11,546 research outputs found
Powerhouse Slope Behavior, Fort Peck Dam, Montana
Landslides occurred in the Bearpaw shale slope adjacent to the powerhouses at Fort Peck Dam in the geologic past. Excavation of the slope toe for construction of reservoir outlet works in 1934 initiated progressive sliding of colluvium which continued to 1974. The active slide area had an average movement rate of 4 ft/yr from 1944-1945 and average movement rates of 1-2 ft/yr from 1953-1971. These movements caused no distress to the powerhouses or other facilities. In 1974, the slope was stabilized by excavating 1.6 x 106 cu. yd. of material, resulting in a 1 on 6 overall slope. A field residual strength given by c\u27 = 0.1 ksf, Φ\u27 = 10° or c\u27 = 0, Φ\u27 = 11.5° for effective normal stresses of 3-4 ksf was calculated from the slides using 1950\u27s topography and groundwater levels
Wetting layer thickness and early evolution of epitaxially strained thin films
We propose a physical model which explains the existence of finite thickness
wetting layers in epitaxially strained films. The finite wetting layer is shown
to be stable due to the variation of the non-linear elastic free energy with
film thickness. We show that anisotropic surface tension gives rise to a
metastable enlarged wetting layer. The perturbation amplitude needed to
destabilize this wetting layer decreases with increasing lattice mismatch. We
observe the development of faceted islands in unstable films.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figure
Stress-driven instability in growing multilayer films
We investigate the stress-driven morphological instability of epitaxially
growing multilayer films, which are coherent and dislocation-free. We construct
a direct elastic analysis, from which we determine the elastic state of the
system recursively in terms of that of the old states of the buried layers. In
turn, we use the result for the elastic state to derive the morphological
evolution equation of surface profile to first order of perturbations, with the
solution explicitly expressed by the growth conditions and material parameters
of all the deposited layers. We apply these results to two kinds of multilayer
structures. One is the alternating tensile/compressive multilayer structure,
for which we determine the effective stability properties, including the effect
of varying surface mobility in different layers, its interplay with the global
misfit of the multilayer film, and the influence of asymmetric structure of
compressive and tensile layers on the system stability. The nature of the
asymmetry properties found in stability diagrams is in agreement with
experimental observations. The other multilayer structure that we study is one
composed of stacked strained/spacer layers. We also calculate the kinetic
critical thickness for the onset of morphological instability and obtain its
reduction and saturation as number of deposited layers increases, which is
consistent with recent experimental results. Compared to the single-layer film
growth, the behavior of kinetic critical thickness shows deviations for upper
strained layers.Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures; Phys. Rev. B, in pres
Obtaining Hemocytes from the Hawaiian Bobtail Squid Euprymna scolopes and Observing their Adherence to Symbiotic and Non-Symbiotic Bacteria
Studies concerning the role of the immune system in mediating molecular signaling between beneficial bacteria and their hosts have, in recent years, made significant contributions to our understanding of the co-evolution of eukaryotes with their microbiota. The symbiotic association between the Hawaiian bobtail squid, Euprymna scolopes and the bioluminescent bacterium Vibrio fischeri has been utilized as a model system for understanding the effects of beneficial bacteria on animal development. Recent studies have shown that macrophage-like hemocytes, the sole cellular component of the squid host's innate immune system, likely play an important role in mediating the establishment and maintenance of this association. This protocol will demonstrate how to obtain hemocytes from E. scolopes and then use these cells in bacterial binding assays. Adult squid are first anesthetized before hemolymph is collected by syringe from the main cephalic blood vessel. The host hemocytes, contained in the extracted hemolymph, are adhered to chambered glass coverslips and then exposed to green fluorescent protein-labeled symbiotic Vibrio fischeri and non-symbiotic Vibrio harveyi. The hemocytes are counterstained with a fluorescent dye (Cell Tracker Orange, Invitrogen) and then visualized using fluorescent microscopy
Navigation input to level C OFT navigation functional subsystem software requirements (rendezvous onorbit-2)
Navigation software design requirements are presented for the orbital flight test phase of space shuttle. Computer loads for the entire onorbit-2 operation are documented
- …