1,257 research outputs found
A compendium of sources of fracture toughness and fatigue crack growth data for metallic alloys, part 3
This Technical Memorandum presents sources of fracture toughness and fatigue crack growth data for metallic alloys. This is Part 3 of a three volume report
A compendium of sources of fracture toughness and fatigue crack growth data for metallic alloys, part 4
A collection of sources is presented of fracture toughness and fatigue crack growth data for metallic alloys
Effects of Changing Stress Amplitude on the Rate of Fatigue-Crack Propagation in Two Aluminum Alloys
A series of fatigue tests with specimens subjected to constant amplitude and two-step axial loads were conducted on 12-inch-wide sheet specimens of 2024-T3 and 7075-T6 aluminum alloy to study the effects of a change in stress level on fatigue-crack propagation. Comparison of the results of the tests in which the specimens were tested at first a high and then a low stress level with those of the constant-stress- amplitude tests indicated that crack propagation was generally delayed after the transition to the lower stress level. In the tests in which the specimens were tested at first a low and then a high stress level, crack propagation continued at the expected rate after the change in stress levels
FTIR measurement of cellulose microfibril angle in historic Scots pine wood and its use to detect fungal decay
Microfibril angle (MFA) – the orientation of cellulose fibres in the S2 layer of the secondary cell wall – is a key determinant of the stiffness and strength of timber. The microfibril angle depends on the way in which the timber was grown and its position within the tree. Microfibril angle can be measured by X-ray diffraction and other methods, but the methods in current use are slow or require advanced instrumentation. The aim of this study was to explore the use of polarised Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) microscopy as a relatively fast and inexpensive method for measuring MFA in historic Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.). The FTIR measurements were calibrated against X-ray measurements of MFA in modern Scots pine. We observed a wide range in MFA values and a radial pattern of MFA similar to modern Scots pine in undecayed Scots pine heartwood from sixteenth and seventeenth century beams in Scottish secular buildings. The density of the heartwood was also similar to modern plantation-grown Scots pine despite the much slower growth rate recorded in the ring widths of the historic timber. The sapwood, which had been attacked by both insect pests and fungi, showed an erratic reduction in density and a large increase in MFA compared to the modern material. The increased sapwood MFA was attributed to selective destruction of the S2 layer of the wood cell walls by fungal decay. Using MFA measurements in conjunction with density offers the possibility to estimate the mechanical properties of sound historic pine timber, to detect fungal decay more sensitively than by density alone, and to distinguish between pest and fungal attack in a way that relates directly to the remaining mechanical performance of the timber
The Masses and Shapes of Dark Matter Halos from Galaxy-Galaxy Lensing in the CFHTLS
We present the first galaxy-galaxy weak lensing results using early data from
the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Legacy Survey (CFHTLS). These results are
based on ~22 sq. deg. of i' data. From this data, we estimate the average
velocity dispersion for an L* galaxy at a redshift of 0.3 to be 137 +- 11 km/s,
with a virial mass, M_{200}, of 1.1 +- 0.2 \times 10^{12} h^{-1} Msun and a
rest frame R-band mass-to-light ratio of 173 +- 34 h Msun/Lsun. We also
investigate various possible sources of systematic error in detail.
Additionally, we separate our lens sample into two sub-samples, divided by
apparent magnitude, thus average redshift. From this early data we do not
detect significant evolution in galaxy dark matter halo mass-to-light ratios
from a redshift of 0.45 to 0.27. Finally, we test for non-spherical galaxy dark
matter halos. Our results favor a dark matter halo with an ellipticity of ~0.3
at the 2-sigma level when averaged over all galaxies. If the sample of
foreground lens galaxies is selected to favor ellipticals, the mean halo
ellipticity and significance of this result increase.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, accepted to ApJ, uses emulateap
Chemical and Mechanical Differences between Historic and Modern Scots Pine Wood
Timber is one of the most common historic building materials, but relatively little is known about how it ages in situ. Here we investigate historic and modern Scots pine to determine any chemical or mechanical differences between them. Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) microscopy was used to investigate differences in the chemical composition of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) timber, comparing small samples from historic beams about 500 years old with modern timber. The hemicellulosic acetyl content was reduced by about half in the historic samples, uniformly across the thickness of the beams. A chemical mechanism was therefore suggested for the loss of acetyl groups, as has been observed in paper. In paper, deacetylation and the resulting release of acetic acid are accompanied by loss of strength. Mechanical testing of the historic timber was difficult because the available length of the samples along the grain was only 20 mm. After developing a miniaturized compression test developed for the purpose, it was shown that the relative stiffness of the historic Scots pine samples was reduced by about half compared to modern material
An auxiliary capacitor based ultra-fast drive circuit for shear piezoelectric motors
Shear piezoelectric motors frequently require large voltage changes on very short time scales. Since piezos behave electrically as capacitors, this requires a drive circuit capable of quickly sourcing or sinking a large amount of current at high voltages. Here we describe a novel circuit design using a high voltage amplifier, transistor switching stage, and auxiliary capacitor. This circuit can drive piezoelectric motors at higher speeds and lower costs than conventional methods and with greater flexibility for computer automation. We illustrate its application in a controller for a scanning tunneling microscope coarse approach mechanism and discuss other possible applications and modifications of this circuit.National Science Foundation CAREER programNational Science Foundation MRSEC ProgramResearch Corporation Cottrell Scholarshi
Mass-to-Light Ratios of Galaxy Groups from Weak Lensing
We present the findings of our weak lensing study of a sample of 116 CNOC2
galaxy groups. The lensing signal is used to estimate the mass-to-light ratio
of these galaxy groups. The best fit isothermal sphere model to our lensing
data has an Einstein radius of 0.88"+/-0.12", which corresponds to a
shear-weighted velocity dispersion of 245+/-18 km/s. The mean mass-to-light
ratio within 1 h^-1 Mpc is 185+/-28 h times solar in the B-band and is
independent of radius from the group center.
The signal-to-noise ratio of the shear measurement is sufficient to split the
sample into subsets of "poor" and "rich" galaxy groups. The poor galaxy groups
were found to have an average velocity dispersion of 193+/-38 km/s and a
mass-to-light ratio of 134+/-26 h times solar in the B-band, while the rich
galaxy groups have a velocity dispersion of 270+/-39 km/s and a mass-to-light
ratio of 278+/-42 h times solar in the B-band, similar to the mass-to-light
ratio of clusters. This steep increase in the mass-to-light ratio as a function
of mass, suggests that the mass scale of ~10^13 solar masses is where the
transition between the actively star-forming field environment and the
passively-evolving cluster environment occurs. This is the first such detection
from weak lensing.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ 6 pages, 6 figures, uses emulateap
Analyses of Special Hazards and Flooding Problems in Tropical Island Environments
Data and results summarized in this paper show that development of urban projects and design of flood control works in tropical island catchments must consider clear water flooding as well as special hazards such as landslides, flow bulking, high sediment concentrations, mud and debris flows and flow avulsions. The needs for and methods to estimate peak flows, event volumes and the potential extent and depths of flooding during severe storm events in urbanizing tropical environments are described
The Phase Space and Stellar Populations of Cluster Galaxies at z ~ 1: Simultaneous Constraints on the Location and Timescale of Satellite Quenching
We investigate the velocity vs. position phase space of z ~ 1 cluster
galaxies using a set of 424 spectroscopic redshifts in 9 clusters drawn from
the GCLASS survey. Dividing the galaxy population into three categories:
quiescent, star-forming, and poststarburst, we find that these populations have
distinct distributions in phase space. Most striking are the poststarburst
galaxies, which are commonly found at small clustercentric radii with high
clustercentric velocities, and appear to trace a coherent ``ring" in phase
space. Using several zoom simulations of clusters we show that the coherent
distribution of the poststarbursts can be reasonably well-reproduced using a
simple quenching scenario. Specifically, the phase space is best reproduced if
satellite quenching occurs on a rapid timescale (0.1 < tau_{Q} < 0.5 Gyr) after
galaxies make their first passage of R ~ 0.5R_{200}, a process that takes a
total time of ~ 1 Gyr after first infall. We compare this quenching timescale
to the timescale implied by the stellar populations of the poststarburst
galaxies and find that the poststarburst spectra are well-fit by a rapid
quenching (tau_{Q} = 0.4^{+0.3}_{-0.4} Gyr) of a typical star-forming galaxy.
The similarity between the quenching timescales derived from these independent
indicators is a strong consistency check of the quenching model. Given that the
model implies satellite quenching is rapid, and occurs well within R_{200},
this would suggest that ram-pressure stripping of either the hot or cold gas
component of galaxies are the most plausible candidates for the physical
mechanism. The high cold gas consumption rates at z ~ 1 make it difficult to
determine if hot or cold gas stripping is dominant; however, measurements of
the redshift evolution of the satellite quenching timescale and location may be
capable of distinguishing between the two.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, submitted to the Ap
- …