618 research outputs found

    NDE Characterization of Metallic Interfaces

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    In recent years, the process of diffusion bonding has found considerable usage in the aerospace and nuclear power industries [1]. This process entails two surfaces being pressed together at elevated temperatures and high pressures. If ideal conditions are achieved, the bonded interface will have properties identical to those of the matrix metal and the microstructure will be continuous across the interface. There is a fine margin for error in attaining ideal conditions and the ability to characterize the bond nondestructively is highly desirable. The present project is aimed at the development of ultrasonic techniques for the characterization of interfaces between two joined parts. The techniques that are being used have applicability to components joined by diffusion bonding, pinch welding, and friction bonding, and may also be useful in nondestructive measurements of rubbing friction and for bond strength

    First Results from the X Ray Microscopy Beamline U41 PGM1 XM at BESSY II

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    The newly designed beamline U41 PGM1 XM at BESSY II for the Helmholtz Zentrum Berlin HZB transmission soft X ray microscope TXM was successfully set up and went in operation in 2017 [1]. During the commissioning of the beamline we determined the spectral resolution, horizontal focus value at the exit slit and the flux for different undulator harmonics. The experimental results meet the values from raytracing calculations. For the horizontal focus at the exit slit position we calculated a FWHM value of 108 m at 510 eV which is in good agreement with the experimental value of 107 m. The flux for photon energies higher than 550 eV is now much higher compared to the previous U41 SGM XM beamline [2] Fig.

    Entanglement of macroscopic test masses and the Standard Quantum Limit in laser interferometry

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    We show that the generation of entanglement of two heavily macroscopic mirrors with masses of up to several kilograms are feasible with state of the art techniques of high-precision laser interferometry. The basis of such a demonstration would be a Michelson interferometer with suspended mirrors and simultaneous homodyne detections at both interferometer output ports. We present the connection between the generation of entanglement and the Standard Quantum Limit (SQL) for a free mass. The SQL is a well-known reference limit in operating interferometers for gravitational-wave detection and provides a measure of when macroscopic entanglement can be observed in the presence of realistic decoherence processes

    A technological approach to the morphofunctional classification of seedlings of 50 Brazilian forest species.

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    Anisotropy of the Fracture Toughness in Aged Inconel 718

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    Inconel 718 is a widely used material for applications at temperatures up to 650°C. Many research groups have studied the properties of Inconel 718 at different conditions [1, 2]. It is known that, after several thousand hours at 650 °C, Inconel 718 shows roughly a 75% decrease in the Charpy V-notch impact energy [3]. However, any anisotropic characteristics of this steel have not been investigated in adequate detail. Consequently, in order to maintain the integrity of the components, it is important to clarify the orientation dependence of the mechanical properties of INCONEL 718

    Absolute frequency measurement of the magnesium intercombination transition 1S03P1^1S_0 \to ^3P_1

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    We report on a frequency measurement of the (3s2)1S0(3s3p)3P1(3s^2)^1S_0\to(3s3p)^3P_1 clock transition of 24^{24}Mg on a thermal atomic beam. The intercombination transition has been referenced to a portable primary Cs frequency standard with the help of a femtosecond fiber laser frequency comb. The achieved uncertainty is 2.5×10122.5\times10^{-12} which corresponds to an increase in accuracy of six orders of magnitude compared to previous results. The measured frequency value permits the calculation of several other optical transitions from 1S0^1S_0 to the 3PJ^3P_J-level system for 24^{24}Mg, 25^{25}Mg and 26^{26}Mg. We describe in detail the components of our optical frequency standard like the stabilized spectroscopy laser, the atomic beam apparatus used for Ramsey-Bord\'e interferometry and the frequency comb generator and discuss the uncertainty contributions to our measurement including the first and second order Doppler effect. An upper limit of 3×10133\times10^{-13} in one second for the short term instability of our optical frequency standard was determined by comparison with a GPS disciplined quartz oscillator.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure

    Achieving ground state and enhancing entanglement by recovering information

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    For cavity-assisted optomechanical cooling experiments, it has been shown in the literature that the cavity bandwidth needs to be smaller than the mechanical frequency in order to achieve the quantum ground state of the mechanical oscillator, which is the so-called resolved-sideband or good-cavity limit. We provide a new but physically equivalent insight into the origin of such a limit: that is information loss due to a finite cavity bandwidth. With an optimal feedback control to recover those information, we can surpass the resolved-sideband limit and achieve the quantum ground state. Interestingly, recovering those information can also significantly enhance the optomechanical entanglement. Especially when the environmental temperature is high, the entanglement will either exist or vanish critically depending on whether information is recovered or not, which is a vivid example of a quantum eraser.Comment: 9 figures, 18 page

    Early Affective Processing in Patients with Acute Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: Magnetoencephalographic Correlates

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    Background: In chronic PTSD, a preattentive neural alarm system responds rapidly to emotional information, leading to increased prefrontal cortex (PFC) activation at early processing stages (<100 ms). Enhanced PFC responses are followed by a reduction in occipito-temporal activity during later processing stages. However, it remains unknown if this neuronal pattern is a result of a long lasting mental disorder or if it represents changes in brain function as direct consequences of severe trauma.Methodology: The present study investigates early fear network activity in acutely traumatized patients with PTSD. It focuses on the question whether dysfunctions previously observed in chronic PTSD patients are already present shortly after trauma exposure. We recorded neuromagnetic activity towards emotional pictures in seven acutely traumatized PTSD patients between one and seven weeks after trauma exposure and compared brain responses to a balanced healthy control sample. Inverse modelling served for mapping sources of differential activation in the brain.Principal Findings: Compared to the control group, acutely traumatized PTSD patients showed an enhanced PFC response to high-arousing pictures between 60 to 80 ms. This rapid prefrontal hypervigilance towards arousing pictorial stimuli was sustained during 120–300 ms, where it was accompanied by a reduced affective modulation of occipito-temporal neural processing.Conclusions: Our findings indicate that the hypervigilance-avoidance pattern seen in chronic PTSD is not necessarily a product of an endured mental disorder, but arises as an almost immediate result of severe traumatisation. Thus, traumatic experiences can influence emotion processing strongly, leading to long-lasting changes in trauma network activation and expediting a chronic manifestation of maladaptive cognitive and behavioral symptoms
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