4,052 research outputs found
Planar Josephson Tunnel Junctions in a Transverse Magnetic Field
Traditionally, since the discovery of the Josephson effect in 1962, the
magnetic diffraction pattern of planar Josephson tunnel junctions has been
recorded with the field applied in the plane of the junction. Here we discuss
the static junction properties in a transverse magnetic field where
demagnetization effects imposed by the junction geometry and configuration of
the electrodes are important. Measurements of the critical current versus
magnetic field in planar Nb-based high-quality junctions with different
geometry, size and critical current density show that it is advantageous to use
a transverse magnetic field rather than an in-plane field to suppress the
Josephson tunnel current and Fiske resonances in practical applications.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Journal of Applied Physic
A Comparison of Ultraviolet, Optical, and X-Ray Imagery of Selected Fields in the Cygnus Loop
During the Astro-1 and Astro-2 Space Shuttle missions in 1990 and 1995, far
ultraviolet (FUV) images of five 40' diameter fields around the rim of the
Cygnus Loop supernova remnant were observed with the Ultraviolet Imaging
Telescope (UIT). These fields sampled a broad range of conditions including
both radiative and nonradiative shocks in various geometries and physical
scales. In these shocks, the UIT B5 band samples predominantly CIV 1550 and the
hydrogen two-photon recombination continuum. Smaller contri- butions are made
by emission lines of HeII 1640 and OIII] 1665. We present these new FUV images
and compare them with optical Halpha and [OIII], and ROSAT HRI X-ray images.
Comparing the UIT images with those from the other bands provides new insights
into the spatial variations and locations of these different types of emission.
By comparing against shock model calculations and published FUV spectroscopy at
select locations, we surmise that resonance scattering in the strong FUV
permitted lines is widespread in the Cygnus Loop, especially in the bright
optical filaments typically selected for observation in most previous studies.Comment: 21 pages with 10 figures. See http://www.pha.jhu.edu/~danforth/uit/
for full-resolution figure
FUSE Observations of the Dwarf Nova SW UMa During Quiescence
We present spectroscopic observations of the short-period cataclysmic
variable SW Ursa Majoris, obtained by the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic
Explorer (FUSE) satellite while the system was in quiescence. The data include
the resonance lines of O VI at 1031.91 and 1037.61 A. These lines are present
in emission, and they exhibit both narrow (~ 150 km/s) and broad (~ 2000 km/s)
components. The narrow O VI emission lines exhibit unusual double-peaked and
redshifted profiles. We attribute the source of this emission to a cooling flow
onto the surface of the white dwarf primary. The broad O VI emission most
likely originates in a thin, photoionized surface layer on the accretion disk.
We searched for emission from H_2 at 1050 and 1100 A, motivated by the
expectation that the bulk of the quiescent accretion disk is in the form of
cool, molecular gas. If H_2 is present, then our limits on the fluxes of the
H_2 lines are consistent with the presence of a surface layer of atomic H that
shields the interior of the disk. These results may indicate that accretion
operates primarily in the surface layers of the disk in SW UMa. We also
investigate the far-UV continuum of SW UMa and place an upper limit of 15,000 K
on the effective temperature of the white dwarf.Comment: 21 Pages, 3 figures, to be published in Ap
An XMM-Newton Observation of the Local Bubble Using a Shadowing Filament in the Southern Galactic Hemisphere
We present an analysis of the X-ray spectrum of the Local Bubble, obtained by
simultaneously analyzing spectra from two XMM-Newton pointings on and off an
absorbing filament in the Southern galactic hemisphere (b ~ -45 deg). We use
the difference in the Galactic column density in these two directions to deduce
the contributions of the unabsorbed foreground emission due to the Local
Bubble, and the absorbed emission from the Galactic halo and the extragalactic
background. We find the Local Bubble emission is consistent with emission from
a plasma in collisional ionization equilibrium with a temperature and an emission measure of 0.018 cm^{-6} pc. Our
measured temperature is in good agreement with values obtained from ROSAT
All-Sky Survey data, but is lower than that measured by other recent XMM-Newton
observations of the Local Bubble, which find
(although for some of these observations it is possible that the foreground
emission is contaminated by non-Local Bubble emission from Loop I). The higher
temperature observed towards other directions is inconsistent with our data,
when combined with a FUSE measurement of the Galactic halo O VI intensity. This
therefore suggests that the Local Bubble is thermally anisotropic.
Our data are unable to rule out a non-equilibrium model in which the plasma
is underionized. However, an overionized recombining plasma model, while
observationally acceptable for certain densities and temperatures, generally
gives an implausibly young age for the Local Bubble (\la 6 \times 10^5 yr).Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 16 pages, 9
figure
Oxycodone Ingestion Patterns in Acute Fracture Pain: a Pilot Study Using a Digital Pill
Background: Opioids are prescribed for acute pain as needed, but no data exists on how patients take opioids after discharge from the ED. This places the onus of dosing on the patient and contributes to variable prescribing by ED physicians. ED opioid prescriptions serve as a source for unintentional exposure and contribute to the opioid epidemic. We deployed a digital pill to measure opioid ingestion patterns in individuals discharged after acute fractures.
Methods: This pilot study involved individuals without chronic opioid use (i.e. prescribed opioids \u3e 1 week) who were discharged from the ED following acute fracture. Participants were trained to use a digital pill system comprising a single pill (5 mg oxycodone tablet + radiofrequency emitter) and a hip mounted receiver. Upon contact with gastric contents, the digital pill transmitted a radio signal to the receiver, which relayed time of ingestion via cellular 3G signal in real-time to a cloud based server. Participants were instructed to take 1-2 oxycodone digital pills as needed every 8 hours for pain. Participants returned unused medication at orthopedic follow up or 1 week post discharge where any discrepancies between digital pill data and pill counts were reconciled.
Results: We enrolled 10 participants (mean age 42). 50% of fractures were managed operatively and 50% were managed nonoperatively. The system recorded ingestions with 85% accuracy. Participants ingested a mean 43 mg oxycodone during the 1 week study period with dose de-escalation occurring after 24 hours. Participants ingested a mean 75.8% of their 1 week total dose in the first 72 hours. 40% of participants stopped taking opioids by 96 hours. 40% of participants remained on opioids 1 week after injury; all required operative treatment.
Conclusions: This is the first study to determine opioid ingestion patterns in ED patients discharged with acute fracture pain. Participants self-tapered opioids after 24 hours, most ingestion occurred in the first 72 hours, and a substantial proportion (40%) stopped ingesting oxycodone by 96 hours. Our data shows individuals may require less opioid analgesics than previously considered for acute fracture pain. Additional studies should address ingestion patterns in other painful conditions and development of ED-based interventions to minimize outpatient opioid use while controlling pain
Universal restrictions to the conversion of heat into work derived from the analysis of the Nernst theorem as a uniform limit
We revisit the relationship between the Nernst theorem and the Kelvin-Planck
statement of the second law. We propose that the exchange of entropy uniformly
vanishes as the temperature goes to zero. The analysis of this assumption shows
that is equivalent to the fact that the compensation of a Carnot engine scales
with the absorbed heat so that the Nernst theorem should be embedded in the
statement of the second law.
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Se analiza la relaci{\'o}n entre el teorema de Nernst y el enunciado de
Kelvin-Planck del segundo principio de la termodin{\'a}mica. Se{\~n}alamos el
hecho de que el cambio de entrop{\'\i}a tiende uniformemente a cero cuando la
temperatura tiende a cero. El an{\'a}lisis de esta hip{\'o}tesis muestra que es
equivalente al hecho de que la compensaci{\'o}n de una m{\'a}quina de Carnot
escala con el calor absorbido del foco caliente, de forma que el teorema de
Nernst puede derivarse del enunciado del segundo principio.Comment: 8pp, 4 ff. Original in english. Also available translation into
spanish. Twocolumn format. RevTe
Dynamical Masses for Low-Mass Pre-Main Sequence Stars: A Preliminary Physical Orbit for HD 98800 B
We report on Keck Interferometer observations of the double-lined binary (B)
component of the quadruple pre-main sequence (PMS) system HD 98800. With these
interferometric observations combined with astrometric measurements made by the
Hubble Space Telescope Fine Guidance Sensors (FGS), and published radial
velocity observations we have estimated preliminary visual and physical orbits
of the HD 98800 B subsystem. Our orbit model calls for an inclination of 66.8
3.2 deg, and allows us to infer the masses and luminosities of the
individual components. In particular we find component masses of 0.699
0.064 and 0.582 0.051 M_{\sun} for the Ba (primary) and Bb (secondary)
components respectively.
Modeling of the component SEDs finds temperatures and luminosities in
agreement with previous studies, and coupled with the component mass estimates
allows for comparison with PMS models in the low-mass regime with few empirical
constraints. Solar abundance models seem to under-predict the inferred
component temperatures and luminosities, while assuming slightly sub-solar
abundances bring the models and observations into better agreement. The present
preliminary orbit does not yet place significant constraints on existing
pre-main sequence stellar models, but prospects for additional observations
improving the orbit model and component parameters are very good.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures, ApJ in press; tables 2 and 3 to be included in
ApJ versio
Reassurance Policing and Signal Crimes
A reassurance function for policing was first considered by American psychologist Charles Bahn (1974: 338) as “feelings of safety that a citizen experiences when he knows that a police officer or patrol car is nearby.” This idea was taken forward in Britain by Martin Innes and colleagues in the early 2000s through the development of a signal crimes perspective. At this time, British policing implemented a National Reassurance Policing Programme (NRPP) where local policing priorities were decided through consultation with local communities. The impact of reassurance policing has since spread and the approach has also been considered in Australia, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Sweden.
In this entry, the background to reassurance policing is considered with particular reference to the work of Charles Bahn and Martin Innes and colleagues. The development of a policy of reassurance policing in Britain is also examined. The successes and limitations of the approach are considered and three main issues identified: that reassurance needs to be a consideration for all policing; that increases in visible patrol need to be questioned (especially at a time of budget restraint); and that reassurance policing has the potential to be a model of democratic policing, but only if consultation is truly inclusive, for instance, including those that have been victimized and groups that have been targets of police activity such as young people, the homeless, and other minority and marginalized groups
Chokka squid on the Agulhas Bank: life history and ecology
Available knowledge is reviewed and new data incorporated in a synthesis of the life history and ecology of the chokka squid Loligo vulgaris reynaudii. We attempt to show that these aspects are essential to rational management of the resource. The life cycle is descriptionbed in detail from the egg to adult stage, mainly in biological terms, including a comprehensive descriptionption of maturation, migration and reproduction. Possible ecological interactions, particularly those of paralarvae and copepods, are discussed. Predator-prey relationships and the current state of knowledge on the effect of the physical environment on squid availability and abundance are summarized
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