2,357 research outputs found
Rate statistics for radio noise from lightning
Radio frequency noise from lightning was measured at several frequencies in the HF - VHF range at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida. The data were examined to determine flashing rate statistics during periods of strong activity from nearby storms. It was found that the time between flashes is modeled reasonably well by a random variable with a lognormal distribution
High Frequency Scattering from Arbitrarily Oriented Dielectric Disks
Calculations have been made of electromagnetic wave scattering from dielectric disks of arbitrary shape and orientation in the high frequency (physical optics) regime. The solution is obtained by approximating the fields inside the disk with the fields induced inside an identically oriented slab (i.e. infinite parallel planes) with the same thickness and dielectric properties. The fields inside the disk excite conduction and polarization currents which are used to calculate the scattered fields by integrating the radiation from these sources over the volume of the disk. This computation has been executed for observers in the far field of the disk in the case of disks with arbitrary orientation and for arbitrary polarization of the incident radiation. The results have been expressed in the form of a dyadic scattering amplitude for the disk. The results apply to disks whose diameter is large compared to wavelength and whose thickness is small compared to diameter, but the thickness need not be small compared to wavelength. Examples of the dependence of the scattering amplitude on frequency, dielectric properties of the disk and disk orientation are presented for disks of circular cross section
Structural dichroism in the antiferromagnetic insulating phase of V_2O_3
We performed near-edge x-ray absorption spectroscopy (XANES) at V K edge in
the antiferromagnetic insulating (AFI) phase of a 2.8% Cr-doped V_2O_3 single
crystal. Linear dichroism of several percent is measured in the hexagonal plane
and found to be in good agreement with ab-initio calculations based on multiple
scattering theory. This experiment definitively proves the structural origin of
the signal and therefore solves a controversy raised by previous
interpretations of the same dichroism as non-reciprocal. It also calls for a
further investigation of the role of the magnetoelectric annealing procedure in
cooling to the AFI phase.Comment: 4 pages 3 figures. To be published in Phys. Rev. B (2005
Microwave properties of Nb/PdNi/Nb trilayers. Observation of flux flow in excess of Bardeen-Stephen theory
We combine wideband (1-20 GHz) Corbino disk and dielectric resonator (8.2
GHz) techniques to study the microwave properties in Nb/PdNi/Nb trilayers,
grown by UHV dc magnetron sputtering, composed by Nb layers of nominal
thickness =15 nm, and a ferromagnetic PdNi layer of thickness = 1, 2,
8 and 9 nm. We focus on the vortex state. Magnetic fields up to were
applied. The microwave resistivity at fixed increases with ,
eventually exceeding the Bardeen Stephen flux flow value.Comment: 6 pages. Submitted to Journal of Superconductivity and Novel
Magnetis
Gauge factor of thick film resistors: outcomes of the variable range hopping model
Despite a large amount of data and numerous theoretical proposals, the
microscopic mechanism of transport in thick film resistors remains unclear.
However, recent low temperature measurements point toward a possible variable
range hopping mechanism of transport. Here we examine how such a mechanism
affects the gauge factor of thick film resistors. We find that at sufficiently
low temperatures , for which the resistivity follows the Mott's law
, the gauge factor GF is proportional to
. Moreover, the inclusion of Coulomb gap effects leads to at lower temperatures. In addition, we study a simple
model which generalizes the variable range hopping mechanism by taking into
account the finite mean inter-grain spacing. Our results suggest a possible
experimental verification of the validity of the variable range hopping in
thick film resistors.Comment: 7 pages, 3 eps figures, submitted to Journal of Applied Physic
Polaronic state and nanometer-scale phase separation in colossal magnetoresistive manganites
High resolution topographic images obtained by scanning tunneling microscope
in the insulating state of Pr0.68Pb0.32MnO3 single crystals showed regular
stripe-like or zigzag patterns on a width scale of 0.4 - 0.5 nm confirming a
high temperature polaronic state. Spectroscopic studies revealed inhomogeneous
maps of zero-bias conductance with small patches of metallic clusters on length
scale of 2 - 3 nm only within a narrow temperature range close to the
metal-insulator transition. The results give a direct observation of polarons
in the insulating state, phase separation of nanometer-scale metallic clusters
in the paramagnetic metallic state, and a homogeneous ferromagnetic state
Theory of Insulator Metal Transition and Colossal Magnetoresistance in Doped Manganites
The persistent proximity of insulating and metallic phases, a puzzling
characterestic of manganites, is argued to arise from the self organization of
the twofold degenerate e_g orbitals of Mn into localized Jahn-Teller(JT)
polaronic levels and broad band states due to the large electron - JT phonon
coupling present in them. We describe a new two band model with strong
correlations and a dynamical mean-field theory calculation of equilibrium and
transport properties. These explain the insulator metal transition and colossal
magnetoresistance quantitatively, as well as other consequences of two state
coexistence
The structural molecular biology network of the State of São Paulo, Brazil
This article describes the achievements of the Structural Molecular Biology Network (SMolBNet), a collaborative program of structural molecular biology, centered in the State of São Paulo, Brazil, and supported by São Paulo State Funding Agency (FAPESP). It gathers twenty scientific groups and is coordinated by the scientific staff of the Center of Structural Molecular Biology, at the National Laboratory of Synchrotron Light (LNLS), in Campinas. The SMolBNet program has been aimed at 1) solving the structure of proteins of interest related to the research projects of the groups. In some cases, the choice has been to select proteins of unknown function or of possible novel structure obtained from the sequenced genomes of the FAPESP genomic program; 2) providing the groups with training in all the steps of the protein structure determination: gene cloning, protein expression, protein purification, protein crystallization and structure determination. Having begun in 2001, the program has been successful in both aims. Here, four groups reveal their participation in the program and describe the structural aspects of the proteins they have selected to study.Esse artigo descreve realizações do Programa SMolBNet (Rede de Biologia Molecular Estrutural) do Estado de São Paulo, apoiado pela FAPESP (Fundação de Apoio à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo). Ele reúne vinte grupos de pesquisa e é coordenado pelos pesquisadores do Laboratório Nacional de Luz Síncrotron (LNLS), em Campinas. O Programa SMolBNet tem como metas: Elucidar a estrutura tridimensional de proteínas de interesse aos grupos de pesquisa componentes do Programa; Prover os grupos com treinamento em todas as etapas de determinação de estrutura: clonagem gênica, expressão de proteínas, purificação de proteínas, cristalização de proteínas e elucidação de suas estruturas. Tendo começado em 2001, o Programa alcançou sucesso em ambas as metas. Neste artigo, quatro dos grupos descrevem suas participações, e discutem aspectos estruturais das proteínas que eles selecionaram para estudos.Centro de Biologia Molecular Estrutural Laboratório Nacional de Luz SíncrotronUniversidade de São Paulo Instituto de Biociências Departamento de Genética e Processos EvolutivosUniversidade de São Paulo Instituto de Química Departamento de BioquímicaUniversidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP) Escola Paulista de MedicinaCentro Latino-Americano e do Caribe de Informação em Ciências da Saúde BIREMEUNIFESP, EPMSciEL
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