507 research outputs found
High Temperature Vaporization Behavior and Thermodynamic Properties of Hafnium Diboride
Vaporization of hafnium diboride has been studied in a tungsten effusion cell over the temperature range 2175 degrees K. to 2500 degrees K. A low-melting eutectic at 2520 degrees K. prevented the use of the effusion cell technique at higher temperatures
Jacobi multipliers, non-local symmetries and nonlinear oscillators
Constants of motion, Lagrangians and Hamiltonians admitted by a family of
relevant nonlinear oscillators are derived using a geometric formalism. The
theory of the Jacobi last multiplier allows us to find Lagrangian descriptions
and constants of the motion. An application of the jet bundle formulation of
symmetries of differential equations is presented in the second part of the
paper. After a short review of the general formalism, the particular case of
non-local symmetries is studied in detail by making use of an extended
formalism. The theory is related to some results previously obtained by
Krasil'shchi, Vinogradov and coworkers. Finally the existence of non-local
symmetries for such two nonlinear oscillators is proved.Comment: 20 page
Multigap Superconductivity in YC: A C-NMR Study
We report on the superconducting (SC) properties of YC with a
relatively high transition temperature K investigated by
C nuclear-magnetic-resonance (NMR) measurements under a magnetic field.
The C Knight shift has revealed a significant decrease below , suggesting a spin-singlet superconductivity. From an analysis of the
temperature dependence of the nuclear spin-lattice relaxation rate in
the SC state, YC is demonstrated to be a multigap superconductor that
exhibits a large gap at the main band and a
small gap at other bands. These results have
revealed that YC is a unique multigap s-wave superconductor similar to
MgB.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Influence of roughness on ZDDP tribofilm formation in boundary lubricated fretting
Influence of initial surface topography on tribofilm formation in ZDDP lubricated contact was analysed. A small displacement fretting tests with sinusoidal motion were carried out in classical sphere/plane configuration. A range of surfaces with different initial roughness were prepared by milling and grinding processes. Tests were carried out using variable displacement method where amplitude of imposed displacement was gradually increased after every 1000 cycles from 2 to 30 µm. The surfaces after tribological tests were measured by interferometric profiler. Main findings confirm that initial roughness has a significant influence on antiwear tribofilm formation in boundary lubricated contact. Tribofilm form faster and require less energy to activate in case of rough surface obtained by milling process than in case of smooth grinded surface. However, in contact lubricated by ZDDP additive a significant transfer of material occurred from plane to sphere specimen
Symmetries in Classical Field Theory
The multisymplectic description of Classical Field Theories is revisited,
including its relation with the presymplectic formalism on the space of Cauchy
data. Both descriptions allow us to give a complete scheme of classification of
infinitesimal symmetries, and to obtain the corresponding conservation laws.Comment: 70S05; 70H33; 55R10; 58A2
Array of time-of-flight diamond detectors for particle discrimination in laser driven p-11B fusion experiments
The detection of radiation emission in laser induced plasma experiments is an helpful method for gaining information on the physics of laser-matter interaction. Time-of-Flight (TOF) approach is a powerful and effective method to obtain timely spectra of particles accelerated from laser-generated plasma. To this respect, diamond-based detectors are very attractive due to their interesting features such as fast signal collection time, signal proportional to the energy deposited by the incident radiation, blindness to visible radiation, high radiation hardness and low leakage current at room temperature operation. Unfortunately, they cannot supply discrimination on the species of the incoming ions, but only their energies. This may be overcome using specific filtering foils to exploit the different stopping powers of ions of different species and energies. In this work we describe the method to distinguish particles using an array of TOF diamond detectors. A first prototype array, consisting of 2Ă—2 diamond detectors, nominally identical and featuring by aluminum filters of different thicknesses, was developed and preliminary tested at PALS facility in Prague
The emergence of altruism as a social norm
Expectations, exerting influence through social norms, are a very strong candidate to explain how complex societies function. In the Dictator game (DG), people expect generous behavior from others even when they cannot enforce any sharing of the pie. Here we assume that people donate following their expectations, and that they update their expectation after playing a DG by reinforcement learning to construct a model that explains the main experimental results in the DG. Full agreement with the experimental results is reached when some degree of mismatch between expectations and donations is added into the model. These results are robust against the presence of envious agents, but affected if we introduce selfish agents that do not update their expectations. Our results point to social norms being on the basis of the generous behavior observed in the DG and also to the wide applicability of reinforcement learning to explain many strategic interactions
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