5,903 research outputs found
A study of cryogenic propellant mixing techniques. Volume 1 - Mixer design and experimental investigations Final report, Jul. 1967 - Sep. 1968
Mixer design and experimental tank study for cryogenic propellants, with applications for manned Mars missio
Determination of Intrinsic Ferroelectric Polarization in Orthorhombic Manganites with E-type Spin Order
By directly measuring electrical hysteresis loops using the Positive-Up
Negative-Down (PUND) method, we accurately determined the remanent
ferroelectric polarization Pr of orthorhombic RMnO3 (R = Ho, Tm, Yb, and Lu)
compounds below their E-type spin ordering temperatures. We found that LuMnO3
has the largest Pr of 0.17 uC/cm^2 at 6 K in the series, indicating that its
single-crystal form can produce a Pr of at least 0.6 \muuC/cm^2 at 0 K.
Furthermore, at a fixed temperature, Pr decreases systematically with
increasing rare earth ion radius from R = Lu to Ho, exhibiting a strong
correlation with the variations in the in-plane Mn-O-Mn bond angle and Mn-O
distances. Our experimental results suggest that the contribution of the Mn t2g
orbitals dominates the ferroelectric polarization.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figure
Dispersive Gap Mode of Phonons in Anisotropic Superconductors
We estimate the effect of the superconducting gap anisotropy in the
dispersive gap mode of phonons, which is observed by the neutron scattering on
borocarbide superconductors. We numerically analyze the phonon spectrum
considering the electron-phonon coupling, and examine contributions coming from
the gap suppression and the sign change of the pairing function on the Fermi
surface. When the sign of the pairing function is changed by the nesting
translation, the gap mode does not appear. We also discuss the suppression of
the phonon softening of the Kohn anomaly due to the onset of superconductivity.
We demonstrate that observation of the gap dispersive mode is useful for
sorting out the underlying superconducting pairing function.Comment: 7 pages, 12 figures, to be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Narratives of therapeutic art-making in the context of marital breakdown: Older women reflect on a significant mid-life experience
This paper explores the narratives of three women aged 65-72 years. They reflected on an episode of therapeutic art-making in midlife, which addressed depression associated with marital crisis and breakdown. The narrative analysis focused upon on the ways in which participants narrated the events leading up to their participation in therapeutic art-making; the aspects of therapeutic art-making that continued to be given significance; the characters given primacy in the stories they told about their journey through therapy and marital breakdown; meanings, symbolic and otherwise, that participants ascribed to their artwork made during this turning point in their lives; and aspects of the narratives that conveyed present-day identities and artistic endeavors. The narratives revealed the complexity of the journey through marital breakdown and depression into health, and showed that therapeutic art-making could best be understood, not as a stand-alone experience, but as given meaning within the context of wider personal and social resources. Participants looked back on therapeutic art-making that occurred two decades earlier and still described this as a significant turning point in their personal development. Art as an adjunct to counselling/therapy was not only symbolically self-expressive but provided opportunity for decision-making, agency and a reformulated self-image
Effect of Time Reversal Symmetry Breaking on the Density of States in Small Superconducting Grains
We show that in ultra-small superconducting grains any concentration of
magnetic impurities or infinitely small orbital effect of magnetic field leads
to destruction of the hard gap in the tunneling density of states. Instead,
though exponentially suppressed at low energies, the tunneling density of
states exhibits the ``soft gap'' behavior, vanishing linearly with excitation
energy, as the energy approaches zero.Comment: 4 pages, 1 eps figur
Carey Youngâs 'Palais de Justice'
The symposium for this issue comprises six responses to the video artwork Palais de Justice (2017) by artist Carey Young. The video presents a study of the life of Brusselsâ vast, late-nineteenth-century court building. In Palais de Justice, Young presents âa legal system seemingly centered on, and perhaps controlled by womenâ. The respondents are Jeanne Gaakeer, Ruth Herz, Joan Kee, Linda Mulcahy, Jeremy Pilcher and Gary Watt. Jeanne Gaakeer and Ruth Herz have the distinction of being, not only internationally respected scholars, but also experienced judges. Jeanne Gaakeer is a judge practicing in the Netherlands and Ruth Herz was formerly a judge in Germany. The six responses are followed by the artistâs own reflections on her artwork and her response to the commentatorsâ responses. Joan Kee writes that âYoung highlights access as a key entry point for thinking about the law. Who can avail themselves of the law? Who may enter (or exit) the courts? Who is excluded and by whose authority? The surreptitious looking and peering that define the experience of watching the film suggests how these questions deny ready answersâ
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