2,820 research outputs found
Effect of stoichiometry on oxygen incorporation in MgB2 thin films
The amount of oxygen incorporated into MgB2 thin films upon exposure to
atmospheric gasses is found to depend strongly on the material's stoichiometry.
Rutherford backscattering spectroscopy was used to monitor changes in oxygen
incorporation resulting from exposure to: (a) ambient atmosphere, (b) humid
atmospheres, (c) anneals in air and (d) anneals in oxygen. The study
investigated thin-film samples with compositions that were systematically
varied from Mg0.9B2 to Mg1.1B2. A significant surface oxygen contamination was
observed in all of these films. The oxygen content in the bulk of the film, on
the other hand, increased significantly only in Mg rich films and in films
exposed to humid atmospheres.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, 1 tabl
MgB2 tunnel junctions with native or thermal oxide barriers
MgB2 tunnel junctions (MgB2/barrier/MgB2) were fabricated using a native
oxide grown on the bottom MgB2 film as the tunnel barrier. Such barriers
therefore survive the deposition of the second electrode at 300oC, even over
junction areas of ~1 mm2. Studies of such junctions, and those of the type
MgB2/native or thermal oxide/metal (Pb, Au, or Ag) show that tunnel barriers
grown on MgB2 exhibit a wide range of barrier heights and widths.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Swelling of acetylated wood in organic liquids
To investigate the affinity of acetylated wood for organic liquids, Yezo
spruce wood specimens were acetylated with acetic anhydride, and their swelling
in various liquids were compared to those of untreated specimens. The
acetylated wood was rapidly and remarkably swollen in aprotic organic liquids
such as benzene and toluene in which the untreated wood was swollen only
slightly and/or very slowly. On the other hand, the swelling of wood in water,
ethylene glycol and alcohols remained unchanged or decreased by the
acetylation. Consequently the maximum volume of wood swollen in organic liquids
was always larger than that in water. The effect of acetylation on the maximum
swollen volume of wood was greater in liquids having smaller solubility
parameters. The easier penetration of aprotic organic liquids into the
acetylated wood was considered to be due to the scission of hydrogen bonds
among the amorphous wood constituents by the substitution of hydroxyl groups
with hydrophobic acetyl groups.Comment: to be published in J Wood Science (Japanese wood research society
A New Ultracool White Dwarf Discovered in the SuperCOSMOS Sky Survey
We present photographic B, R and I photometry, and optical and near-infrared
spectroscopy, of a new ultracool white dwarf (UCWD) discovered in the
SuperCOSMOS Sky Survey. The spectrum of SSSJ1556-0806 shows strong flux
suppression due to the presence of collisionally induced absorption by
molecular hydrogen (H2CIA), a feature characteristic of the cool, high density
environments found in the atmospheres of ultracool white dwarfs. SSSJ1556-0806
therefore joins a list of <10 ultracool white dwarfs displaying extreme flux
suppression. Synthetic model fitting suggests an effective temperature <3000K,
which if true would make this one of the coolest white dwarfs currently known.
We also exploit the similarity between the SEDs of SSSJ1556-0806 and the
well-studied UCWD LHS 3250 to aid in the determination of the atmospheric
parameters in a regime where models consistently fail to reproduce
observations. SSSJ1556-0806 is relatively bright (R ~ 17.8), making it
particularly amenable to follow up observations to obtain trigonometric
parallax and IR photometry.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
Inequality in education – innovation in methods introduction with reflections by Dr Nicola Ingram and Professor Melanie Nind
Against a backdrop of metamorphosis in the UK educational landscape and the increased focus on ‘innovation’ in research funding and postgraduate programmes, a conference entitled ‘Inequality in Education – Innovation in Methods’ (IEIM) was held at the University of Warwick in November 2014 to offer space to reflect on ‘inequality in education’ as a field of research and the impact, and future prospect for ‘innovation in method’ in this field. This article introduces this featured section, including reflections from Dr Nicola Ingram and Professor Melanie Nind, who both delivered keynote addresses at the conferenc
Simulation Study of TenTen: A new Multi-TeV IACT array
TenTen is a proposed array of Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescopes (IACT)
optimized for the gamma ray energy regime of 10 TeV to 100 TeV, but with a
threshold of ~1 to a few TeV. It will offer a collecting area of 10 km2 above
energies of 10 TeV. In the initial phase, a cell of 3 to 5 modest-sized
telescopes, each with 10-30 m2 mirror area, is suggested for an Australian
site. A possible expansion of the array could comprise many such cells. Here we
present work on configuration and technical issues from our simulation studies
of the array. Working topics include array layout, telescope size and optics,
camera field of view, telescope trigger system, electronics, and site surveys.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Proceedings of the ICRC 2007, pdf
forma
Zurek-Kibble Mechanism for the Spontaneous Vortex Formation in Josephson Tunnel Junctions: New Theory and Experiment
New scaling behavior has been both predicted and observed in the spontaneous
production of fluxons in quenched annular Josephson tunnel
junctions as a function of the quench time, . The probability
to trap a single defect during the N-S phase transition clearly follows an
allometric dependence on with a scaling exponent , as
predicted from the Zurek-Kibble mechanism for {\it realistic} JTJs formed by
strongly coupled superconductors. This definitive experiment replaces one
reported by us earlier, in which an idealised model was used that predicted
, commensurate with the then much poorer data. Our experiment
remains the only condensed matter experiment to date to have measured a scaling
exponent with any reliability.Comment: Four pages, one figur
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