65,724 research outputs found

    Device for tensioning test specimens within an hermetically sealed chamber

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    The device is characterized by a support column adapted to be received within an insulated, hermetically sealable chamber. A plurality of anchor pins are mounted on the column for releasibly connecting thereto a plurality of test specimens. A plurality of axially displaceable pull rods are received by the column in coaxial alignment with the anchor pins. One end of each pull rod is provided with a coupling for connecting the pull rod to a test specimen. The opposite end of the pull rod is entended through a cover plate and adapted to be connected with a remotely related linear actuator through a connecting link including a load cell for measuring stress as the pull rod is placed in tension by the actuator

    Birds and people in Europe

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    At a regional scale, species richness and human population size are frequently positively correlated across space. Such patterns may arise because both species richness and human density increase with energy availability. If the species-energy relationship is generated through the 'more individuals' hypothesis, then the prediction is that areas with high human densities will also support greater numbers of individuals from other taxa. We use the unique data available for the breeding birds in Europe to test this prediction. Overall regional densities of bird species are higher in areas with more people; species of conservation concern exhibit the same pattern. Avian density also increases faster with human density than does avian biomass, indicating that areas with a higher human density have a higher proportion of small-bodied individuals. The analyses also underline the low numbers of breeding birds in Europe relative to humans, with a median of just three individual birds per person, and 4 g of bird for every kilogram of human

    Role of Metastable States in Phase Ordering Dynamics

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    We show that the rate of separation of two phases of different densities (e.g. gas and solid) can be radically altered by the presence of a metastable intermediate phase (e.g. liquid). Within a Cahn-Hilliard theory we study the growth in one dimension of a solid droplet from a supersaturated gas. A moving interface between solid and gas phases (say) can, for sufficient (transient) supersaturation, unbind into two interfaces separated by a slab of metastable liquid phase. We investigate the criteria for unbinding, and show that it may strongly impede the growth of the solid phase.Comment: 4 pages, Latex, Revtex, epsf. Updated two reference

    Factorised Steady States in Mass Transport Models on an Arbitrary Graph

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    We study a general mass transport model on an arbitrary graph consisting of LL nodes each carrying a continuous mass. The graph also has a set of directed links between pairs of nodes through which a stochastic portion of mass, chosen from a site-dependent distribution, is transported between the nodes at each time step. The dynamics conserves the total mass and the system eventually reaches a steady state. This general model includes as special cases various previously studied models such as the Zero-range process and the Asymmetric random average process. We derive a general condition on the stochastic mass transport rules, valid for arbitrary graph and for both parallel and random sequential dynamics, that is sufficient to guarantee that the steady state is factorisable. We demonstrate how this condition can be achieved in several examples. We show that our generalized result contains as a special case the recent results derived by Greenblatt and Lebowitz for dd-dimensional hypercubic lattices with random sequential dynamics.Comment: 17 pages 1 figur

    Factorised steady states for multi-species mass transfer models

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    A general class of mass transport models with Q species of conserved mass is considered. The models are defined on a lattice with parallel discrete time update rules. For one-dimensional, totally asymmetric dynamics we derive necessary and sufficient conditions on the mass transfer dynamics under which the steady state factorises. We generalise the model to mass transfer on arbitrary lattices and present sufficient conditions for factorisation. In both cases, explicit results for random sequential update and continuous time limits are given.Comment: 11 page

    Johnson-Kendall-Roberts theory applied to living cells

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    Johnson-Kendall-Roberts (JKR) theory is an accurate model for strong adhesion energies of soft slightly deformable material. Little is known about the validity of this theory on complex systems such as living cells. We have addressed this problem using a depletion controlled cell adhesion and measured the force necessary to separate the cells with a micropipette technique. We show that the cytoskeleton can provide the cells with a 3D structure that is sufficiently elastic and has a sufficiently low deformability for JKR theory to be valid. When the cytoskeleton is disrupted, JKR theory is no longer applicable

    The importance of the mesostructure in toughening cellulosic short fibre composites

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in this record In tonnage terms the commercial production of engineering composites is dominated by glass reinforced systems, this is particularly the case in the automotive industry. Natural fibres have long been regarded as a viable lightweight replacement for glass, however the various shortcomings of natural/cellulosic fibres have so far, inhibited exploitation, where resistance to fast fracture during impact is a major failing. Composite mesostructure describes mid-scale structures in composites, such as fibre alignment patterns, bundling effects, and fibre end synchronisation. The mesostructure can dramatically affect final properties in some random short fibre systems where flow is involved, such as sheet moulding compounds (SMC), and can be the determining factor in, for example, the success of one fibre system over another. This study seeks to manipulate the fibre mesostructure in moulding compounds reinforced with natural/cellulosic fibres, where it is shown that by arranging mechanically inferior fibres in bundles, composite impact energy absorption can be substantially improved, where the reasons behind the toughening mechanism at work, is discussed and optimum bundle dimensions for several fibre systems are identified. Fibre bundling seems to be a highly interesting method for toughening composites made from mechanically inferior natural/cellulosic fibres, however no work in the area has been reported until now. © 2014 Elsevier Ltd.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC
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