2,712 research outputs found
Cobalt base superalloy has outstanding properties up to 1478 K (2200 F)
Alloy VM-103 is especially promising for use in applications requiring short time exposure to very high temperatures. Its properties over broad range of temperatures are superior to those of comparable commercial wrought cobalt-base superalloys, L-605 and HS-188
Research Note:<br>Derivation of temperature lapse rates in semi-arid south-eastern Arizona
International audienceEcological and hydrological modelling at the regional scale requires distributed information on weather variables, and temperature is important among these. In an area of basin and range topography with a wide range of elevations, such as south-eastern Arizona, measurements are usually available only at a relatively small number of locations and elevations, and temperatures elsewhere must be estimated from atmospheric lapse rate. This paper derives the lapse rates to estimate maximum, minimum and mean daily temperatures from elevation. Lapse rates were calculated using air temperatures at 2 m collected during 2002 at 18 locations across south-eastern Arizona, with elevations from 779 to 2512 m. The lapse rate predicted for the minimum temperature was lower than the mean environmental lapse rate (MELR), i.e. 6 K km?1, whereas those predicted for the mean and maximum daily temperature were very similar to the MELR. Lapse rates were also derived from radiosonde data at 00 and 12 UTC (5 pm and 5 am local time, respectively). The lapse rates calculated from radiosonde data were greater than those from the 2 m measurements, presumably because the effect of the surface was less. Given temperatures measured at Tucson airport, temperatures at the other sites were predicted using the different estimates of lapse rates. The best predictions of temperatures used the locally predicted lapse rates. In the case of maximum and mean temperature, using the MELR also resulted in accurate predictions. Keywords: near surface lapse rates, semi-arid climate, mean minimum and maximum temperatures, basin and range topograph
Burst avalanches in solvable models of fibrous materials
We review limiting models for fracture in bundles of fibers, with
statistically distributed thresholds for breakdown of individual fibers. During
the breakdown process, avalanches consisting of simultaneous rupture of several
fibers occur, and the distribution of the magnitude of
such avalanches is the central characteristics in our analysis. For a bundle of
parallel fibers two limiting models of load sharing are studied and contrasted:
the global model in which the load carried by a bursting fiber is equally
distributed among the surviving members, and the local model in which the
nearest surviving neighbors take up the load. For the global model we
investigate in particular the conditions on the threshold distribution which
would lead to anomalous behavior, i.e. deviations from the asymptotics
, known to be the generic behavior. For the local
model no universal power-law asymptotics exists, but we show for a particular
threshold distribution how the avalanche distribution can nevertheless be
explicitly calculated in the large-bundle limit.Comment: 28 pages, RevTeX, 3 Postscript figure
The Post-Common Envelope and Pre-Cataclysmic Binary PG 1224+309
We have made extensive spectroscopic and photometric observations of PG
1224+309, a close binary containing a DA white dwarf primary and an M4+
secondary. The H alpha line is in emission due to irradiation of the M-star by
the hot white dwarf and is seen to vary around the orbit. From the radial
velocities of the H alpha line we derive a period of P = 0.258689 +/- 0.000004
days and a semi-amplitude of K_Halpha = 160 +/- 8 km/s. We estimate a
correction Delta_K = 21 +/- 2 km/s, where K_M = K_Halpha + Delta_K. Radial
velocity variations of the white dwarf reveal a semi-amplitude of K_WD = 112
+/- 14 km/s. The blue spectrum of the white dwarf is well fit by a synthetic
spectrum having T_eff = 29,300 K and log(g) = 7.38. The white dwarf contributes
97% of the light at 4500 Angstroms and virtually all of the light blueward of
3800 Angstroms. No eclipses are observed. The mass inferred for the white dwarf
depends on the assumed mass of the thin residual hydrogen envelope: 0.40 < M_WD
< 0.45 solar masses for hydrogen envelope masses of 0 < M_H < 4.0E-4 solar
masses. We argue that the mass of the white dwarf is closer to 0.45 solar
masses, hence it appears that the white dwarf has a relatively large residual
hydrogen envelope. The mass of the M-star is then M_M = 0.28 +/- 0.05 solar
masses, and the inclination is i = 77 +/- 7 degrees. We discuss briefly how PG
1224+309 may be used to constrain theories of close binary star evolution, and
the past and future histories of PG 1224+309 itself. The star is both a
``post-common envelope'' star and a ``pre-cataclysmic binary'' star. Mass
transfer by Roche-lobe overflow should commence in about 10 Gyr.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, AAS LaTeX, to appear in AJ, March 199
Parametric coupling between macroscopic quantum resonators
Time-dependent linear coupling between macroscopic quantum resonator modes
generates both a parametric amplification also known as a {}"squeezing
operation" and a beam splitter operation, analogous to quantum optical systems.
These operations, when applied properly, can robustly generate entanglement and
squeezing for the quantum resonator modes. Here, we present such coupling
schemes between a nanomechanical resonator and a superconducting electrical
resonator using applied microwave voltages as well as between two
superconducting lumped-element electrical resonators using a r.f.
SQUID-mediated tunable coupler. By calculating the logarithmic negativity of
the partially transposed density matrix, we quantitatively study the
entanglement generated at finite temperatures. We also show that
characterization of the nanomechanical resonator state after the quantum
operations can be achieved by detecting the electrical resonator only. Thus,
one of the electrical resonator modes can act as a probe to measure the
entanglement of the coupled systems and the degree of squeezing for the other
resonator mode.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, submitte
Racial/ethnic differences in hepatic steatosis in a populationâbased cohort of postâmenopausal women: the Michigan Study of Women's Health Across the Nation
Aims The prevalence of hepatic steatosis may differ between postâmenopausal AfricanâAmerican women and nonâHispanic white women and by sex hormone binding globulin level. We examined prevalence of hepatic steatosis by race/ethnicity and associations with sex hormone binding globulin. Methods Participants included postâmenopausal women who underwent hepatic ultrasound ( n  = 345) at the Michigan site of the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation, a populationâbased study. We examined hepatic steatosis prevalence by race/ethnicity and used logistic regression models to calculate the odds of hepatic steatosis with race/ethnicity and sex hormone binding globulin, after adjustment for age, alcohol use, waist circumference, high density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglycerides, systolic blood pressure and use of medications reported to lower intrahepatic fat. Results Fewer AfricanâAmerican women than nonâHispanic white women had hepatic steatosis (23 vs. 36%, P  = 0.01). AfricanâAmerican women had lower triglyceride and lowâdensity lipoprotein cholesterol levels, but higher blood pressure and follicleâstimulating hormone levels ( P  < 0.05). In the optimalâfitting multivariable models, women in the highest tertile of sex hormone binding globulin (60.2â220.3 nmol/l) had a lower odds of hepatic steatosis (odds ratio 0.43, 95% CI 0.20â0.93) compared with women in the lowest tertile of sex hormone binding globulin (10.5â40.3 nmol/l). There was an interaction between race/ethnicity and medication use whereby nonâHispanic white women using medications had three times higher odds of hepatic steatosis compared with AfricanâAmerican women not using medications (odds ratio 3.36, 95% CI 1.07â10.58). Interactions between race/ethnicity and other variables, including sex hormone levels, were not significant. Conclusions Hepatic steatosis on ultrasound may be more common in postâmenopausal nonâHispanic white women than AfricanâAmerican women and was associated with lower levels of sex hormone binding globulin. What's new? Although hepatic steatosis is common in postâmenopausal women, previous studies have not examined risk factors in this population, particularly sex steroids and sex hormone binding globulin. We report that increased sex hormone binding globulin, the primary binding protein of sex hormones and a risk factor for diabetes, was strongly associated with decreased odds of hepatic steatosis in both race/ethnicities.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/101792/1/dme12225.pd
Lattice-Boltzmann and finite-difference simulations for the permeability for three-dimensional porous media
Numerical micropermeametry is performed on three dimensional porous samples
having a linear size of approximately 3 mm and a resolution of 7.5 m. One
of the samples is a microtomographic image of Fontainebleau sandstone. Two of
the samples are stochastic reconstructions with the same porosity, specific
surface area, and two-point correlation function as the Fontainebleau sample.
The fourth sample is a physical model which mimics the processes of
sedimentation, compaction and diagenesis of Fontainebleau sandstone. The
permeabilities of these samples are determined by numerically solving at low
Reynolds numbers the appropriate Stokes equations in the pore spaces of the
samples. The physical diagenesis model appears to reproduce the permeability of
the real sandstone sample quite accurately, while the permeabilities of the
stochastic reconstructions deviate from the latter by at least an order of
magnitude. This finding confirms earlier qualitative predictions based on local
porosity theory. Two numerical algorithms were used in these simulations. One
is based on the lattice-Boltzmann method, and the other on conventional
finite-difference techniques. The accuracy of these two methods is discussed
and compared, also with experiment.Comment: to appear in: Phys.Rev.E (2002), 32 pages, Latex, 1 Figur
Spectroscopy of Blue Stragglers and Turnoff Stars in M67 (NGC 2682)
We have analyzed high-resolution spectra of relatively cool blue stragglers
and main sequence turnoff stars in the old open cluster M67 (NGC 2682). We
attempt to identify blue stragglers whose spectra are least contaminated by
binary effects (contamination by a binary companion or absorption by
circumstellar material). These ``best'' stragglers have metallicities ([Fe/H] =
-0.05) and abundance ratios of the blue stragglers are not significantly
different from those of the turnoff stars. Based on arguments from
hydrodynamical models of stellar collisions, we assert that the current upper
limits for the lithium abundances of all blue stragglers observed in M67 (by us
and others) are consistent with no mixing during the formation process,
assuming pre-main sequence and main sequence depletion patterns observed for
M67 main sequence stars. We discuss composition signatures that could more
definitively distinguish between blue straggler formation mechanisms in open
cluster stars.
We confirm the spectroscopic detection of a binary companion to the straggler
S 1082. From our spectra, we measure a projected rotational speed of 90+/-20
km/sec for the secondary, and find that its radial velocity varies with a
peak-to-peak amplitude of ~ 25 km/sec. Because the radial velocities do not
vary with a period corresponding to the partial eclipses in the system, we
believe this system is currently undergoing mass transfer. In addition we
present evidence that S 984 is a true blue straggler (and not an unresolved
pair). If this can be proven, our detection of lithium may indicate a
collisional origin.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures, to appear in October 2000 A
Keep Your Stats in the Cloud! Evaluating the Use of Google Sheets to Teach Quantitative Methods
Teaching quantitative methods at the undergraduate level is a difficult yet rewarding endeavor due to the challenges instructors face in presenting the material. One way to bolster student learning is through the use of statistical software packages. Google Sheets is a cloud-based spreadsheet program capable of many basic statistical procedures, which has yet to be evaluated for use in quantitative methods courses. This article contains pros and cons to using Google Sheets in the classroom and provides an evaluation of student attitudes toward using Google Sheets in an introductory quantitative methods class. The results suggest favorable student attitudes toward Google Sheets and which attitudes toward Google Sheets show a positive relationship with quantitative self-efficacy. Thus, based on the positive student attitudes and the unique features of Google Sheets, it is a viable program to use in introductory methods classes. However, due to limited functionality, Google Sheets may not be useful for more advanced courses. Future research may want to evaluate the use of third-party Google Sheets applications, which can increase functionality, and the use of Google Sheets in online classes
Attachment Styles Within the Coach-Athlete Dyad: Preliminary Investigation and Assessment Development
The present preliminary study aimed to develop and examine the psychometric properties of a new sport-specific self-report instrument designed to assess athletesâ and coachesâ attachment styles. The development and initial validation comprised three main phases. In Phase 1, a pool of items was generated based on pre-existing self-report attachment instruments, modified to reflect a coach and an athleteâs style of attachment. In Phase 2, the content validity of the items was assessed by a panel of experts. A final scale was developed and administered to 405 coaches and 298 athletes (N = 703 participants). In Phase 3, confirmatory factor analysis of the obtained data was conducted to determine the final items of the Coach-Athlete Attachment Scale (CAAS). Confirmatory factor analysis revealed acceptable goodness of fit indexes for a 3-first order factor model as well as a 2-first order factor model for both the athlete and the coach data, respectively. A secure attachment style positively predicted relationship satisfaction, while an insecure attachment style was a negative predictor of relationship satisfaction. The CAAS revealed initial psychometric properties of content, factorial, and predictive validity, as well as reliability
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