372 research outputs found
Response of Seven Crystallographic Orientations of Sapphire Crystals to Shock Stresses of 16 to 86 GPa
Shock-wave profiles of sapphire (single-crystal Al2O3) with seven
crystallographic orientations were measured with time-resolved VISAR
interferometry at shock stresses in the range 16 to 86 GPa. Shock propagation
was normal to the surface of each cut. The angle between the c-axis of the
hexagonal crystal structure and the direction of shock propagation varied from
0 for c-cut up to 90 degrees for m-cut in the basal plane. Based on published
shock-induced transparencies, shock-induced optical transparency correlates
with the smoothness of the shock-wave profile. The ultimate goal was to find
the direction of shock propagation in sapphire that is most transparent as a
window. Particle velocity histories were recorded at the interface between a
sapphire crystal and a LiF window. In most cases measured wave profiles are
noisy as a result of heterogeneity of deformation. Measured values of Hugoniot
Elastic Limits (HELs) depend on direction of shock compression and peak shock
stress. The largest HEL values were recorded for shock loading along the c-axis
and perpendicular to c along the m-direction. Shock compression along the m-
and s-directions is accompanied by the smallest heterogeneity of deformation
and the smallest rise time of the plastic shock wave. m- and s-cut sapphire
most closely approach ideal elastic-plastic flow, which suggests that m- and
s-cut sapphire are probably the orientations that remains most transparent to
highest shock pressures. Under purely elastic deformation sapphire has very
high spall strength, which depends on load duration and peak stress. Plastic
deformation of sapphire causes loss of its tensile strength.Comment: 18 pages, 18 figure
Chapter 13: Interacting with interviewers in text and voice interviews on smartphones. Appendix 13
Appendix A: Example human text and voice interchange that includes clarification.
Appendix B: Coding Manual
Appendix A13C.1 (Data) attached belo
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Simulation of Comet Impact and Survivability of Organic Compounds
Comets have long been proposed as a potential means for the transport of complex organic compounds to early Earth. For this to be a viable mechanism, a significant fraction of organic compounds must survive the high temperatures due to impact. We have undertaken three-dimensional numerical simulations to track the thermodynamic state of a comet during oblique impacts. The comet was modeled as a 1-km water-ice sphere impacting a basalt plane at 11.2 km/s; impact angles of 15{sup o} (from horizontal), 30{sup o}, 45{sup o}, 65{sup o}, and 90{sup o} (normal impact) were examined. The survival of organic cometary material, modeled as water ice for simplicity, was calculated using three criteria: (1) peak temperatures, (2) the thermodynamic phase of H{sub 2}O, and (3) final temperature upon isentropic unloading. For impact angles greater than or equal to 30{sup o}, no organic material is expected to survive the impact. For the 15{sup o} impact, most of the material survives the initial impact and significant fractions (55%, 25%, and 44%, respectively) satisfy each survival criterion at 1 second. Heating due to deceleration, in addition to shock heating, plays a role in the heating of the cometary material for nonnormal impacts. This effect is more noticeable for more oblique impacts, resulting in significant deviations from estimates using scaling of normal impacts. The deceleration heating of the material at late times requires further modeling of breakup and mixing
Differential Effects of Myeloid Cell PPARδ and IL-10 in Regulating Macrophage Recruitment, Phenotype, and Regeneration following Acute Muscle Injury
Changes in macrophage phenotype in injured muscle profoundly influence regeneration. In particular, the shift of macrophages from a pro-inflammatory (M1-biased) phenotype to a pro-regenerative (M2-biased) phenotype characterized by expression of CD206 and CD163 is essential for normal repair. According to the current canonical mechanism regulating for M1/M2 phenotype transition, signaling through PPARδ is necessary for obtaining the M2-biased phenotype. Our findings confirm that the murine myeloid cell targeted deletion of Ppard reduces expression in vitro of genes that are activated in M2-biased macrophages; however, the mutation in mice in vivo increased numbers of CD206+ M2-biased macrophages and did not reduce the expression of phenotypic markers of M2-biased macrophages in regenerating muscle. Nevertheless, the mutation impaired CCL2-mediated chemotaxis of macrophages and slowed revascularization of injured muscle. In contrast, null mutation of IL10 diminished M2-biased macrophages but produced no defects in muscle revascularization. Our results provide two significant findings. First, they illustrate that mechanisms that regulate macrophage phenotype transitions in vitro are not always predictive of mechanisms that are most important in vivo. Second, they show that mechanisms that regulate macrophage phenotype transitions differ in different in vivo environments
Entropy-Dominated Dissipation in Sapphire Shock-Compressed up to 400 GPa (4 Mbar)
Sapphire (single-crystal Al2O3) is a representative Earth material and is
used as a window and/or anvil in shock experiments. Pressure, for example, at
the core-mantle boundary is about 130 gigapascals (GPa). Defects induced by
100-GPa shock waves cause sapphire to become opaque, which precludes measuring
temperature with thermal radiance. We have measured wave profiles of sapphire
crystals with several crystallographic orientations at shock pressures of 16,
23, and 86 GPa. At 23 GPa plastic-shock rise times are generally quite long
(~100 ns) and their values depend sensitively on the direction of shock
propagation in the crystal lattice. The long rise times are probably caused by
the high strength of inter-atomic interactions in the ordered three-dimensional
sapphire lattice. Our wave profiles and recent theoretical and laser-driven
experimental results imply that sapphire disorders without significant shock
heating up to about 400 GPa, above which Al2O3 is amorphous and must heat. This
picture suggests that the characteristic shape of shock compression curves of
many Earth materials at 100 GPa pressures is caused by a combination of entropy
and temperature.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Important performance characteristics in elite clay and grass court tennis match-play.
The performance characteristics of elite tennis match-play differ depending on court surface. However, the performance characteristics (e.g. aces, first serve points won, forced errors) most associated with success on different surfaces are currently unknown. With three weeks typically separating Roland Garros and Wimbledon, the transition from clay to grass courts, whereby players must adapt their game style between surfaces, is crucial to understand. Using the recently validated PWOL method, we analysed 984 singles matches across the 2016 and 2017 Roland Garros and Wimbledon tournaments, to identify the most important performance characteristics in clay and grass court tennis. Results revealed that points won of 0-4 shot rally length, first serve points won and baseline points won were most strongly associated with success for both sexes; serve-related performance characteristics (aces, double faults and average first serve speed) were among the least associated with success. Furthermore, winning short points (points of 0-4 shots) was more closely associated with success than winning medium-length (5-8 shots) and long points (9+ shots). To be representative of match-play, findings suggest that players should afford sufficient practise time to short rallies and point-ending strategies during the clay and grass court seasons, rather than over-emphasising long rallies
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