4,896 research outputs found
Using M-integral for multi-cracked problems subjected to nonconservative and nonuniform crack surface tractions
AbstractIn this paper, an energy parameter based on the concept of the M-integral is proposed for describing the fracture behavior of a multi-cracked solid subjected to nonconservative and nonuniform crack surface tractions. By using the M-integral with a suitably chosen closed contour, one can evaluate the âsurface creation energyâ (SCE) required for creation of the stressed cracks. Also, it is demonstrated that the property of path-independence holds even under the action of crack surface tractions. Therefore, the singular stress field in the near-tip areas is not directly involved in the calculation so that a complicated finite element model around the crack tips is not required in evaluation of the M-integral
S=1 kagom\'e Ising model with triquadratic interactions, single-ion anisotropy and magnetic field: exact phase diagrams
We consider a S=1 kagom\'e Ising model with triquadratic interactions around
each triangular face of the kagom\'e lattice, single-ion anisotropy and an
applied magnetic field. A mapping establishes an equivalence between the
magnetic canonical partition function of the model and the grand canonical
partition function of a kagom\'e lattice-gas model with localized
three-particle interactions. Since exact phase diagrams are known for
condensation in the one-parameter lattice-gas model, the mapping directly
provides the corresponding exact phase diagrams of the three-parameter S=1
Ising model. As anisotropy competes with interactions, results include the
appearance of confluent singularities effecting changes in the topology of the
phase diagrams, phase boundary curves (magnetic field vs temperature) with
purely positive or negative slopes as well as intermediate cases showing
nonmonotonicity, and coexistence curves (magnetization vs temperature) with
varying shapes and orientations, in some instances entrapping a homogeneous
phase.Comment: 14 pages plus 11 figures; to be published in Physica
Analysis on Effect Decomposition of Industrial COD Emission
AbstractIn this paper, which is based on the effect decomposition model of the emission of pollutants, the change of the industrial COD emission is researched, and a quantitative analysis is carried out for the scale effect, structure effect and technology effect of the industrial COD emission change. The driving factors and causes for this kind of change are identified and the contribution of the three kinds of effects on the pollution reduction is analyzed. The results show that the gradually increasing scale effect is a major factor causing increasing stress on the pollution reduction. The structure effect which is overall low indicates that the activities of optimization and adjustment for the industrial structure have no significant effect. The increment of the generalized technology effect is a main reason for the reduction of the pollution emission. Wherein, the upgrading of industrial technology and the development of scale economy make a great contribution to reduction of pollution. It is an important way to realize the target of pollution reduction by using clean technology effect to offset the new emission and reducing the stock with pollution control effect
Design, fabrication and measurements with a UV Linear-Variable Optical Filter microspectrometer
An IC-Compatible Linear-Variable Optical Filter (LVOF) for application in the UV spectral range between 310 nm and 400 nm has been fabricated using resist reflow and an optimized dry-etching. The LVOF is mounted on the top of a commercially available CMOS camera to result in a UV microspectrometer. A special calibration technique has been employed that is based on an initial spectral measurement on a Xenon lamp. The image recorded on the camera during calibration is used in a signal processing algorithm to reconstruct the spectrum of the Mercury lamp and the calibration data is subsequently used in UV spectral measurements. Experiments on fabricated LVOF-based microspectrometer with this calibration approach implemented reveal a spectral resolution of 0.5 nm
Experimental properties of Bose-Einstein condensates in 1D optical lattices: Bloch oscillations, Landau-Zener tunneling and mean-field effects
We report experimental results on the properties of Bose-Einstein condensates
in 1D optical lattices. By accelerating the lattice, we observed Bloch
oscillations of the condensate in the lowest band, as well as Landau-Zener
(L-Z) tunneling into higher bands when the lattice depth was reduced and/or the
acceleration of the lattice was increased. The dependence of the L-Z tunneling
rate on the condensate density was then related to mean-field effects modifying
the effective potential acting on the condensate, yielding good agreement with
recent theoretical work. We also present several methods for measuring the
lattice depth and discuss the effects of the micromotion in the TOP-trap on our
experimental results.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figure
Pregnancy-related pain in the pelvis ( PPP): Terminology, clinical presentation and prevalence
Pregnancy-related lumbopelvic pain has puzzled medicine for a long time. The present systematic review focuses on terminology, clinical presentation, and prevalence. Numerous terms are used, as if they indicated one and the same entity. We propose âpregnancy-related pelvic girdle pain (PPP)â, and âpregnancy-related low back pain (PLBP)â, present evidence that the two add up to âlumbopelvic painâ, and show that they are distinct entities (although underlying mechanisms may be similar). Average pain intensity during pregnancy is 50Â mm on a visual analogue scale; postpartum, pain is less. During pregnancy, serious pain occurs in about 25%, and severe disability in about 8% of patients. After pregnancy, problems are serious in about 7%. The mechanisms behind disabilities remain unclear, and constitute an important research priority. Changes in muscle activity, unusual perceptions of the leg when moving it, and altered motor coordination were observed but remain poorly understood. Published prevalence for PPP and/or PLBP varies widely. Quantitative analysis was used to explain the differences. Overall, about 45% of all pregnant women and 25% of all women postpartum suffer from PPP and/or PLBP. These values decrease by about 20% if one excludes mild complaints. Strenuous work, previous low back pain, and previous PPP and/or PLBP are risk factors, and the inclusion/exclusion of high-risk subgroups influences prevalence. Of all patients, about one-half have PPP, one-third PLBP, and one-sixth both conditions combined. Overall, the literature reveals that PPP deserves serious attention from the clinical and research communities, at all times and in all countries
Supergravity Solutions for BI Dyons
We construct partially localized supergravity counterpart solutions to the
1/2 supersymmetric non-threshold and the 1/4 supersymmetric threshold bound
state BI dyons in the D3-brane Dirac-Born-Infeld theory. Such supergravity
solutions have all the parameters of the BI dyons. By applying the IIA/IIB
T-duality transformations to these supergravity solutions, we obtain the
supergravity counterpart solutions to 1/2 and 1/4 supersymmetric BIons carrying
electric and magnetic charges of the worldvolume U(1) gauge field in the
Dirac-Born-Infeld theory in other dimensions.Comment: 17 pages, REVTeX, revised version to appear in Phys. Rev.
BPS R-balls in N=4 SYM on R X S^3, Quantum Hall Analogy and AdS/CFT Holography
In this paper, we propose a new approach to study the BPS dynamics in N=4
supersymmetric U(N) Yang-Mills theory on R X S^3, in order to better understand
the emergence of gravity in the gauge theory. Our approach is based on
supersymmetric, space-filling Q-balls with R-charge, which we call R-balls. The
usual collective coordinate method for non-topological scalar solitons is
applied to quantize the half and quarter BPS R-balls. In each case, a different
quantization method is also applied to confirm the results from the collective
coordinate quantization. For finite N, the half BPS R-balls with a U(1)
R-charge have a moduli space which, upon quantization, results in the states of
a quantum Hall droplet with filling factor one. These states are known to
correspond to the ``sources'' in the Lin-Lunin-Maldacena geometries in IIB
supergravity. For large N, we find a new class of quarter BPS R-balls with a
non-commutativity parameter. Quantization on the moduli space of such R-balls
gives rise to a non-commutative Chern-Simons matrix mechanics, which is known
to describe a fractional quantum Hall system. In view of AdS/CFT holography,
this demonstrates a profound connection of emergent quantum gravity with
non-commutative geometry, of which the quantum Hall effect is a special case.Comment: 42 pages, 2 figures; v3: a new paragraph on counting unbroken susy of
NC R-balls and references adde
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