28,588 research outputs found
Induced voltage in an open wire
A puzzle arising from Faraday's law is considered and solved concerning the
question which voltage is induced in an open wire with a time-varying
homogeneous magnetic field. In contrast to closed wires where the voltage is
determined by the time variance of magnetic field and enclosed area, in an open
wire we have to integrate the electric field along the wire. It is found that
the longitudinal electric field contributes with 1/3 and the transverse field
with 2/3 to the induced voltage. In order to find the electric fields the
sources of the magnetic fields are necessary to know. The representation of a
homogeneous and time-varying magnetic field implies unavoidably a certain
symmetry point or symmetry line which depend on the geometry of the source. As
a consequence the induced voltage of an open wire is found to be the area
covered with respect to this symmetry line or point perpendicular to the
magnetic field. This in turn allows to find the symmetry points of a magnetic
field source by measuring the voltage of an open wire placed with different
angles in the magnetic field. We present exactly solvable models for a symmetry
point and for a symmetry line, respectively. The results are applicable to open
circuit problems like corrosion and for astrophysical applications
Methodological Individualism, the We-mode, and Team Reasoning
Raimo Tuomela is one of the pioneers of social action theory and has done as much as anyone over the last thirty years to advance the study of social action and collective intentionality. Social Ontology: Collective Intentionality and Group Agents (2013) presents the latest version of his theory and applications to a range of important social phenomena. The book covers so much ground, and so many important topics in detailed discussions, that it would impossible in a short space to do it even partial justice. In this brief note, I will concentrate on a single, though important, theme in the book, namely, the claim that we must give up methodological individualism in the social sciences and embrace instead irreducibly group notions. I wish to defend methodological individualism as up to the theoretical tasks of the social sciences while acknowledging what is distinctive about the social world and collective intentional action.
Tuomela frames the question of the adequacy of methodological individualism in terms of a contrast between what he calls the I-mode and the we-mode. He argues that we-mode phenomena are not reducible to I-mode phenomena, and concludes that we must reject methodological individualism. I will argue that the irreducibility of the we-mode to the I-mode, given how the contrast is set up, does not entail the rejection of methodological individualism. In addition, I will argue that the three conditions that Tuomela places on genuine we-mode activities, the group reason, collectivity, and collective commitment conditions, if they are understood in a way that does not beg the question, can plausibly be satisfied by a reductive account. Finally, I will argue that the specific considerations advanced in the book do not give us reason to think that a reductive account cannot be adequate to the descriptive and explanatory requirements of a theory of the social worl
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Analysis of Droplet Train/Moving Substrate Interactions in Ink-Jetting Processes
Ink-jetting technology has been applied to several processes in solid free-form
fabrication (SFF) wherein droplets impinge onto a substrate to deposit the build material.
Droplet impact behaviour on a surface has been the interest of many researchers; however,
few studies have been undertaken to investigate the interaction of droplets with the moving
substrate. This paper reports the impact behaviour of the droplets jetted at different
frequencies onto a substrate moving over a range of velocities. The phenomena associated
with the interaction were classified into three main regimes.Mechanical Engineerin
Quenching of pairing gap at finite temperature in 184W
We extract pairing gap in W at finite temperature for the first time
from the experimental level densities of W, W, and W
using "thermal" odd-even mass difference. We found the quenching of pairing gap
near the critical temperature MeV in the BCS calculations. It is
shown that the monopole pairing model with a deformed Woods-Saxon potential
explains the reduction of the pairing correlation using the partition function
with the number parity projection in the static path approximation plus
random-phase approximation.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in PR
Cross-Sender Bit-Mixing Coding
Scheduling to avoid packet collisions is a long-standing challenge in
networking, and has become even trickier in wireless networks with multiple
senders and multiple receivers. In fact, researchers have proved that even {\em
perfect} scheduling can only achieve . Here
is the number of nodes in the network, and is the {\em medium
utilization rate}. Ideally, one would hope to achieve ,
while avoiding all the complexities in scheduling. To this end, this paper
proposes {\em cross-sender bit-mixing coding} ({\em BMC}), which does not rely
on scheduling. Instead, users transmit simultaneously on suitably-chosen slots,
and the amount of overlap in different user's slots is controlled via coding.
We prove that in all possible network topologies, using BMC enables us to
achieve . We also prove that the space and time
complexities of BMC encoding/decoding are all low-order polynomials.Comment: Published in the International Conference on Information Processing
in Sensor Networks (IPSN), 201
Effect of Edge Roughness on Electronic Transport in Graphene Nanoribbon Channel Metal Oxide Semiconductor Field-Effect Transistors
Results of quantum mechanical simulations of the influence of edge disorder
on transport in graphene nanoribbon metal oxide semiconductor field-effect
transistors (MOSFETs) are reported. The addition of edge disorder significantly
reduces ON-state currents and increases OFF-state currents, and introduces wide
variability across devices. These effects decrease as ribbon widths increase
and as edges become smoother. However the bandgap decreases with increasing
width, thereby increasing the band-to-band tunneling mediated subthreshold
leakage current even with perfect nanoribbons. These results suggest that
without atomically precise edge control during fabrication, MOSFET performance
gains through use of graphene will be difficult to achieve.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
Differential Expression Of Gap Junction mRNAs And Proteins In The Developing Murine Kidney And In Experimentally Induced Nephric Mesenchymes
The expression of three gap junction (GJ) proteins, alpha-1 (Cx43), beta-1 (Cx32), and beta-2 (Cx26), and their transcripts were examined during the ontogeny of the mouse and rat kidney. These proteins were expressed in two non-overlapping patterns. The alpha-1 GJ protein was first observed in mesenchymal cells in the 12-day mouse kidney. By day 14 and thereafter, the ai protein was detected in the transient S-shaped bodies, but not in the podocytes of the maturing glomeruli. After birth the antigen was retained in a small subset of secretory tubules.The beta-1 and beta-2 GJ proteins were similar in their developmental patterns. They were first detected in a small subset of secretory tubules in the subcortical zone of day 17 embryos. These tubules were identified by immunohistochemical markers to be proximal. At birth, practically all proximal tubules expressed the two antigens.This analysis of GJ proteins was consistent with the results of S1 nuclease protection assays showing that, while the alpha-1 mRNA appeared early during kidney development and declined around birth, the two beta mRNAs appeared later and became intensified during the last days of intrauterine development.In experimentally induced metanephric mesenchymes, a transient expression of the alpha-1 GJ protein was seen during the segregation of the tubular anlagen. beta-1 and beta-2 GJ proteins were not detected in such induced mesenchymes cultivated up to 7 days.These observations provide evidence for the cell-specific utilization of different GJ genes during different stages of kidney organogenesis. The alpha-1 gene is activated during the early segregation of the secretory tubule and might contribute to its compartmentalization, while the beta-1 and beta-2 gene products are not detected until advanced stages of development. The latter gene products might be correlated with the physiological activity of the proximal tubules in vivo, as they are not expressed in experimentally induced tubules detectable with markers for proximal tubules
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