625 research outputs found
Subdynamic asymptotic behavior of microfluidic valves
Decreasing the Reynolds number of microfluidic
no-moving-part flow control valves considerably below the usual operating range leads to a distinct “subdynamic” regime of viscosity- dominated flow, usually entered through a clearly defined transition. In this regime, the dynamic effects on which the operation of large-scale no-moving-part fluidic valves is based, cease to be useful, but fluid may be driven through the valve (and any
connected load) by an applied pressure difference, maintained by an external pressure regulator. Reynolds number ceases to characterize the valve operation, but the driving pressure effect is usefully characterized by a newly introduced dimensionless number and it is this parameter which determines the valve behavior. This summary paper presents information about the subdynamic regime using data (otherwise difficult to access) obtained for several recently developed flow control valves. The purely subdynamic regime is an extreme. Most present-day microfluidic valves are operated at higher Re, but the paper shows that the laws governing subdynamic flows provide relations useful as an asymptotic reference
Development of a microfluidic unit for sequencing fluid samples for composition analysis
A microfluidic sample-sequencing unit was developed as a part of a high-throughput catalyst screening facility. It may find applications wherever a fluid is to be selected
for analysis from any one of several sources, such as microreactors operating in parallel. The novel feature is that the key components are fluidic valves having no moving parts and operating at very low sample flow Reynolds numbers, typically below 100. The inertial
effects utilized in conventional no-moving-part fluidics are nearly absent; instead, the flows are pressure-driven. Switching between input channels is by high-Reynolds-number control flows, the jet pumping effect of which simultaneously cleans the downstream cavities to prevent crosscontamination between the samples. In the configuration discussed here, the integrated circuit
containing an array of 16 valves is etched into an 84mm diameter stainless steel foil. This is clamped into a massive assembly containing 16 mini-reactors operated at up to 400C and 4 MPa. This paper describes the design basis and experience with prototypes. Results of CFD
analysis, with scrutiny of some discrepancies when compared with flow visualization, is included
Ecohydrological studies of dune slack vegetation at Kenfig dunes, South Wales, UK
Dune slacks are important coastal sand dune habitats and seasonal changes in water levels within dune aquifers control both their formation and the specific hydrological conditions which then govern the floristic composition of their characteristic plant communities. Kenfig Dunes National Nature Reserve is one of the largest dune sites in South Wales and Southern Britain. It supports an exceptional range of dune slack communities, including most of those recognised in the British National Vegetation Classification scheme. Detailed studies of the vegetation ecology and hydrology of dune slacks reveal the important influence of hydrological variables in controlling the composition of dune slack vegetation and also valuable information on water table profile and the key factors governing the annual hydrological budget of the dune system aquifer
Vector Meson Production at HERA
We show that the lowest-order QCD calculation in a simple model of elastic
vector-meson production does reproduce correctly the ratios of cross sections
for rho, phi and J/psi, both in photoproduction and in high-Q2 quasi-elastic
scattering. The dependence of the slopes on the mass of the vector meson is
reproduced as well. We examine the lower-energy data, and find that the energy
dependence of the cross section does not depend on Q2, but may depend on the
vector-meson mass.Comment: 12 pages, Latex, 6 figures. Shortened version of the previous paper,
which also includes a clearer criticism of the work by Martin, Ryskin and
Teubner, hep-ph/960944
K^+ -> pi^+pi^0e^+e^-: a novel short-distance probe
We study the decay K^+ -> pi^+ pi^0 e^+ e^-, currently under analysis by the
NA62 Collaboration at CERN. In particular, we provide a detailed analysis of
the Dalitz plot for the long-distance, gamma^*-mediated, contributions
(Bremsstrahlung, direct emission and its interference). We also examine a set
of asymmetries to isolate genuine short-distance effects. While we show that
charge asymmetries are not required to test short distances, they provide the
best environment for its detection. This constitutes by itself a strong
motivation for NA62 to study K^- decays in the future. We therefore provide a
detailed study of different charge asymmetries and the corresponding estimated
signals. Whenever possible, we make contact with the related processes K^+ ->
pi^+ pi^0 gamma and K_L -> pi^+ pi^- e^+ e^- and discuss the advantages of K^+
-> pi^+ pi^0 e^+ e^- over them.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figure
Finite sum of gluon ladders and high energy cross sections
A model for the Pomeron at is suggested. It is based on the idea of a
finite sum of ladder diagrams in QCD. Accordingly, the number of -channel
gluon rungs and correspondingly the powers of logarithms in the forward
scattering amplitude depends on the phase space (energy) available, i.e. as
energy increases, progressively new prongs with additional gluon rungs in the
-channel open. Explicit expressions for the total cross section involving
two and three rungs or, alternatively, three and four prongs (with
and as highest terms, respectively) are fitted to the proton-proton
and proton-antiproton total cross section data in the accelerator region. Both
QCD calculation and fits to the data indicate fast convergence of the series.
In the fit, two terms (a constant and a logarithmically rising one) almost
saturate the whole series, the term being small and the next one,
, negligible. Theoretical predictions for the photon-photon total
cross section are also given.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX, 2 EPS figures, uses axodraw.st
Implications of the Higgs Discovery in the MSSM Golden Region
If the lightest CP-even Higgs boson in the MSSM is discovered at the LHC, two
measurements could be made simultaneously: the Higgs mass m_h and the event
rate Bs(gg -> h -> gamma gamma). We study to what extent the combination of
these two measurements would allow us to extract parameters in the stop mass
matrix, including the off-diagonal mixing term, with a focus on the MSSM golden
region where the stops are light and the mixing is large. Even though both the
production cross-section and the decay amplitude are not sensitive to
supersymmetric parameters outside of the stop sector, the branching ratio
depends on the total decay width, which is dominated by the Higgs decay to b
quarks and sensitive to both the pseudo-scalar mass m_A and the supersymmetric
Higgs mass \mu. In the end we find m_A is an important input in extracting the
stop mass parameters, while a fair estimate of the off-diagonal mixing term
could be obtained without prior knowledge of \mu.Comment: 17 pages and 6 figures; v2: minor revision and added references to
match JHEP versio
On the structure and evolution of a polar crown prominence/filament system
Polar crown prominences are made of chromospheric plasma partially circling
the Suns poles between 60 and 70 degree latitude. We aim to diagnose the 3D
dynamics of a polar crown prominence using high cadence EUV images from the
Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO)/AIA at 304 and 171A and the Ahead spacecraft
of the Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO-A)/EUVI at 195A. Using
time series across specific structures we compare flows across the disk in 195A
with the prominence dynamics seen on the limb. The densest prominence material
forms vertical columns which are separated by many tens of Mm and connected by
dynamic bridges of plasma that are clearly visible in 304/171A two-color
images. We also observe intermittent but repetitious flows with velocity 15
km/s in the prominence that appear to be associated with EUV bright points on
the solar disk. The boundary between the prominence and the overlying cavity
appears as a sharp edge. We discuss the structure of the coronal cavity seen
both above and around the prominence. SDO/HMI and GONG magnetograms are used to
infer the underlying magnetic topology. The evolution and structure of the
prominence with respect to the magnetic field seems to agree with the filament
linkage model.Comment: 24 pages, 14 figures, Accepted for publication in Solar Physics
Journal, Movies can be found at http://www2.mps.mpg.de/data/outgoing/panesar
Diffractive production and the total cross section in deep inelastic scattering
We explore the consequences for diffractive production, gamma* p --> X p, in
deep inelastic scattering at low values of x\sim Q^2/W^2 <<1 that follow from
our recent representation of the total photoabsorption cross section,
sigma_{gamma* p}, in the generalized vector dominance/ color dipole
picture(GVD/CDP) that is based on the generic structure of the
two-gluon-exchange from QCD. Sum rules are derived that relate the transverse
and the longitudinal (virtual) photoabsorption cross section to diffractive
forward production of q q-bar states that carry photon quantum numbers
("elastic diffraction"). Agreement with experiment in the W^2 and Q^2
dependence is found for M_X^2/Q^2<<1, where M_X is the mass of the produced
system X. An additional component ("inelastic diffraction"), not actively
contributing to the forward Compton amplitude, is needed for diffractive
production at high values of M_X. Our previous theoretical representation of
the total photoabsorption cross section sigma_{gamma* p}=sigma_{gamma* p}(eta),
in terms of the scaling variable eta=(Q^2+m_0^2)/Lambda^2(W^2) is extended to
include the entire kinematic domain, x==0, where
scaling in eta holds experimentally.Comment: 19 pages with 4 figures,(eps and ps files), Late
Observations of Coronal Mass Ejections with the Coronal Multichannel Polarimeter
The Coronal Multichannel Polarimeter (CoMP) measures not only the
polarization of coronal emission, but also the full radiance profiles of
coronal emission lines. For the first time, CoMP observations provide
high-cadence image sequences of the coronal line intensity, Doppler shift and
line width simultaneously in a large field of view. By studying the Doppler
shift and line width we may explore more of the physical processes of CME
initiation and propagation. Here we identify a list of CMEs observed by CoMP
and present the first results of these observations. Our preliminary analysis
shows that CMEs are usually associated with greatly increased Doppler shift and
enhanced line width. These new observations provide not only valuable
information to constrain CME models and probe various processes during the
initial propagation of CMEs in the low corona, but also offer a possible
cost-effective and low-risk means of space weather monitoring.Comment: 6 figures. Will appear in the special issue of Coronal Magnetism,
Sol. Phy
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