189 research outputs found
When hot water freezes before cold
I suggest that the origin of the Mpemba effect (the freezing of hot water
before cold) is freezing-point depression by solutes, either gaseous or solid,
whose solubility decreases with increasing temperature so that they are removed
when water is heated. They are concentrated ahead of the freezing front by zone
refining in water that has not been heated, reduce the temperature of the
freezing front, and thereby reduce the temperature gradient and heat flux,
slowing the progress of the front. I present a simple calculation of this
effect, and suggest experiments to test this hypothesis.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
Low carrier concentration crystals of the topological insulator BiTeSe
We report the characterization of BiTeSe crystals obtained by the
modified Bridgman and Bridgman-Stockbarger crystal growth techniques. X-ray
diffraction study confirms an ordered Se-Te distribution in the inner and outer
chalcogen layers, respectively, with a small amount of mixing. The crystals
displaying high resistivity () and low carrier
concentration (/cm) at 4 K were found in the central
region of the long Bridgman-Stockbarger crystal, which we attribute to very
small differences in defect density along the length of the crystal rod.
Analysis of the temperature dependent resistivities and Hall coefficients
reveals the possible underlying origins of the donors and acceptors in this
phase.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, accepted by PR
Proton Spin-Lattice Relaxation in Organic Molecular Solids: Polymorphism and the Dependence on Sample Preparation
We report solid‐state nuclear magnetic resonance 1H spin‐lattice relaxation, single‐crystal X‐ray diffraction, powder X‐ray diffraction, field emission scanning electron microscopy, and differential scanning calorimetry in solid samples of 2‐ethylanthracene (EA) and 2‐ethylanthraquinone (EAQ) that have been physically purified in different ways from the same commercial starting compounds. The solid‐state 1H spin‐lattice relaxation is always non‐exponential at high temperatures as expected when CH3 rotation is responsible for the relaxation. The 1H spin‐lattice relaxation experiments are very sensitive to the “several‐molecule” (clusters) structure of these van der Waals molecular solids. In the three differently prepared samples of EAQ, the relaxation also becomes very non‐exponential at low temperatures. This is very unusual and the decay of the nuclear magnetization can be fitted with both a stretched exponential and a double exponential. This unusual result correlates with the powder X‐ray diffractometry results and suggests that the anomalous relaxation is due to crystallites of two (or more) different polymorphs (concomitant polymorphism)
Evaluating the Effect of Beauty on Labor Market Outcomes: A Review of the Literature.
An important underlying determinant of wage discrimination, as well as the gender wage gap is the way the labor market rewards individual physical attractiveness. This article surveys the extensive empirical literature of the effect of physical attractiveness on labor market outcomes. Particular attention is given to the channels through which attractiveness may affect individual labor market outcomes and the way attractiveness affects gender wage differentials. Further research is needed on the effect of attractiveness within occupations in order to provide more evidence on its productivity-enhancing channel of transmission and the effect this has on the gender wage gap
Health and income:a meta-analysis to explore cross-country, gender and age differences
Background: Evidence of an effect of income on self-reported poor health (SRPH) is widely available in the literature. We compare this effect across age, different countries and between men and women using meta-analysis. Studies that report on an effect of income lack a homogenous effect size. To overcome this problem we propose a method to derive a homogenous effect size to enable us to compare the effect of income across groups. Methods: We take a meta-analytical approach to examine the effect of income on SRPH. The data consists of reported and calculated odds ratios as a measure of effect for SRPH outcomes across different income categories. Self-reported health outcomes are dichotomised into 'good' and 'poor'. With least-squares techniques, we estimate the functional parameters that describe the log-linear association between income and SRPH. Subsequently, F-tests are performed to show variations between the groups. Results: The relationship between income and SRPH is log-linear for most countries but not significantly for Sweden and the Netherlands. Our results show significant differences in the effect of income between countries. We find that men require a higher income than women to achieve comparable SRPH outcomes, and that the effect of income depends on age. Conclusions: There is significant income related variation in SRPH between different countries even if the levels of income or the standards of living are comparable. For women income affects SRPH differently than for men. The effect of income on SRPH depends on the age of the individual respondent
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