255,617 research outputs found
First-principles study of crystallographic slip modes in ω-Zr.
We use first-principles density functional theory to study the preferred modes of slip in the high-pressure ω phase of Zr. The generalized stacking fault energy surfaces associated with shearing on nine distinct crystallographic slip modes in the hexagonal ω-Zr crystal are calculated, from which characteristics such as ideal shear stress, the dislocation Burgers vector, and possible accompanying atomic shuffles, are extracted. Comparison of energy barriers and ideal shear stresses suggests that the favorable modes are prismatic 〈c〉, prismatic-II [Formula: see text] and pyramidal-II 〈c + a〉, which are distinct from the ground state hexagonal close packed α phase of Zr. Operation of these three modes can accommodate any deformation state. The relative preferences among the identified slip modes are examined using a mean-field crystal plasticity model and comparing the calculated deformation texture with the measurement. Knowledge of the basic crystallographic modes of slip is critical to understanding and analyzing the plastic deformation behavior of ω-Zr or mixed α-ω phase-Zr
Origin of translocation barriers for polyelectrolyte chains
For single-file translocations of a charged macromolecule through a narrow
pore, the crucial step of arrival of an end at the pore suffers from free
energy barriers, arising from changes in intrachain electrostatic interaction,
distribution of ionic clouds and solvent molecules, and conformational entropy
of the chain. All contributing factors to the barrier in the initial stage of
translocation are evaluated by using the self-consistent field theory for the
polyelectrolyte and the coupled Poisson-Boltzmann description for ions, without
radial symmetry. The barrier is found to be essentially entropic, due to
conformational changes. For moderate and high salt concentrations, the barriers
for the polyelectrolyte chain are quantitatively equivalent to that of
uncharged self-avoiding walks. Electrostatic effects are shown to increase the
free energy barriers, but only slightly. The degree of ionization,
electrostatic interaction strength, decreasing salt concentration and the
solvent quality all result in increases in the barrier.Comment: J.Chem. Phys. 131, 21 (2009) - to be appeare
Dynamical SUSY Breaking in Intersecting Brane Models
We present a simple mechanism by which supersymmetry can be dynamically
broken in intersecting brane models, naturally generating an exponentially
small scale. Rather than utilize either non-Abelian gauge dynamics or
D-instantons, our mechanism uses worldsheet instantons to generate the small
scale in a hidden sector.Comment: 10 pages, LaTeX, References adde
Managing water in the face of growing scarcity, inequity and declining returns: exploring fresh approaches. Proceedings of the 7th Annual Partners Meet, IWMI TATA Water Policy Research Program, ICRISAT, Patancheru, Hyderabad, India, 2-4 April 2008. Vol.2.
Water productivityWater use efficiencyMultiple useWater conservationIrrigation systemsIrrigation programsIrrigation methodsCase studiesWater storageFarming systemsWetlandsGroundwater irrigationIrrigated farmingWater reuseWastewater
Further Results on Geometric Properties of a Family of Relative Entropies
This paper extends some geometric properties of a one-parameter family of
relative entropies. These arise as redundancies when cumulants of compressed
lengths are considered instead of expected compressed lengths. These parametric
relative entropies are a generalization of the Kullback-Leibler divergence.
They satisfy the Pythagorean property and behave like squared distances. This
property, which was known for finite alphabet spaces, is now extended for
general measure spaces. Existence of projections onto convex and certain closed
sets is also established. Our results may have applications in the R\'enyi
entropy maximization rule of statistical physics.Comment: 7 pages, Prop. 5 modified, in Proceedings of the 2011 IEEE
International Symposium on Information Theor
From open resources to educational opportunity
Since MIT’s bold announcement of the OpenCourseWare initiative in 2001, the content of over 700 of its courses have been published on the Web and made available for free to the world. Important infrastructure initiatives have also been launched recently with a view to enabling the sustainable implementation of these educational programmes, through strengthening organizational capacity as well as through building open, standards‐based technology. Each of these initiatives point to a rich palette of transformational possibilities for education; together with the growing open source movement, they offer glimpses of a sustainable ecology of substantial and quality educational resources. This discussion piece will highlight some of the educational opportunity presented by MIT’s current information technology‐enabled educational agenda and related initiatives, along with their strategic underpinnings and implications. It will address various dimensions of their impact on the form and function of education. It will examine how these ambitious programmes achieve a vision characterized by an abundance of sustainable, transformative educational opportunities, not merely pervasive technology
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