3,273 research outputs found
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Hot rolled high Al containing steels as a replacement for the control rolled high strength low alloy (HSLA) steels
The extent to which Al and Nb can be used to improve the properties of hot rolled steels has been investigated with the aim of obtaining mechanical properties similar to those given by the more expensive, control rolled or normalised route, eg. API X52 line pipe. Three steels with 0.02%Al, 0.16%Al and 0.16%Al, 0.018%Nb have been examined and their strength and impact behaviour obtained. The 0.16%Al steel had a similar strength to the 0.02%Al containing steel∼300MPa, but better impact behaviour (30-40°C lower 54J, ITT) with an impact transition temperature (ITT) of −90°C which from previous work will be due to a refinement of the grain boundary carbides. The present work shows that the addition of Nb to this high Al containing steel, although beneficial to strength, giving a lower yield strength (LYS) of 385 MPa, close to that given by some of the control rolled steels gives very poor impact behaviour with a 54J ITT of only −20°C. The improvement of strength is mainly a result of precipitation hardening by NbCN with some benefit from grain refinement while the deterioration of impact behaviour might be due to the presence of lower transformation products or coarser carbides. Further work is required to positively clarify the cause of this deterioration and to explore further options in achieving the aim of obtaining a hot rolled steel with strength in the range 350-400MPa and 54J ITT of −50°C
Evaluation of Aposphaeria amaranthi as a Bioherbicide for Pigweed (Amaranthus Spp.)
Studies were conducted to determine the potential of the fungus, Aposphaeria amaranth!, as a bioherbicide for pigweeds (Amaranthus spp.). Experiments to establish the environmental parameters necessary for control of tumble pigweed (A. albus) demonstrated that an 8-hr dew period was sufficient for control of seedlings with four to six leaves, and that temperatures ranging from 20 to 28 C were conducive for disease development. Conidial concentrations as lowas 1x 10s conidia per ml also were sufficient for plant mortality. Host range tests demonstrated pathogenicity of A. amaranthi to several other species of Amaranthus, including biotypes resistant to triazine herbicides. Disease on redroot pigweed (A. retroflexus) was enhanced by incorporation of surfactants into inoculum suspensions. Field tests conducted in 1990 resulted in 73% control of redroot pigweed and 99% control of tumble pigweed. These results suggest that Aposphaeria amaranthi has potential as a bioherbicide for controlling pigweeds
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Hot ductility of high Al TWIP steels containing Nb and Nb-V
The hot ductility of B-Ti-Nb-high Al (1.5%Al) containing TWIP steels having Ti/N ratios mainly in excess of 3.4/1 was obtained. After soaking at 1250°C, the tensile specimens were cooled at 12 or 60°C min−1 to the test temperature and then strained to failure at 3 × 10−3 s−1. Ductility was always good (reduction of area >40%), independent of Ti/N ratio or cooling rate. The good ductility is due to B segregation strengthening the grain boundaries and the low S level (0.005%S) limiting the volume fraction of MnS inclusions and restricting AlN precipitation to the matrix. Increasing the cooling rate, higher N levels and Nb resulted in a small improvement in ductility. An addition of V to the Nb-containing steels caused a slight deterioration in the hot ductility
The universal character of Zwanziger's horizon function in Euclidean Yang-Mills theories
In light of the recently established BRST invariant formulation of the
Gribov-Zwanziger theory, we show that Zwanziger's horizon function displays a
universal character. More precisely, the correlation functions of local BRST
invariant operators evaluated with the Yang-Mills action supplemented with a
BRST invariant version of the Zwanziger's horizon function and quantized in an
arbitrary class of covariant, color invariant and renormalizable gauges which
reduce to the Landau gauge when all gauge parameters are set to zero, have a
unique, gauge parameters independent result, corresponding to that of the
Landau gauge when the restriction to the Gribov region in the latter
gauge is imposed. As such, thanks to the BRST invariance, the cut-off at the
Gribov region acquires a gauge independent meaning in the class of the
physical correlators.Comment: 14 pages. v2: version accepted by Phys.Lett.
A Virtual Conversational Agent for Teens with Autism: Experimental Results and Design Lessons
We present the design of an online social skills development interface for
teenagers with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The interface is intended to
enable private conversation practice anywhere, anytime using a web-browser.
Users converse informally with a virtual agent, receiving feedback on nonverbal
cues in real-time, and summary feedback. The prototype was developed in
consultation with an expert UX designer, two psychologists, and a pediatrician.
Using the data from 47 individuals, feedback and dialogue generation were
automated using a hidden Markov model and a schema-driven dialogue manager
capable of handling multi-topic conversations. We conducted a study with nine
high-functioning ASD teenagers. Through a thematic analysis of post-experiment
interviews, identified several key design considerations, notably: 1) Users
should be fully briefed at the outset about the purpose and limitations of the
system, to avoid unrealistic expectations. 2) An interface should incorporate
positive acknowledgment of behavior change. 3) Realistic appearance of a
virtual agent and responsiveness are important in engaging users. 4)
Conversation personalization, for instance in prompting laconic users for more
input and reciprocal questions, would help the teenagers engage for longer
terms and increase the system's utility
Particle Creation by a Moving Boundary with Robin Boundary Condition
We consider a massless scalar field in 1+1 dimensions satisfying a Robin
boundary condition (BC) at a non-relativistic moving boundary. We derive a
Bogoliubov transformation between input and output bosonic field operators,
which allows us to calculate the spectral distribution of created particles.
The cases of Dirichlet and Neumann BC may be obtained from our result as
limiting cases. These two limits yield the same spectrum, which turns out to be
an upper bound for the spectra derived for Robin BC. We show that the particle
emission effect can be considerably reduced (with respect to the
Dirichlet/Neumann case) by selecting a particular value for the oscillation
frequency of the boundary position
Researching ‘bogus’ asylum seekers, ‘illegal’ migrants and ‘crimmigrants’
Both immigration and criminal laws are, at their core, systems of inclusion and exclusion. They are designed to determine whether and how to include individuals as members of society or exclude them from it, thereby, creating insiders and outsiders (Stumpf 2006). Both are designed to create distinct categories of people — innocent versus guilty, admitted versus excluded or, as majority would say, ‘legal’ versus ‘illegal’ (Stumpf 2006). Viewed in that light, perhaps it is not surprising that these two areas of law have become inextrica- bly connected in the official discourses. When politicians and policy makers (and also law enforcement authorities and tabloid press) seek to raise the barriers for non-citizens to attain membership in society, it is unremarkable that they turn their attention to an area of the law that similarly func- tions to exclude the ‘other’ — transforming immigrants into ‘crimmigrants’.1 As a criminological researcher one then has to rise up to the challenges of disentangling these so-called officially constructed (pseudo) realities, and breaking free from a continued dominance of authoritative discourses, and developing an alternative understanding of ‘crimmigration’ by connecting the processes of criminal is ation and ‘other ing’ with poverty, xe no-racism and other forms of social exclusion (see Institute of Race Relations 1987; Richmond 1994; Fekete 2001; Bowling and Phillips 2002; Sivanandan 2002; Weber and Bowling 2004)
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