4,434 research outputs found
Magnetic and humidity sensing properties of nanostructured Cu[x]Co[1-x]Fe2O4 synthesized by auto combustion technique
Magnetic nanomaterials (23-43 nm) of CuCoFeO\ (x = 0.0,
0.5 and 1.0) were synthesized by auto combustion method. The crystallite sizes
of these materials were calculated from X-ray diffraction peaks. The band
observed in Fourier transform infrared spectrum near 575 cm in these
samples confirm the presence of ferrite phase. Conductivity measurement shows
the thermal hysteresis and demonstrates the knee points at 475C, 525C
and 500C for copper ferrite, cobalt ferrite and copper-cobalt mixed ferrite
respectively. The hystersis M-H loops for these materials were traced using the
Vibrating Sample Magnetometer (VSM) and indicate a significant increase in the
saturation magnetization (M) and remanence (M) due to the substitution
of Cu ions in cobalt ferrite, while the intrinsic coercivity (H) was
decreasing. Among these ferrites, copper ferrite exhibits highest sensitivity
for humidity.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
B0850+054: a new gravitational lens system from CLASS
We report the discovery of a new gravitational lens system from the CLASS
survey. Radio observations with the VLA, the WSRT and MERLIN show that the
radio source B0850+054 is comprised of two compact components with identical
spectra, a separation of 0.7 arcsec and a flux density ratio of 6:1. VLBA
observations at 5 GHz reveal structures that are consistent with the
gravitational lens hypothesis. The brighter of the two images is resolved into
a linear string of at least six sub-components whilst the weaker image is
radially stretched towards the lens galaxy. UKIRT K-band imaging detects an
18.7 mag extended object, but the resolution of the observations is not
sufficient to resolve the lensed images and the lens galaxy. Mass modelling has
not been possible with the present data and the acquisition of high-resolution
optical data is a priority for this system.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Utilization of the Aspergillus nidulans pyrG gene as a selectable marker for transformation and electroporation of Neurospora crassa
We report the complementation of the Neurospora crassa pyr-4 mutation with the Aspergillus nidulans pyrG gene. The use of the pyrG gene as a selectable marker for N. crassa transformation offers several advantages: a non toxic nutritional selection, the ability to put single-copy transformants through a sexual cross without the occurrence of RIP (Repeat-Induced Point mutation) by alleles of the pyr-4 gene, and a relatively-high electroporation efficiency. These traits were exploited for targeted gene replacement in N. crassa. In addition, the high electroporation efficiency of pyrG achieved using supercoiled circular DNA renders it an ideal marker for random insertional mutagenesis studies in N. crassa
Emotional labor in Korean local government : testing the consequences of situational factors and emotional dissonance
The study of emotional labor in public administration has a strong foundation. Emotional labor scales have been operationalized that measure emotion work, personal efficacy, type of acting, and positive/negative display rules. Less is known about how public employees are affected by the frequency, attentiveness, and variety of emotional display, and by emotional dissonance. A survey of local government employees in South Korea is used to analyze the consequences of these factors for job stress, burnout, and job satisfaction. These factors are found to affect the dependent variables in different ways
Correlated metallic state of vanadium dioxide
The metal-insulator transition and unconventional metallic transport in
vanadium dioxide (VO) are investigated with a combination of spectroscopic
ellipsometry and reflectance measurements. The data indicates that electronic
correlations, not electron-phonon interactions, govern charge dynamics in the
metallic state of VO. This study focuses on the frequency and temperature
dependence of the conductivity in the regime of extremely short mean free path
violating the Ioffe-Regel-Mott limit of metallic transport. The standard
quasiparticle picture of charge conduction is found to be untenable in metallic
VO.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Electrodynamics of the vanadium oxides VO2 and V2O3
The optical/infrared properties of films of vanadium dioxide (VO2) and
vanadium sesquioxide (V2O3) have been investigated via ellipsometry and
near-normal incidence reflectance measurements from far infrared to ultraviolet
frequencies. Significant changes occur in the optical conductivity of both VO2
and V2O3 across the metal-insulator transitions at least up to (and possibly
beyond) 6 eV. We argue that such changes in optical conductivity and electronic
spectral weight over a broad frequency range is evidence of the important role
of electronic correlations to the metal-insulator transitions in both of these
vanadium oxides. We observe a sharp optical transition with possible final
state (exciton) effects in the insulating phase of VO2. This sharp optical
transition occurs between narrow a1g bands that arise from the
quasi-one-dimensional chains of vanadium dimers. Electronic correlations in the
metallic phases of both VO2 and V2O3 lead to reduction of the kinetic energy of
the charge carriers compared to band theory values, with paramagnetic metallic
V2O3 showing evidence of stronger correlations compared to rutile metallic VO2.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
The curvature of semidirect product groups associated with two-component Hunter-Saxton systems
In this paper, we study two-component versions of the periodic Hunter-Saxton
equation and its -variant. Considering both equations as a geodesic flow
on the semidirect product of the circle diffeomorphism group \Diff(\S) with a
space of scalar functions on we show that both equations are locally
well-posed. The main result of the paper is that the sectional curvature
associated with the 2HS is constant and positive and that 2HS allows for a
large subspace of positive sectional curvature. The issues of this paper are
related to some of the results for 2CH and 2DP presented in [J. Escher, M.
Kohlmann, and J. Lenells, J. Geom. Phys. 61 (2011), 436-452].Comment: 19 page
On the ill/well-posedness and nonlinear instability of the magneto-geostrophic equations
We consider an active scalar equation that is motivated by a model for
magneto-geostrophic dynamics and the geodynamo. We prove that the non-diffusive
equation is ill-posed in the sense of Hadamard in Sobolev spaces. In contrast,
the critically diffusive equation is well-posed. In this case we give an
example of a steady state that is nonlinearly unstable, and hence produces a
dynamo effect in the sense of an exponentially growing magnetic field.Comment: We have modified the definition of Lipschitz well-posedness, in order
to allow for a possible loss in regularity of the solution ma
On the optical properties of Ag^{+15} ion-beam irradiated TiO_{2} and SnO_{2} thin films
The effects of 200-MeV Ag^{+15} ion irradiation on the optical properties of
TiO_{2} and SnO_{2} thin films prepared by using the RF magnetron sputtering
technique were investigated. These films were characterized by using UV-vis
spectroscopy, and with increasing irradiation fluence, the transmittance for
the TiO_{2} films was observed to increase systematically while that for
SnO_{2} was observed to decrease. Absorption spectra of the irradiated samples
showed minor changes in the indirect bandgap from 3.44 to 3.59 eV with
increasing irradiation fluence for TiO_{2} while significant changes in the
direct bandgap from 3.92 to 3.6 eV were observed for SnO_{2}. The observed
modifications in the optical properties of both the TiO_{2} and the SnO_{2}
systems with irradiation can be attributed to controlled structural
disorder/defects in the system.Comment: 6 pages, ICAMD-201
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