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Solidification behavior and microstructural evolution of near-eutectic Zn-Al alloys under intensive shear
Copyright @ 2009 ASM International. This paper was published in Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A, 40(1), 185 - 195 and is made
available as an electronic reprint with the permission of ASM International. One print or electronic copy may
be made for personal use only. Systematic or multiple reproduction, distribution to multiple locations via
electronic or other means, duplications of any material in this paper for a fee or for commercial purposes, or
modification of the content of this paper are prohibited.The effect of intensive shear on the solidification behavior and microstructural evolution of binary Zn-Al alloys is presented at hypoeutectic, eutectic, and hypereutectic compositions. It is found that the intensive shear, applied on the eutectic melt prior to solidification at a temperature above but close the eutectic temperature, can significantly reduce the size of eutectic cells, but the solidified microstructure still remains the lamellar morphology. For applying intensive shear on the melt during solidification, the nucleation occurs at temperatures very close to the equilibrium condition and requires very small undercooling for both the primary solidification and the eutectic solidification. The intensive shear can significantly alter the microstructural morphology. In contrast to the dendritic morphology formed in the conventional solidification, the primary Al-rich phase in hypoeutectic Zn-Al alloy and the primary Zn-rich phase in hypereutectic Zn-Al alloy under intensive shear exhibit fine and spherical particles, respectively. The lamellae morphology of Zn-rich phase and Al-rich phase formed in the conventional eutectic solidification exhibit fine and spherical particles. The increase of intensity of shear promotes the independence of solid Zn-rich particles and Al-rich particles during the eutectic solidification, resulting in the uniform and separate distribution of two solid particles in the matrix. It is speculated that the high intensity of shear can result in the independent nucleation of individual eutectic phase throughout the whole melt, and the separate growth of solid phases in the subsequent solidification
Building Blocks of Physical States in a Non-Critical 3-Brane on R*S^3
The physical states in a world-volume model of a non-critical 3-brane are
systematically constructed using techniques of four-dimensional conformal field
theories on R*S^3 developed recently. Invariant combinations of creation modes
under a special conformal transformation provide building blocks of physical
states. Any state can be created by acting with such building blocks on a
conformally invariant vacuum in an invariant way under the other conformal
charges: the Hamiltonian and rotation generators on S^3. We explicitly
construct building blocks for scalar, vector and gravitational fields, and
classify them as finite types.Comment: 56 page
Dietary patterns of households in Scotland : Differences by level of deprivation and associations with dietary goals
Funding This work was supported by the Scottish Government’s Rural and Environment Science and Analytical Services (RESAS) Division.Peer reviewedPostprin
Chromospheric evaporation in sympathetic coronal bright points
{Chromospheric evaporation is a key process in solar flares that has
extensively been investigated using the spectroscopic observations. However,
direct soft X-ray (SXR) imaging of the process is rare, especially in remote
brightenings associated with the primary flares that have recently attracted
dramatic attention.} {We intend to find the evidence for chromospheric
evaporation and figure out the cause of the process in sympathetic coronal
bright points (CBPs), i.e., remote brightenings induced by the primary CBP.}
{We utilise the high-cadence and high-resolution SXR observations of CBPs from
the X-ray Telescope (XRT) aboard the Hinode spacecraft on 2009 August 23.} {We
discover thermal conduction front propagating from the primary CBP, i.e., BP1,
to one of the sympathetic CBPs, i.e., BP2 that is 60\arcsec away from BP1.
The apparent velocity of the thermal conduction is 138 km s.
Afterwards, hot plasma flowed upwards into the loop connecting BP1 and BP2 at a
speed of 76 km s, a clear signature of chromospheric evaporation.
Similar upflow was also observed in the loop connecting BP1 and the other
sympathetic CBP, i.e., BP3 that is 80\arcsec away from BP1, though less
significant than BP2. The apparent velocity of the upflow is 47 km
s. The thermal conduction front propagating from BP1 to BP3 was not well
identified except for the jet-like motion also originating from BP1.} {We
propose that the gentle chromospheric evaporation in the sympathetic CBPs were
caused by thermal conduction originating from the primary CBP.}Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Modulation of voltage-dependent sodium and potassium currents by charged amphiphiles in cardiac ventricular myocytes. Effects via modification of surface potential.
Modulation of voltage-dependent sodium and potassium currents by charged amphiphiles was investigated in cardiac ventricular myocytes using the patch-clamp technique. Negatively charged sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS) increased amplitude of INa, whereas positively charged dodecyltrimethylammonium (DDTMA) decreased INa. Furthermore, SDS shifted the steady-state activation and inactivation of INa in the negative direction, whereas DDTMA shifted the curves in the opposite direction. These shifts provided an explanation for the changes in current amplitude. Activation and inactivation kinetics of INa were accelerated by SDS but slowed by DDTMA. These changes in both steady-state gating and kinetics of INa are consistent with a decrease of the intramembrane field by SDS and an increase of the field by DDTMA due to an alteration of surface potential after their insertion into the outer monolayer of the sarcolemma. The effect of SDS on the steady-state inactivation of INa was concentration dependent and partially reversed by screening surface charges with increased extracellular [Ca2+]. These amphiphiles also altered the activation of the delayed rectifier K+ current (IK,del), producing a shift in the negative direction by SDS but in the positive direction by DDTMA. These results suggest that the insertion of charged amphiphiles into the cell membrane alters the behavior of voltage-dependent INa and IK,del by changing the surface charge density, and consequently the surface potential and implies, although indirectly, that the lipid surface charges are important to the voltage-dependent gating of these channels
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Integration, management and communication of heterogeneous design resources with WWW technologies
Recently, advanced information technologies have opened new pos-sibilities for collaborative designs. In this paper, a Web-based collaborative de-sign environment is proposed, where heterogeneous design applications can be integrated with a common interface, managed dynamically for publishing and searching, and communicated with each other for integrated multi-objective de-sign. The CORBA (Common Object Request Broker Architecture) is employed as an implementation tool to enable integration and communication of design application programs; and the XML (eXtensible Markup Language) is used as a common data descriptive language for data exchange between heterogeneous applications and for resource description and recording. This paper also intro-duces the implementation of the system and the encapsulating issues of existing legacy applications. At last, an example of gear design based on the system is il-lustrated to identify the methods and procedure developed by this research
A super-ductile alloy for the die-casting of aluminium automotive body structural components
Super-ductile die-cast aluminium alloys are critical to future light-weighting of automotive body structures. This paper introduces a die-cast aluminium alloy that can satisfy the requirements of these applications. After a review of currently available alloys, the requirement of a die-cast aluminium alloy for automotive body structural parts is proposed and an Al-Mg-Si system is suggested. The effect of the alloying elements, in the composition, has been investigated on the microstructure and mechanical properties, in particular the yield strength, the ultimate tensile strength and elongation. © (2014) Trans Tech Publications, Switzerland.The EPSRC and JLR U
Blobs in recurring EUV jets
In this paper, we report our discovery of blobs in the recurrent and
homologous jets that occurred at the western edge of NOAA active region 11259
on 2011 July 22. The jets were observed in the seven extreme-ultraviolet (EUV)
filters of the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) instrument aboard the Solar
Dynamics Observatory (SDO). Using the base-difference images of the six filters
(94, 131, 171, 211, 193, and 335 {\AA}), we carried out the differential
emission measure (DEM) analyses to explore the thermodynamic evolutions of the
jets. The jets were accompanied by cool surges observed in the H line
center of the ground-based telescope in the Big Bear Solar Observatory. The
jets that had lifetimes of 2030 min recurred at the same place for three
times with interval of 4045 min. Interestingly, each of the jets
intermittently experienced several upward eruptions at the speed of 120450
km s. After reaching the maximum heights, they returned back to the
solar surface, showing near-parabolic trajectories. The falling phases were
more evident in the low- filters than in the high- filters, indicating
that the jets experienced cooling after the onset of eruptions. We identified
bright and compact blobs in the jets during their rising phases. The
simultaneous presences of blobs in all the EUV filters were consistent with the
broad ranges of the DEM profiles of the blobs (),
indicating their multi-thermal nature. The median temperatures of the blobs
were 2.3 MK. The blobs that were 3 Mm in diameter had lifetimes of
2460 s. To our knowledge, this is the first report of blobs in coronal jets.
We propose that these blobs are plasmoids created by the magnetic reconnection
as a result of tearing-mode instability and ejected out along the jets.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figure
Counting Form Factors of Twist-Two Operators
We present a simple method to count the number of hadronic form factors based
on the partial wave formalism and crossing symmetry. In particular, we show
that the number of independent nucleon form factors of spin-n, twist-2
operators (the vector current and energy-momentum tensor being special
examples) is n+1. These generalized form factors define the generalized
(off-forward) parton distributions that have been studied extensively in the
recent literature. In proving this result, we also show how the J^{PC} rules
for onium states arise in the helicity formalism.Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX (revtex
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