3,195 research outputs found
Improved adhesive for cryogenic applications cures at room temperature
Adhesive cured at room temperature provides an effective adhesive bond over the range from room temperature down to the temperature of liquid hydrogen. The adhesive consists of one part of 200-mesh powdered nylon filler to two parts of an epoxy-polyamine resin
Physical Origin of the Boson Peak Deduced from a Two-Order-Parameter Model of Liquid
We propose that the boson peak originates from the (quasi-) localized
vibrational modes associated with long-lived locally favored structures, which
are intrinsic to a liquid state and are randomly distributed in a sea of
normal-liquid structures. This tells us that the number density of locally
favored structures is an important physical factor determining the intensity of
the boson peak. In our two-order-parameter model of the liquid-glass
transition, the locally favored structures act as impurities disturbing
crystallization and thus lead to vitrification. This naturally explains the
dependence of the intensity of the boson peak on temperature, pressure, and
fragility, and also the close correlation between the boson peak and the first
sharp diffraction peak (or prepeak).Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, An error in the reference (Ref. 7) was correcte
Photoinduced IR absorption in (La(1-x)Sr(x)Mn)(1-\delta)O3: changes of the anti-Jahn-Teller polaron binding energy with doping
Photoinduced IR absorption was measured in (La(1-x)Sr(x)Mn)(1-\delta)O3. A
midinfrared peak centered at ~ 5000 cm was observed in the x=0
antiferromagnetic sample. The peak diminishes and softens as hole doping is
increased. The origin of the photoinduced absorption peak is atributted to the
photon assisted hopping of anti-Jahn-Teller polarons formed by photoexcited
charge carriers, whose binding energy decreases with increasing hole doping.
The shape of the peak indicates that the polarons are small.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, submitted to PR
Can muon-induced backgrounds explain the DAMA data?
We present an accurate simulation of the muon-induced background in the DAMA/LIBRA experiment. Muon sampling underground has been performed using the MUSIC/MUSUN codes and subsequent interactions in the rock around the DAMA/LIBRA detector cavern and the experimental setup including shielding, have been simulated with GEANT4.9.6. In total we simulate the equivalent of 20 years of muon data. We have calculated the total muon-induced neutron flux in the DAMA/LIBRA detector cavern as Φμn = 1.0 ×10-9 cm-2s-1, which is consistent with other simulations. After selecting events which satisfy the DAMA/LIBRA signal criteria, our simulation predicts 3.49 ×10-5 cpd/kg/keV which accounts for less than 0.3% of the DAMA/LIBRA modulation amplitude. We conclude from our work that muon-induced backgrounds are unable to contribute to the observed signal modulation
Modulational instability in periodic quadratic nonlinear materials
We investigate the modulational instability of plane waves in quadratic
nonlinear materials with linear and nonlinear quasi-phase-matching gratings.
Exact Floquet calculations, confirmed by numerical simulations, show that the
periodicity can drastically alter the gain spectrum but never completely
removes the instability. The low-frequency part of the gain spectrum is
accurately predicted by an averaged theory and disappears for certain gratings.
The high-frequency part is related to the inherent gain of the homogeneous
non-phase-matched material and is a consistent spectral feature.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures corrected minor misprint
- …