580 research outputs found
Modeling and testing of a thermal transient anemometer
The Thermal Transient Anemometer (TTA) is a fluid mass flow measuring device which utilizes a thermocouple as a probe. The probe is periodically heated by an electric current pulse through the thermocouple junction, and the measured rate of cooling between pulses is related to the local mean flow velocity. The standard thermocouple sensor provides an inexpensive flow probe which is durable, rugged, and capable of satisfactory operation in hostile environments. The TTA was developed and patented in prototype form by Instrument Development for Applied Physics (IDAP), a small US company. IDAP has tested the TTA and shown that the measurement principle is valid. However, there is a need to refine the prototype so that the TTA becomes a commercially viable instrument. The main concern is to reduce the heating current to the TTA so that battery-powered operation is possible. To do this, a probe needs to be developed such that only the region local to the thermocouple junction is heated, rather than the entire length of the wire. There area number of ways that this might be done, and IDAP has worked with ARi Industries, a thermocouple manufacturer, to develop probe designs that would have this characteristic, and at the same time would retain the ruggedness and ease of manufacture of a standard thermocouple. The purpose of this CRADA was to investigate these designs with a view to their possible commercial development. The starting point was to develop a computer model of the TTA as it currently exists, i.e., the prototype configuration, and to compare the results with experimental data. Good agreement between model and data was obtained, thus allowing new designs to be analyzed with some confidence
Carbohydrate-derived iminium salt organocatalysts for the asymmetric epoxidation of alkenes
A new family of carbohydrate-based dihydroisoquinolinium salts has been prepared and tested for potential as asymmetric catalysts for the epoxidation of unfunctionalized alkene substrates, providing up to 57% ee in the product epoxides
Giardia duodenalis mouse model for the development of novel antigiardial agents
This study describes a neonatal mouse model of Giardia infection for development of novel antigiardials. Mice were infected with the axenically cultured Assemblage A BAH2c2 strain, with 105 trophozoites per animal recovered. This model proved to be robust and consistent for use in preliminary drug efficacy trials and drug development
Pseudospin symmetry as a relativistic dynamical symmetry in the nucleus
Pseudospin symmetry in nuclei is investigated by solving the Dirac equation
with Woods-Saxon scalar and vector radial potentials, and studying the
correlation of the energy splittings of pseudospin partners with the nuclear
potential parameters. The pseudospin interaction is related to a
pseudospin-orbit term that arises in a Schroedinger-like equation for the lower
component of the Dirac spinor. We show that the contribution from this term to
the energy splittings of pseudospin partners is large. The near pseudospin
degeneracy results from a significant cancelation among the different terms in
that equation, manifesting the dynamical character of this symmetry in the
nucleus. We analyze the isospin dependence of the pseudospin symmetry and find
that its dynamical character is behind the different pseudospin splittings
observed in neutron and proton spectra of nuclei.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, uses REVTeX4 macro
A Monitor of Beam Polarization Profiles for the TRIUMF Parity Experiment
TRIUMF experiment E497 is a study of parity violation in pp scattering at an
energy where the leading term in the analyzing power is expected to vanish,
thus measuring a unique combination of weak-interaction flavour conserving
terms. It is desired to reach a level of sensitivity of 2x10^-8 in both
statistical and systematic errors. The leading systematic errors depend on
transverse polarization components and, at least, the first moment of
transverse polarization. A novel polarimeter that measures profiles of both
transverse components of polarization as a function of position is described.Comment: 19 pages LaTeX, 10 PostScript figures. To appear in Nuclear
Instruments and Methods in Physics Research, Section
Systematics of proton emission
A very simple formula is presented that relates the logarithm of the
half-life, corrected by the centrifugal barrier, with the Coulomb parameter in
proton decay processes. The corresponding experimental data lie on two straight
lines which appear as a result of a sudden change in the nuclear shape marking
two regions of deformation independently of the angular momentum of the
outgoing proton. This feature provides a powerful tool to assign experimentally
quantum numbers in proton emitters.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Role of dynamical particle-vibration coupling in reconciliation of the puzzle for spherical proton emitters
It has been observed that decay rate for proton emission from
single particle state is systematically quenched compared with the prediction
of a one dimensional potential model although the same model successfully
accounts for measured decay rates from and states. We
reconcile this discrepancy by solving coupled-channels equations, taking into
account couplings between the proton motion and vibrational excitations of a
daughter nucleus. We apply the formalism to proton emitting nuclei
Re to show that there is a certain range of parameter set of the
excitation energy and the dynamical deformation parameter for the quadrupole
phonon excitation which reproduces simultaneously the experimental decay rates
from the 2, 3 and 1 states in these nuclei.Comment: RevTex, 12 pages, 4 eps figure
Giants On Deformed Backgrounds
We study giant graviton probes in the framework of the three--parameter
deformation of the AdS_5 x S^5 background. We examine both the case when the
brane expands in the deformed part of the geometry and the case when it blows
up into AdS. Performing a detailed analysis of small fluctuations around the
giants, the configurations turn out to be stable. Our results hold even for the
supersymmetric Lunin-Maldacena deformation.Comment: LaTex, 28 pages, uses JHEP3; v2: minor corrections, references added;
v3: final version accepted for publication in JHE
Young people, crime and school exclusion: a case of some surprises
During the 1990s the number of young people being permanently excluded from schools in England and Wales increased dramatically from 2,910 (1990/91) to a peak of 12,700 (1996/97). Coinciding with this rise was a resurgence of the debate centring on lawless and delinquent youth. With the publication of Young People and Crime (Graham and Bowling 1995) and Misspent Youth (Audit Commission 1996) the 'common sense assumption' that exclusion from school inexorably promoted crime received wide support, with the school excludee portrayed as another latter day 'folk devil'. This article explores the link between school exclusion and juvenile crime, and offers some key findings from a research study undertaken with 56 young people who had experience of being excluded from school. Self-report interview questions reveal that whilst 40 of the young people had offended, 90% (36) reported that the onset of their offending commenced prior to their first exclusion. Moreover, 50 (89.2% of the total number of young people in the sample), stated that they were no more likely to offend subsequent to being excluded and 31 (55.4%) stated that they were less likely to offend during their exclusion period. Often, this was because on being excluded, they were 'grounded' by their parents
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