858 research outputs found
Vivienda unifamiliar en Colombier sur Morges, Suiza
An outstanding feature of this scheme is the interest in obtaining a total integration and assimilation into the landscape — the slope of a hill planted with vineyards in an essentially agricultural district.
Interesting elements to notice are: the roofing, which Is very important in any part of Switzerland, the distribution of the interior space on three levels, and the visible structure combining play of light with materials used.
Among the latter, great importance has been given to wood, which is successfully combined with pink brick and the rest of the decoration to produce a cosy atmosphere.Nota destacable de esta construcción la constituye el interés prestado a conseguir su total integración y ambientación al terreno: la falda de un cerro plantado de viñedos en una comarca esencialmente agrícola.
Elementos interesantes a observar son: la cubierta —que en cualquier región suiza tiene gran importancia—, el sistema de ordenación interior con tres niveles distribuidores de espacios, la estructura aparente combinando juegos de luces y los materiales utilizados.
Entre estos últimos se ha dado gran importancia a la madera, muy acertadamente combinada con ladrillo rosa y el resto de la decoración, formando un acogedor ambiente en la vivienda
A slow and dark atomic beam
We demonstrate a method to produce a very slow atomic beam from a vapour cell
magneto-optical trap. Atoms are extracted from the trap using the radiation
pressure imbalance caused by a push beam. An additional transfer beam placed
near the center of the trap transfers the atomic beam into an off-resonant
state. The velocity of the atomic beam has been varied by changing the
intensity of the push beam or the position of the transfer beam. The method can
be used to generate a continuous, magnetically guided atomic beam in a dark
state.Comment: 14 page
Hypothalamically-Induced Insulin Release and its Potentiation During Oral and Intravenous Glucose Loads
Male Wistar rats were provided with bilateral cannulas in the lateral hypothalamic area (LHA) and cannulas in the left and right jugular vein. Freely moving rats provided in this way with cannulas were infused with transmitters in the LHA and with various substances in the blood circulation during simultaneous sampling of blood without disturbing the animals. Infusion of norepinephrine (NE) in the LHA resulted in increased insulin levels while plasma glucagon and blood glucose were nearly not affected. This LHA mediated insulin release was suppressed by atropine injection in the blood circulation suggesting a vagal contribution to the observed phenomenon. Administration of either an oral or i.v. glucose load during noradrenergic stimulation of the LHA elicited an exaggerated insulin response when compared to their controls. This LHA potentiated insulin response during an oral and i.v. glucose load could be suppressed by atropinization of the rats. It is concluded that meal-related stimuli are relayed to the NE-stimulated area of the LHA and that these stimuli modulate the output from this area of the LHA that is concerned with the release of insulin.
Blaming the victim, all over again: Waddell and Aylward's biopsychosocial (BPS) model of disability
The biopsychosocial (BPS) model of mental distress, originally conceived by the American psychiatrist George Engel in the 1970s and commonly used in psychiatry and psychology, has been adapted by Gordon Waddell and Mansell Aylward to form the theoretical basis for current UK Government thinking on disability. Most importantly, the Waddell and Aylward version of the BPS has played a key role as the Government has sought to reform spending on out-of- work disability benefits. This paper presents a critique of Waddell and Aylward’s model, examining its origins, its claims and the evidence it employs. We will argue that its potential for genuine inter-disciplinary cooperation and the holistic and humanistic benefits for disabled people as envisaged by Engel are not now, if they ever have been, fully realized. Any potential benefit it may have offered has been eclipsed by its role in Coalition/Conservative government social welfare policies that have blamed the victim and justified restriction of entitlements
Slow dynamics and aging of a confined granular flow
We present experimental results on slow flow properties of a granular
assembly confined in a vertical column and driven upwards at a constant
velocity V. For monodisperse assemblies this study evidences at low velocities
() a stiffening behaviour i.e. the stress necessary to obtain
a steady sate velocity increases roughly logarithmically with velocity. On the
other hand, at very low driving velocity (), we evidence a
discontinuous and hysteretic transition to a stick-slip regime characterized by
a strong divergence of the maximal blockage force when the velocity goes to
zero. We show that all this phenomenology is strongly influenced by surrounding
humidity. We also present a tentative to establish a link between the granular
rheology and the solid friction forces between the wall and the grains. We base
our discussions on a simple theoretical model and independent grain/wall
tribology measurements. We also use finite elements numerical simulations to
confront experimental results to isotropic elasticity. A second system made of
polydisperse assemblies of glass beads is investigated. We emphasize the onset
of a new dynamical behavior, i.e. the large distribution of blockage forces
evidenced in the stick-slip regime
Development of a custom on-line ultrasonic vapour analyzer/flowmeter for the ATLAS inner detector, with application to gaseous tracking and Cherenkov detectors
Precision sound velocity measurements can simultaneously determine binary gas
composition and flow. We have developed an analyzer with custom electronics,
currently in use in the ATLAS inner detector, with numerous potential
applications. The instrument has demonstrated ~0.3% mixture precision for
C3F8/C2F6 mixtures and < 10-4 resolution for N2/C3F8 mixtures. Moderate and
high flow versions of the instrument have demonstrated flow resolutions of +/-
2% F.S. for flows up to 250 l.min-1, and +/- 1.9% F.S. for linear flow
velocities up to 15 ms-1; the latter flow approaching that expected in the
vapour return of the thermosiphon fluorocarbon coolant recirculator being built
for the ATLAS silicon tracker.Comment: Paper submitted to TWEPP2012; Topical Workshop on Electronics for
Particle Physics, Oxford, UK, September 17-21, 2012. KEYWORDS: Sonar;
Saturated fluorocarbons; Flowmetry; Sound velocity, Gas mixture analysis. 8
pages, 7 figure
Logarithmic rate dependence in deforming granular materials
Rate-independence for stresses within a granular material is a basic tenet of
many models for slow dense granular flows. By contrast, logarithmic rate
dependence of stresses is found in solid-on-solid friction, in geological
settings, and elsewhere. In this work, we show that logarithmic rate-dependence
occurs in granular materials for plastic (irreversible) deformations that occur
during shearing but not for elastic (reversible) deformations, such as those
that occur under moderate repetitive compression. Increasing the shearing rate,
\Omega, leads to an increase in the stress and the stress fluctuations that at
least qualitatively resemble what occurs due to an increase in the density.
Increases in \Omega also lead to qualitative changes in the distributions of
stress build-up and relaxation events. If shearing is stopped at t=0, stress
relaxations occur with \sigma(t)/ \sigma(t=0) \simeq A \log(t/t_0). This
collective relaxation of the stress network over logarithmically long times
provides a mechanism for rate-dependent strengthening.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. RevTeX
High flux cold Rubidium atomic beam for strongly coupled Cavity QED
This paper presents a setup capable of producing a high-flux continuous beam
of cold rubidium atoms for cavity QED experiments in the regime of strong
coupling. A 2 MOT, loaded by rubidium getters in a dry film coated vapor
cell, fed a secondary moving-molasses MOT (MM-MOT) at a rate of 1.5 x
atoms/sec. The MM-MOT provided a continuous beam with tunable velocity. This
beam was then directed through the waist of a 280 m cavity resulting in a
Rabi splitting of more than +/- 10 MHz. The presence of sufficient number of
atoms in the cavity mode also enabled splitting in the polarization
perpendicular to the input. The cavity was in the strong coupling regime, with
parameters (g, , )/2 equal to (7, 3, 6)/ 2 MHz.Comment: Journal pape
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