27,529 research outputs found
A small and light weight heat exchanger for on-board helium refrigerator
A small and light weight heat exchanger used for small helium refrigerator has been developed by Sumitomo Heavy Industries, Ltd. This heat exchanger is a laminated metal heat exchanger which consists of perforated aluminum metal plates and glassfiber reinforced plastic separators. The size is from 100 mm to 28 mm in diameter and about 300 mm in length. The weight is from 2.5 kg to 0.6 kg. Also it can be used between room temperature and liquid helium temperature. The thermal efficiency obtained has been more than 96%. The heat exchanger has been practically used for on-board helium refrigerator in Japanese National Railways' superconducting magnetic levitated trains
Why current-carrying magnetic flux tubes gobble up plasma and become thin as a result
It is shown that if a current-carrying magnetic flux tube is bulged at its
axial midpoint z=0 and constricted at its axial endpoints z=+h,-h, then plasma
will be accelerated from z=+h,-h towards z=0 resulting in a situation similar
to two water jets pointed at each other. The ingested plasma convects embedded,
frozen-in toroidal magnetic flux from z=+h,-h to z=0. The counter-directed
flows collide and stagnate at z=0 and in so doing (i) convert their
translational kinetic energy into heat, (ii) increase the plasma density at
z~0, and (iii) increase the embedded toroidal flux density at z~0. The increase
in toroidal flux density at z~0 increases the toroidal field Bphi and hence
increases the magnetic pinch force at z~0 and so causes a reduction of the flux
tube radius at z~0. Thus, the flux tube develops an axially uniform
cross-section, a decreased volume, an increased density, and an increased
temperature. This model is proposed as a likely hypothesis for the
long-standing mystery of why solar coronal loops are observed to be axially
uniform, hot, and bright.Comment: to appear in Physics of Plasmas 24 pages, 5 figure
Spin-current injection and detection in strongly correlated organic conductor
Spin-current injection into an organic semiconductor
film induced by the spin
pumping from an yttrium iron garnet (YIG) film. When magnetization dynamics in
the YIG film is excited by ferromagnetic or spin-wave resonance, a voltage
signal was found to appear in the
film.
Magnetic-field-angle dependence measurements indicate that the voltage signal
is governed by the inverse spin Hall effect in
. We found that the
voltage signal in the /YIG
system is critically suppressed around 80 K, around which magnetic and/or glass
transitions occur, implying that the efficiency of the spin-current injection
is suppressed by fluctuations which critically enhanced near the transitions
Distribution of Faraday Rotation Measure in Jets from Active Galactic Nuclei II. Prediction from our Sweeping Magnetic Twist Model for the Wiggled Parts of AGN Jets and Tails
Distributions of Faraday rotation measure (FRM) and the projected magnetic
field derived by a 3-dimensional simulation of MHD jets are investigated based
on our "sweeping magnetic twist model". FRM and Stokes parameters were
calculated to be compared with radio observations of large scale wiggled AGN
jets on kpc scales. We propose that the FRM distribution can be used to discuss
the 3-dimensional structure of magnetic field around jets and the validity of
existing theoretical models, together with the projected magnetic field derived
from Stokes parameters. In the previous paper, we investigated the basic
straight part of AGN jets by using the result of a 2-dimensional axisymmetric
simulation. The derived FRM distribution has a general tendency to have a
gradient across the jet axis, which is due to the toroidal component of the
magnetic field generated by the rotation of the accretion disk. In this paper,
we consider the wiggled structure of the AGN jets by using the result of a
3-dimensional simulation. Our numerical results show that the distributions of
FRM and the projected magnetic field have a clear correlation with the large
scale structure of the jet itself, namely, 3-dimensional helix. Distributions,
seeing the jet from a certain direction, show a good matching with those in a
part of 3C449 jet. This suggests that the jet has a helical structure and that
the magnetic field (especially the toroidal component) plays an important role
in the dynamics of the wiggle formation because it is due to a current-driven
helical kink instability in our model.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Effect of disorder outside the CuO planes on of copper oxide superconductors
The effect of disorder on the superconducting transition temperature
of cuprate superconductors is examined. Disorder is introduced into the cation
sites in the plane adjacent to the CuO planes of two single-layer
systems, BiSrLnCuO and
LaNdSrCuO. Disorder is controlled by changing
rare earth (Ln) ions with different ionic radius in the former, and by varying
the Nd content in the latter with the doped carrier density kept constant. We
show that this type of disorder works as weak scatterers in contrast to the
in-plane disorder produced by Zn, but remarkably reduces suggesting
novel effects of disorder on high- superconductivity.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev. Let
- …
