1,413 research outputs found
The influence of thermal transient rates on TBC spallation
During rapid engine throttling operations, turbine airfoils can experience very rapid heating and cooling. These rapid transient events lead to the generation of very high thermal gradients, and consequently, larger non-uniform stress distribution through the thermal barrier coating (TBC) and substrate, which in turn leads to faster coating spallation. To study this phenomenon, a burner rig was designed and built to test coupons under these rapid transient thermal conditions. Coupons were tested to failure under different transient rates. The tests were also simulated using coupled aerothermal CFD and the thermal profiles were matched to the experiment. A fracture mechanics model was also developed to calculate energy release rates under these transient thermal loading. Rationalization of TBC spallation models reported in the literature and our own finite element model with experimental results was done. The details of the experimental set-up, coupon test results, and model correlation with test results will be presented
The local structure of SO2 and SO3 on Ni(1 1 1): a scanned-energy mode photoelectron diffraction study
O 1s and S 2p scanned-energy mode photoelectron diffraction (PhD) data, combined with multiple-scattering simulations, have been used to determine the local adsorption geometry of the SO2 and SO3 species on a Ni(1 1 1) surface. For SO2, the application of reasonable constraints on the molecular conformation used in the simulations leads to the conclusion that the molecule is centred over hollow sites on the surface, with the molecular plane essentially parallel to the surface, and with both S and O atoms offset from atop sites by almost the same distance of 0.65 Å. For SO3, the results are consistent with earlier work which concluded that surface bonding is through the O atoms, with the S atom higher above the surface and the molecular symmetry axis almost perpendicular to the surface. Based on the O 1s PhD data alone, three local adsorption geometries are comparably acceptable, but only one of these is consistent with the results of an earlier normal-incidence X-ray standing wave (NIXSW) study. This optimised structural model differs somewhat from that originally proposed in the NIXSW investigation
The local adsorption structure of methylthiolate and butylthiolate on Au(1 1 1): a photoemission core-level shift investigation
Measurements of the core-level shifts in Au 4f photoemission spectra from Au(1 1 1) at different coverages of methylthiolate and butylthiolate are reported. Adsorption leads to two components in addition to that from the bulk, one at lower photoelectron binding energy attributed to surface atoms not bonded to thiolate species, while the second component has a higher binding energy and is attributed to Au atoms bonded to the surface thiolate. The relative intensities of these surface components for the saturation coverage (mainly (√3 × √3)R30°) phases are discussed in terms of different local adsorption sites in a well-ordered surface, and favour adsorption of the thiolate species atop Au adatoms. Alternative interpretations that might be consistent with an Au-adatom-dithiolate model are discussed, particularly in the context of the possible influence of reduced coverage associated with a disordered surface. Marked differences from previously-reported results for longer-chain alkylthiolate layers are highlighted
Theory of a magnetic microscope with nanometer resolution
We propose a theory for a type of apertureless scanning near field microscopy
that is intended to allow the measurement of magnetism on a nanometer length
scale. A scanning probe, for example a scanning tunneling microscope (STM) tip,
is used to scan a magnetic substrate while a laser is focused on it. The
electric field between the tip and substrate is enhanced in such a way that the
circular polarization due to the Kerr effect, which is normally of order 0.1%
is increased by up to two orders of magnitude for the case of a Ag or W tip and
an Fe sample. Apart from this there is a large background of circular
polarization which is non-magnetic in origin. This circular polarization is
produced by light scattered from the STM tip and substrate. A detailed retarded
calculation for this light-in-light-out experiment is presented.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figure
Detailed Calculation of Test-Mass Charging in the LISA Mission
The electrostatic charging of the LISA test masses due to exposure of the
spacecraft to energetic particles in the space environment has implications in
the design and operation of the gravitational inertial sensors and can affect
the quality of the science data. Robust predictions of charging rates and
associated stochastic fluctuations are therefore required for the exposure
scenarios expected throughout the mission. We report on detailed charging
simulations with the Geant4 toolkit, using comprehensive geometry and physics
models, for Galactic cosmic-ray protons and helium nuclei. These predict
positive charging rates of 50 +e/s (elementary charges per second) for solar
minimum conditions, decreasing by half at solar maximum, and current
fluctuations of up to 30 +e/s/Hz^{1/2}. Charging from sporadic solar events
involving energetic protons was also investigated. Using an event-size
distribution model, we conclude that their impact on the LISA science data is
manageable. Several physical processes hitherto unexplored as potential
charging mechanisms have also been assessed. Significantly, the kinetic
emission of very low-energy secondary electrons due to bombardment of the
inertial sensors by primary cosmic rays and their secondaries can produce
charging currents comparable with the Monte Carlo rates.Comment: 31 pages, 18 figures, 4 tables. to be published in Astroparticle
Physics. Changed due to error found in normalisation of the simulation
result
Retrieval of soil moisture and vegetation water content using SSM/I data over a corn and soybean region
The potential for soil moisture and vegetation water content retrieval using Special Sensor Microwave Imager (SSM/I) brightness temperature over a corn and soybean field region was analyzed and assessed using datasets from the Soil Moisture Experiment 2002 (SMEX02). Soil moisture retrieval was performed using a dual-polarization 19.4-GHz data algorithm that requires the specification of two vegetation parameters¿single scattering albedo and vegetation water content. Single scattering albedo was estimated using published values. A method for estimating the vegetation water content from the microwave polarization index using SSM/I 37.0-GHz data was developed for the region using extensive datasets developed as part of SMEX02. Analyses indicated that the sensitivity of the brightness temperature to soil moisture decreased as vegetation water content increased. However, there was evidence that SSM/I brightness temperatures changed in response to soil moisture increases resulting from rainfall during the later stages of crop growth. This was partly attributed to the lower soil and vegetation thermal temperatures that typically followed a rainfall. Comparisons between experimentally measured volumetric soil moisture and SSM/I-retrieved soil moisture indicated that soil moisture retrieval was feasible using SSM/I data, but the accuracy highly depended upon the levels of vegetation and atmospheric precipitable water; the standard error of estimate over the 3-week study period was 5.49%. The potential for using this approach on a larger scale was demonstrated by mapping the state of Iowa. Results of this investigation provide new insights on how one might operationally correct for vegetation effects using high-frequency microwave observation
The putative proteinase maturation protein A of Streptococcus pneumoniae is a conserved surface protein with potential to elicit protective immune responses
Surface-exposed proteins often play an important role in the interaction
between pathogenic bacteria and their host. We isolated a pool of
hydrophobic, surface-associated proteins of Streptococcus pneumoniae. The
opsonophagocytic activity of hyperimmune serum raised against this protein
fraction was high and species specific. Moreover, the opsonophagocytic
activity was independent of the capsular type and chromosomal genotype of
the pneumococcus. Since the opsonophagocytic activity is presumed to
correlate with in vivo protection, these data indicate that the protein
fraction has the potential to elicit species-specific immune protection
with cross-protection against various pneumococcal strains. Individual
proteins in the extract were purified by two-dimensional gel
electrophoresis. Antibodies raised against three distinct proteins
contributed to the opsonophagocytic activity of the serum. The proteins
were identified by mass spectrometry and N-terminal amino acid sequencing.
Two proteins were the previously characterized pneumococcal surface
protein A and oligopeptide-binding lipoprotein AmiA. The third protein was
the recently identified putative proteinase maturation protein A (PpmA),
which showed homology to members of the family of peptidyl-prolyl
cis/trans isomerases. Immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated that PpmA was
associated with the pneumococcal surface. In addition, PpmA was shown to
elicit species-specific opsonophagocytic antibodies that were
cross-reactive with various pneumococcal strains. This antibody
cross-reactivity was in line with the limited sequence variation of ppmA.
The importance of PpmA in pneumococcal pathogenesis was demonstrated in a
mouse pneumonia model. Pneumococcal ppmA-deficient mutants showed reduced
virulence. The properties of PpmA reported here indicate its potential for
inclusion in multicomponent protein vaccines
Flux-noise spectra around the Kosterlitz-Thouless transition for two-dimensional superconductors
The flux-noise spectra around the Kosterlitz-Thouless transition are obtained
from simulations of the two-dimensional resistively shunted junction model. In
particular the dependence on the distance between the pick-up coil and the
sample is investigated. The typical experimental situation corresponds to the
large- limit and a simple relation valid in this limit between the complex
impedance and the noise spectra is clarified. Features, which distinguish
between the large- and small- limit, are identified and the possibility of
observing these features in experiments is discussed.Comment: 12 pages including 8 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
A new multivariable 6-psi-6 summation formula
By multidimensional matrix inversion, combined with an A_r extension of
Jackson's 8-phi-7 summation formula by Milne, a new multivariable 8-phi-7
summation is derived. By a polynomial argument this 8-phi-7 summation is
transformed to another multivariable 8-phi-7 summation which, by taking a
suitable limit, is reduced to a new multivariable extension of the
nonterminating 6-phi-5 summation. The latter is then extended, by analytic
continuation, to a new multivariable extension of Bailey's very-well-poised
6-psi-6 summation formula.Comment: 16 page
The Capaciousness of No: Affective Refusals as Literacy Practices
© 2020 The Authors. Reading Research Quarterly published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Literacy Association The authors considered the capacious feeling that emerges from saying no to literacy practices, and the affective potential of saying no as a literacy practice. The authors highlight the affective possibilities of saying no to normative understandings of literacy, thinking with a series of vignettes in which children, young people, and teachers refused literacy practices in different ways. The authors use the term capacious to signal possibilities that are as yet unthought: a sense of broadening and opening out through enacting no. The authors examined how attention to affect ruptures humanist logics that inform normative approaches to literacy. Through attention to nonconscious, noncognitive, and transindividual bodily forces and capacities, affect deprivileges the human as the sole agent in an interaction, thus disrupting measurements of who counts as a literate subject and what counts as a literacy event. No is an affective moment. It can signal a pushback, an absence, or a silence. As a theoretical and methodological way of thinking/feeling with literacy, affect proposes problems rather than solutions, countering solution-focused research in which the resistance is to be overcome, co-opted, or solved. Affect operates as a crack or a chink, a tiny ripple, a barely perceivable gesture, that can persist and, in doing so, hold open the possibility for alternative futures
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