250 research outputs found
Thermal prestress in composite compliant shell mechanisms
This paper explores the ability to tailor the mechanical properties of composite compliant shell mechanisms, by exploiting the thermal prestress introduced during the composite laminate cure. An extension of an analytical tape spring model with composite thermal analysis is presented, and the effect of the thermal prestress is studied by means of energy landscapes for the cylindrical composite shells. Tape springs that would otherwise be monostable structures become bistable and exhibit greater ranges of low-energy twisting with thermally induced prestress. Predicted shell geometries are compared with finite element (FE) results and manufactured samples, showing good agreement between all approaches. Wider challenges around the manufacture of prestressed composite compliant mechanisms are discussed
Bespoke extensional elasticity through helical lattice systems
© 2019 The Authors. Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited. Nonlinear structural behaviour offers a richness of response that cannot be replicated within a traditional linear design paradigm. However, designing robust and reliable nonlinearity remains a challenge, in part, due to the difficulty in describing the behaviour of nonlinear systems in an intuitive manner. Here, we present an approach that overcomes this difficulty by constructing an effectively one-dimensional system that can be tuned to produce bespoke nonlinear responses in a systematic and understandable manner. Specifically, given a continuous energy function E and a tolerance ℇ > 0, we construct a system whose energy is approximately E up to an additive constant, with L∞-error no more that ℇ. The system is composed of helical lattices that act as one-dimensional nonlinear springs in parallel. We demonstrate that the energy of the system can approximate any polynomial and, thus, by Weierstrass approximation theorem, any continuous function. We implement an algorithm to tune the geometry, stiffness and pre-strain of each lattice to obtain the desired system behaviour systematically. Examples are provided to show the richness of the design space and highlight how the system can exhibit increasingly complex behaviours including tailored deformation-dependent stiffness, snap-through buckling and multi-stability
Origins of Diamond Surface Noise Probed by Correlating Single-Spin Measurements with Surface Spectroscopy
The nitrogen vacancy (NV) center in diamond exhibits spin-dependent
fluorescence and long spin coherence times under ambient conditions, enabling
applications in quantum information processing and sensing. NV centers near the
surface can have strong interactions with external materials and spins,
enabling new forms of nanoscale spectroscopy. However, NV spin coherence
degrades within 100 nanometers of the surface, suggesting that diamond surfaces
are plagued with ubiquitous defects. Prior work on characterizing near-surface
noise has primarily relied on using NV centers themselves as probes; while this
has the advantage of exquisite sensitivity, it provides only indirect
information about the origin of the noise. Here we demonstrate that surface
spectroscopy methods and single spin measurements can be used as complementary
diagnostics to understand sources of noise. We find that surface morphology is
crucial for realizing reproducible chemical termination, and use these insights
to achieve a highly ordered, oxygen-terminated surface with suppressed noise.
We observe NV centers within 10 nm of the surface with coherence times extended
by an order of magnitude
The Massive and Distant Clusters of WISE Survey VI: Stellar Mass Fractions of a Sample of High-Redshift Infrared-selected Clusters
We present measurements of the stellar mass fractions () for a
sample of high-redshift () infrared-selected galaxy
clusters from the Massive and Distant Clusters of WISE Survey (MaDCoWS) and
compare them to the stellar mass fractions of Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ)
effect-selected clusters in a similar mass and redshift range from the South
Pole Telescope (SPT)-SZ Survey. We do not find a significant difference in mean
between the two selection methods, though we do find an unexpectedly
large range in for the SZ-selected clusters. In addition, we measure
the luminosity function of the MaDCoWS clusters and find ,
similar to other studies of clusters at or near our redshift range. Finally, we
present SZ detections and masses for seven MaDCoWS clusters and new
spectroscopic redshifts for five MaDCoWS clusters. One of these new clusters,
MOO J1521+0452 at , is the most distant MaDCoWS cluster confirmed to
date.Comment: Accepted to Ap
Optical types of inland and coastal waters
Inland and coastal waterbodies are critical components of the global biosphere. Timely monitoring is necessary to enhance our understanding of their functions, the drivers impacting on these functions and to deliver more effective management. The ability to observe waterbodies from space has led to Earth observation (EO) becoming established as an important source of information on water quality and ecosystem condition. However, progress toward a globally valid EO approach is still largely hampered by inconsistences over temporally and spatially variable in-water optical conditions. In this study, a comprehensive dataset from more than 250 aquatic systems, representing a wide range of conditions, was analyzed in order to develop a typology of optical water types (OWTs) for inland and coastal waters. We introduce a novel approach for clustering in situ hyperspectral water reflectance measurements (n = 4045) from multiple sources based on a functional data analysis. The resulting classification algorithm identified 13 spectrally distinct clusters of measurements in inland waters, and a further nine clusters from the marine environment. The distinction and characterization of OWTs was supported by the availability of a wide range of coincident data on biogeochemical and inherent optical properties from inland waters. Phylogenetic trees based on the shapes of cluster means were constructed to identify similarities among the derived clusters with respect to spectral diversity. This typification provides a valuable framework for a globally applicable EO scheme and the design of future EO missions
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