81,560 research outputs found

    Stress intensity at a crack between bonded dissimilar materials

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    The contour integral method is extended to general boundary value problems involving imperfect bonding of dissimilar materials. The loading and restraints are shown to have a significant effect on the stress intensity. Example problems are presented to illustrate the results

    Factor income taxation and growth with increasing integration of world capital markets

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    In a closed economy, the infinite-horizon and the overlapping generations (OG) model prescribe diametrically opposite policies on factor taxation: the former argues that the growth-maximizing capital income tax rate should be set to zero, whereas the latter argues that it should be set as high as possible. This note investigates the issue by taking into account global capital market integration. We show that the long-run growth-maximizing capital income tax rate in a small open OG economy is decreasing as the economy's capital market is increasingly integrated with the rest of the world, and will be equal to zero as prescribed in the infinite-horizon model once the degree of integration becomes sufficiently high.Capital mobility, Endogenous growth, Factor income taxation, Overlapping generations, Small open economy

    Identification of stromal cells in spleen which support myelopoiesis

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    Stromal cells in spleen organize tissue into red pulp, white pulp and marginal zone, and also interact with hematopoietic cells to regulate immune responses. This study has used phenotypic information of a previously described spleen stromal cell line called 5G3, which supports restricted hematopoiesis in vitro, to identify an equivalent stromal cell subset in vivo and to test its capacity to support hematopoiesis. Using stromal cell fractionation, phenotypic analysis, as well as cell growth and hematopoietic support assays, the Sca-1+gp38+Thy1.2+CD29+CD51+ fraction of spleen stroma has been identified as an equivalent stromal subset resembling the 5G3 cell counterpart. While heterogeneity may still exist within that subset, it has been shown to have superior hematopoietic support capacity compared with the 5G3 cell line, and all other spleen stromal cell fractions tested.This work was supported by project grants to HO from the Australian Research Council (#DP130101703) and the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (#585443). HL was supported by an Australian National University Postgraduate Scholarship

    Neutron Stars with Bose-Einstein Condensation of Antikaons as MIT Bags

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    We investigate the properties of an antikaon in medium, regarding itas a MIT bag. We first construct the MIT bag model for a kaon withσ∗\sigma^* and ϕ\phi in order to describe the interaction ofss-quarks in hyperonic matter in the framework of the modifiedquark-meson coupling model. The coupling constant gσ′BKg'^{B_K}_\sigmain the density-dependent bag constant B(σ)B(\sigma) is treated as afree parameter to reproduce the optical potential of a kaon in asymmetric matter and all other couplings are determined by usingSU(6) symmetry and the quark counting rule. With various values ofthe kaon potential, we calculate the effective mass of a kaon inmedium to compare it with that of a point-like kaon. We thencalculate the population of octet baryons, leptons and K−K^- and theequation of state for neutron star matter. The results show thatkaon condensation in hyperonic matter is sensitive to the ss-quarkinteraction and also to the way of treating the kaon. The mass andthe radius of a neutron star are obtained by solving theTolmann-Oppenheimer-Volkoff equation.Comment: 14 figure

    One-dimensional kinetic description of nonlinear traveling-pulse (soliton) and traveling-wave disturbances in long coasting charged particle beams

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    This paper makes use of a one-dimensional kinetic model to investigate the nonlinear longitudinal dynamics of a long coasting beam propagating through a perfectly conducting circular pipe with radius rwr_{w}. The average axial electric field is expressed as ⟨Ez⟩=−(∂/∂z)⟨ϕ⟩=−ebg0∂λb/∂z−ebg2rw2∂3λb/∂z3\langle E_{z}\rangle=-(\partial/\partial z)\langle\phi\rangle=-e_{b}g_{0}\partial\lambda_{b}/\partial z-e_{b}g_{2}r_{w}^{2}\partial^{3}\lambda_{b}/\partial z^{3}, where g0g_{0} and g2g_{2} are constant geometric factors, λb(z,t)=∫dpzFb(z,pz,t)\lambda_{b}(z,t)=\int dp_{z}F_{b}(z,p_{z},t) is the line density of beam particles, and Fb(z,pz,t)F_{b}(z,p_{z},t) satisfies the 1D Vlasov equation. Detailed nonlinear properties of traveling-wave and traveling-pulse (solitons) solutions with time-stationary waveform are examined for a wide range of system parameters extending from moderate-amplitudes to large-amplitude modulations of the beam charge density. Two classes of solutions for the beam distribution function are considered, corresponding to: (a) the nonlinear waterbag distribution, where Fb=const.F_{b}=const. in a bounded region of pzp_{z}-space; and (b) nonlinear Bernstein-Green-Kruskal (BGK)-like solutions, allowing for both trapped and untrapped particle distributions to interact with the self-generated electric field ⟨Ez⟩\langle E_{z}\rangle. .Comment: 42 pages, 17 figure
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