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VPI Processes and Resin Evaluations for CPA Electrical Windings
High energy density requirements for fieldable electric gun applications has led to the air-core compensated pulsed alternator (CPA) or compulsator as the generator of choice to provide pulse power. The air-core nature of the machines combined with ambitious power density requirements has led to the minimizing of metallic supporting structures which places additional structural requirements on the electrical windings within the generators.Center for Electromechanic
Central mode and soft mode behavior in PbMg1/Nb2/3O3 relaxor ferroelectric
The relaxor ferroelectric PbMg1/Nb2/3O3 was investigated by means of
broad-band dielectric and Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) transmission
spectroscopy in the frequency range from 1 MHz to 15 THz at temperatures
between 20 and 900 K using PMN films on infrared transparent sapphire
substrates. While thin film relaxors display reduced dielectric permittivity at
low frequencies, their high frequency intrinsic or lattice response is shown to
be the same as single crystal/ceramic specemins. It was observed that in
contrast to the results of inelastic neutron scattering, the optic soft mode
was underdamped at all temperatures. On heating, the TO1 soft phonon followed
the Cochran law with an extrapolated critical temperature equal to the Burns
temperature of 670 K and softened down to 50 cm-1. Above 450 K the soft mode
frequency leveled off and slightly increased above the Burns temperature. A
central mode, describing the dynamics of polar nanoclusters appeared below the
Burns temperature at frequencies near the optic soft mode and dramatically
slowed down below 1 MHz on cooling below room temperature. It broadened on
cooling, giving rise to frequency independent losses in microwave and lower
frequency range below the freezing temperature of 200 K. In addition, a new
heavily damped mode appeared in the FTIR spectra below the soft mode frequency
at room temperature and below. The origin of this mode as well as the
discrepancy between the soft mode damping in neutron and infrared spectra is
discussed.Comment: 7 pages with 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Coronal density diagnostics with Helium-like triplets: CHANDRA--LETGS observations of Algol, Capella, Procyon, Eps Eri, Alpha Cen A&B, UX Ari, AD Leo, YY Gem, and HR1099
We present an analysis of ten cool stars (Algol, Capella, Procyon, Eps Eri,
Alpha Cen A&B, UX Ari, AD Leo, YY Gem, and HR1099) observed with the Low Energy
Transmission Grating Spectrometer (LETGS) on board the Chandra X-ray
Observatory. This sample contains all cools stars observed with the LETGS
presently available to us with integration times sufficiently long to warrant a
meaningful spectral analysis. Our sample comprises inactive, moderately active,
and hyperactive stars and samples the bulk part of activity levels encountered
in coronal X-ray sources. We use the LETGS spectra to carry out density and
temperature diagnostics with an emphasis on the H-like and the He-like ions. We
find a correlation between line flux ratios of the Lyman-Alpha and He-like
resonance lines with the mean X-ray surface flux. We determine densities using
the He-like triplets. For active stars we find no significant deviations from
the low-density limit for the ions of Ne, Mg, and Si, while the measured line
ratios for the ions of C, N, and O do show evidence for departures from the
low-density limit in the active stars, but not in the inactive stars. Best
measurements can be made for the OVII triplet where we find significant
deviations from the low-density limit for the stars Algol, Procyon, YY Gem, Eps
Eri, and HR1099. We discuss the influence of radiation fields on the
interpretation of the He-like triplet line ratios in the low-Z ions, which is
relevant for Algol, and the influence of dielectronic satellite lines, which is
relevant for Procyon. For the active stars YY Gem, Eps Eri, and HR1099 the low
f/i ratios can unambiguously be attributed to high densties in the range 1--3
10^10 cm^-3 at OVII temperatures. We find our LETGS spectra to be an extremely
useful tool for plasma diagnostics of stellar coronae.Comment: 17 pages, Latex2e, 12 figures. accepted for A&A under MS262
Long range spin supercurrents in ferromagnetic CrO using a multilayer contact structure
e report measurements of long ranged supercurrents through ferromagnetic and
fully spin-polarized CrO deposited on TiO substrates. In earlier work,
we found supercurrents in films grown on sapphire but not on TiO. Here we
employed a special contact arrangement, consisting of a Ni/Cu sandwich between
the film and the superconducting amorphous MoGe electrodes. The
distance between the contacts was almost a micrometer, and we find the critical
current density to be significantly higher than found in the films deposited on
sapphire. We argue this is due to spin mixing in the Ni/Cu/CrO layer
structure, which is helpful in the generation of the odd-frequency spin triplet
correlations needed to carry the supercurrent.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figure
The X-ray spectra of the flaring and quiescent states of AT Microscopii observed by XMM-Newton
The X-ray spectrum of the late-type M-dwarf binary AT Mic (dM4.5e+dM4.5e) is
observed in the wavelength range 1 - 40 Angstrom by means of rgs and epic-mos
on board XMM-Newton. During the exposure a flare occured. We have performed a
3-temperature fit and a DEM-modeling to the flaring and quiescent part of the
spectrum. We report the coronal temperature distribution, emission measures,
and abundances of the flaring and quiescent state of this bright X-ray source.
The temperature range stretches from about 1 to 60 MK. The total volume
emission measure in this temperature interval is ~12.2*10^51 cm^-3 for the
quiescent state and ~19.5*10^51 cm^-3 for the flare state. This difference is
due to the contribution of the hot temperature component. The high-resolution
spectrum of AT Mic, obtained by rgs, is dominated by the H- and He-like
transitions of C, N, O, and Ne and by Fe XVII lines, produced by the plasma
with temperatures from 1 to 10 MK. The epic-mos spectrum below 10 Angstrom
shows H- and He-like Ne, Si and the iron K-shell transitions. They are produced
by the hot component (30 MK). The iron K-shell is more prominent in the flare
state. The abundance pattern in the quiescent state of AT Mic shows the
depletion of low-FIP elements relative to high-FIP elements, indicating the
presence of an I(nverse)FIP effect in this active star. In the flare state,
however, some flattening of this IFIP effect is present.Comment: 7 pages, 11 figures ordered as: 1, 2ab, 3, 4abc, 5ab, 6a
Gate-tunable band structure of the LaAlO-SrTiO interface
The 2-dimensional electron system at the interface between LaAlO and
SrTiO has several unique properties that can be tuned by an externally
applied gate voltage. In this work, we show that this gate-tunability extends
to the effective band structure of the system. We combine a magnetotransport
study on top-gated Hall bars with self-consistent Schr\"odinger-Poisson
calculations and observe a Lifshitz transition at a density of
cm. Above the transition, the carrier density of one
of the conducting bands decreases with increasing gate voltage. This surprising
decrease is accurately reproduced in the calculations if electronic
correlations are included. These results provide a clear, intuitive picture of
the physics governing the electronic structure at complex oxide interfaces.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
The effect of population variation on the accuracy of sex estimates derived from basal occipital discriminant functions
Multiple discriminant functions that estimate sex from the dimensions of the basal occipital have been published. However, as there is limited exploration of basal dimension variation between groups, the accuracy of these functions when applied to archaeological material is unknown. This study compares basal dimensions between four known sex-at-death post-medieval European samples and explores how metric differences impact on the accuracy of sex assessment discriminant functions. Published data from St Bride’s, London (n = 146) and the Georges Olivier collection, Paris (n = 68) were compared with new data from the eighteenth to nineteenth century Dutch Middenbeemster sample (n = 74) and the early twentieth century Rainer sample, Romania (n = 282) using independent t tests. The Middenbeemster and Rainer data were substituted into six published discriminant functions derived from the St Bride’s and the Georges Olivier samples, and the results were compared to their known sex. Multiple statistically significant differences were found between the four groups. Of the six discriminant functions tested, five failed to reach the published accuracy and fell below chance. In addition, even where the samples were statistically comparable in means, trends for difference also impacted the accuracy of discriminant functions. Enough variation in basal occipital dimensions existed in the European groups to decrease the accuracy of sex estimation discriminant functions to unusable. Possible inter-observer error, varying genetic, socioeconomic, and geographical factors are likely causes of dimension variation. This research further highlights the dangers of using sex estimation discriminant functions on samples that differ to the original derivative population and demonstrates the need for more rigorous testing
Hubbard physics in the symmetric half-filled periodic Anderson-Hubbard model
Two very different methods -- exact diagonalization on finite chains and a
variational method -- are used to study the possibility of a metal-insulator
transition in the symmetric half-filled periodic Anderson-Hubbard model. With
this aim we calculate the density of doubly occupied sites as a function of
various parameters. In the absence of on-site Coulomb interaction ()
between electrons, the two methods yield similar results. The double
occupancy of levels remains always finite just as in the one-dimensional
Hubbard model. Exact diagonalization on finite chains gives the same result for
finite , while the Gutzwiller method leads to a Brinkman-Rice transition
at a critical value (), which depends on and .Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Discovery of Radio Emission from the Quasar SDSS J1536+0441, a Candidate Binary Black-Hole System
The radio-quiet quasar SDSS J1536+0441 shows two broad-line emission systems
that Boroson & Lauer interpret as a candidate binary black-hole system with a
separation of 0.1 pc (0.02 mas). From new VLA imaging at 8.5 GHz, two faint
sources, separated by 0.97 arcsec (5.1 kpc), have been discovered within the
quasar's optical localization region. Each radio source is unresolved, with a
diameter of less than 0.37 arcsec (1.9 kpc). A double radio structure is seen
in some other radio-quiet quasars, and the double may be energized here by the
candidate 0.1-pc binary black-hole system. Alternatively, the radio emission
may arise from a binary system of quasars with a projected separation of 5.1
kpc, and the two quasars may produce the two observed broad-line emission
systems. Binary active galactic nuclei with a kpc scale separation are known
from radio and X-ray observations, and a few such system are expected in the
Boroson & Lauer sample based on the observed clustering of quasars down to the
10 kpc scale. Future observations designed to distinguish between the 0.1 pc
and 5 kpc scales for the binary system are suggested.Comment: 5 pages; 1 figure; emulateapj.cls; to appear in ApJ
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