM, and an integer ℓ\ell, is there a backbone coloring for GG and MM with at most ℓ\ell colors?'' jumps from polynomial to NP-complete between ℓ=3\ell=3 and ℓ=4\ell=4. Finally, we consider the case where GG is a planar graph

    Intrinsic gap and exciton condensation in the nu_T=1 bilayer system

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    We investigate the quasiparticle excitation of the bilayer quantum Hall (QH) system at total filling factor νT=1\nu_{\mathrm{T}} = 1 in the limit of negligible interlayer tunneling under tilted magnetic field. We show that the intrinsic quasiparticle excitation is of purely pseudospin origin and solely governed by the inter- and intra-layer electron interactions. A model based on exciton formation successfully explains the quantitative behavior of the quasiparticle excitation gap, demonstrating the existence of a link between the excitonic QH state and the composite fermion liquid. Our results provide a new insight into the nature of the phase transition between the two states.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Simultaneous monitoring of a collapsing landslide with video cameras

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    Effective countermeasures and risk management to reduce landslide hazards require a full understanding of the processes of collapsing landslides. While the processes are generally estimated from the features of debris deposits after collapse, simultaneous monitoring during collapse provides more insights into the processes. Such monitoring, however, is usually very difficult, because it is rarely possible to predict when a collapse will occur. This study introduces a rare case in which a collapsing landslide (150 m in width and 135 m in height) was filmed with three video cameras in Higashi-Yokoyama, Gifu Prefecture, Japan. The cameras were set up in the front and on the right and left sides of the slide in May 2006, one month after a series of small slope failures in the toe and the formation of cracks on the head indicated that a collapse was imminent. <br><br> The filmed images showed that the landslide collapse started from rock falls and slope failures occurring mainly around the margin, that is, the head, sides and toe. These rock falls and slope failures, which were individually counted on the screen, increased with time. Analyzing the images, five of the failures were estimated to have each produced more than 1000 m<sup>3</sup> of debris, and the landslide collapsed with several surface failures accompanied by a toppling movement. The manner of the collapse suggested that the slip surface initially remained on the upper slope, and then extended down the slope as the excessive internal stress shifted downwards. Image analysis, together with field measurements using a ground-based laser scanner after the collapse, indicated that the landslide produced a total of 50 000 m<sup>3</sup> of debris. <br><br> As described above, simultaneous monitoring provides valuable information about landslide processes. Further development of monitoring techniques will help clarify landslide processes qualitatively as well as quantitatively

    Relativistic Beaming and Flux Variability in Active Galactic Nuclei

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    We discuss the impact of special relativistic effects on the observed light curves and variability duty cycles of AGNs. We model the properties of AGN light curves at radio wavelengths using a simulated shot noise process in which the occurrence of major flaring events in a relativistic jet is governed by Poisson statistics. We show that flaring sources whose radiation is highly beamed toward us are able to reach very high flux levels, but will in fact spend most of their time in relatively low flaring states due to relativistic contraction of flare time scales in the observer frame. The fact that highly beamed AGNs do not return to a steady-state quiescent level between flares implies that their weakly beamed counterparts should have highly stable flux densities that result from a superposition of many long-term, low-amplitude flares. The ``apparent'' quiescent flux levels of these weakly beamed AGNs (identified in many unified models as radio galaxies) will be significantly higher than their ''true'' quiescent (i.e., non-flaring) levels. We use Monte Carlo simulations to investigate flux variability bias in the selection statistics of flat-spectrum AGN samples. In the case of the Caltech-Jodrell Flat-spectrum survey, the predicted orientation bias towards jets seen end-on is weakened if the parent population is variable, since the highly beamed sources have a stronger tendency to be found in low flaring states. This effect is small, however, since highly beamed sources are relatively rare, and their fluxes tend to be boosted sufficiently above the survey limit such that they are selected regardless of their flaring level. We find that for larger flat-spectrum AGN surveys with fainter flux cutoffs, variability should not be an appreciable source of selection bias.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa

    Magnetic-Field Dependence of Tunnel Couplings in Carbon Nanotube Quantum Dots

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    By means of sequential and cotunneling spectroscopy, we study the tunnel couplings between metallic leads and individual levels in a carbon nanotube quantum dot. The levels are ordered in shells consisting of two doublets with strong- and weak-tunnel couplings, leading to gate-dependent level renormalization. By comparison to a one- and two-shell model, this is shown to be a consequence of disorder-induced valley mixing in the nanotube. Moreover, a parallel magnetic field is shown to reduce this mixing and thus suppress the effects of tunnel renormalization.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; revised version as publishe
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