1,027 research outputs found
Static and dynamic properties of frictional phenomena in a one-dimensional system with randomness
Static and dynamic frictional phenomena at the interface with random
impurities are investigated in a two-chain model with incommensurate structure.
Static frictional force is caused by the impurity pinning and/or by the pinning
due to the regular potential, which is responsible for the breaking of
analyticity transition for impurity-free cases. It is confirmed that the static
frictional force is always finite in the presence of impurities, in contrast to
the impurity-free system. The nature of impurity pinning is discussed in
connection with that in density waves. The kinetic frictional force of a steady
sliding state is also investigated numerically. The relationship between the
sliding velocity dependence of the kinetic frictional force and the strength of
impurity potential is discussed.Comment: RevTex, 14 pages, 6 PostScript figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Friction, order, and transverse pinning of a two-dimensional elastic lattice under periodic and impurity potentials
Frictional phenomena of two-dimensional elastic lattices are studied
numerically based on a two-dimensional Frenkel-Kontorova model with impurities.
It is shown that impurities can assist the depinning. We also investigate
anisotropic ordering and transverse pinning effects of sliding lattices, which
are characteristic of the moving Bragg glass state and/or transverse glass
state. Peculiar velocity dependence of the transverse pinning is observed in
the presence of both periodic and random potentials and discussed in the
relation with growing order and discommensurate structures.Comment: RevTeX, 4 pages, 5 figures. to appear in Phys. Rev. B Rapid Commu
Dynamical frictional phenomena in an incommensurate two-chain model
Dynamical frictional phenomena are studied theoretically in a two-chain model
with incommensurate structure. A perturbation theory with respect to the
interchain interaction reveals the contributions from phonons excited in each
chain to the kinetic frictional force. The validity of the theory is verified
in the case of weak interaction by comparing with numerical simulation. The
velocity and the interchain interaction dependences of the lattice structure
are also investigated. It is shown that peculiar breaking of analyticity states
appear, which is characteristic to the two-chain model. The range of the
parameters in which the two-chain model is reduced to the Frenkel-Kontorova
model is also discussed.Comment: RevTex, 9 pages, 7 PostScript figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Theoretical Study of Friction: A Case of One-Dimensional Clean Surfaces
A new method has been proposed to evaluate the frictional force in the
stationary state. This method is applied to the 1-dimensional model of clean
surfaces. The kinetic frictional force is seen to depend on velocity in
general, but the dependence becomes weaker as the maximum static frictional
force increases and in the limiting case the kinetic friction gets only weakly
dependent on velocity as described by one of the laws of friction. It is also
shown that there is a phase transition between state with vanishing maximum
static frictional force and that with finite one. The role of randomness at the
interface and the relation to the impurity pinning of the sliding
Charge-Density-Wave are discussed. to appear in Phys.Rev.B. abstract only. Full
text is available upon request. E-mail: [email protected]: 2 pages, Plain TEX, OUCMT-94-
Colossal electroresistance and colossal magnetoresistive step in paramagnetic insulating phase of single crystalline bilayered manganite(LaPr)SrMnO
We report a significant decrease in the low-temperature resistance induced by
the application of an electric current on the -plane in the paramagnetic
insulating (PMI) state of
(LaPr)SrMnO. A colossal
electroresistance effect attaining -95% is observed at lower temperatures. A
colossal magnetoresistive step appears near 5T at low temperatures below 10K,
accompanied by an ultrasharp width of the insulator-metal transition. Injection
of higher currents to the crystal causes a disappearance of the steplike
transition. These findings have a close relationship with the presence of the
short-range charge-ordered clusters pinned within the PMI matrix of the crystal
studied.Comment: 4 pages 3 figure
Microstructural Change and Mechanical Property of Neutron Irradiated Ti-Ni Shape Memory Alloy
Microstructural change and mechanical property of Ti-Ni shape memory alloy after neutron irradiation have been studied. The neutron doses were from 1.4×10^ to 1.2×10^n/cm^2, and the irradiation temperature was under 423K. A halo ring was observed after the irradiation of 1.2×10^n/cm^2, which means that amorphous phase was induced by the neutron irradiation. In stress-strain curve, the critical point (σ_M) increased as the dose increased. At the highest dose, the stress-strain curve lost pseudoelasticity. These results indicate that such mechanical properties strongly depend on the amorphous formation
Microvascular Architecture of the Filiform Papillae in Primates and Insectivores
The microvascular architecture of filiform papillae was investigated under a scanning electron microscope in man, Japanese monkeys, common squirrel monkeys, common marmosets, common tree shrews, large Japanese moles and dwarf shrews utilizing microvascular corrosion casts. Filiform papillae were circularly arranged in primates, and each of them was supplied by a hairpin capillary loop. These papillae sometimes were aggregated. The filiform papillae of Japanese monkeys exhibited markedly locational differences on the lingual dorsum and were supplied by circularly arranged capillary loops or by an intrapapillary capillary network. Small filiform papillae were located on an epithelial eminence in the lingual radix, each of them supplied by a low and simple hairpin capillary loop. The aggregated filiform papillae of common squirrel monkeys were less frequent without any locational differences. Low filiform papillae of common marmosets and tree shrews were simpler in form, being arranged in a circle and supplied by a simple hairpin capillary loop. The filiform papillae of insectivores were not arranged in a circle. The filiform papillae of dwarf shrews were supplied by an incomplete capillary ring without a loop. With respect to species differences, the circularly arranged capillary loops in man were most complicated and highly developed. Microvascular architecture of the filiform papillae of insectivores was much simpler, different from those observed in primates
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