487 research outputs found

    Viscoelastic repetitive creep and recovery in bituminous materials

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    Abstract Repetitive creep and recovery tests in bituminous materials- asphalt and asphalt paving mix are studied at high service temperatures. The non-exponential- stretched exponential type of continuous retardation spectrum is defined and used for the calculation of creep compliance function in repetitive shear and tensile creep and recovery experiments and also in the wheel tracking test on asphalt paving mix. It is shown that the used model, with only five adjustable parameters, can describe the test quite well. The model is also adequate for the description of the composite compliance function constructed from the linear viscoelastic data and the apparently nonlinear compliance function obtained in the wheel tracking test, for asphalt paving mix

    Experimental observation of optical rotation generated in vacuum by a magnetic field

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    We report the experimental observation of a light polarization rotation in vacuum in the presence of a transverse magnetic field. Assuming that data distribution is Gaussian, the average measured rotation is (3.9+/-0.5)e-12 rad/pass, at 5 T with 44000 passes through a 1m long magnet, with lambda = 1064 nm. The relevance of this result in terms of the existence of a light, neutral, spin-zero particle is discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letters Comment to version 2: minor changes to abstract and final discussion. Added 2 references Comment to version 3: corrected minor typographical errors, eliminated the distinction between scalar and pseudoscalar in the particle interpretation of the resul

    Crack growth behavior of SBR, NR and BR rubber compounds: comparison of Pure-Shear versus Strip Tensile test

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    Fatigue crack growth experiments on different carbon black–filled rubber compounds have been carried out to evaluate the influence of pure-shear and strip tensile testing mode by using sine and pulse as waveforms. In a previous set of experimental investigations regarding the influence of both waveform and tested material, it was found that the mode I of crack opening sometimes propagates too quickly to be properly monitored in tests involving strip-tensile specimens. An alternative test methodology based on pure-shear test mode has been investigated, optimizing both the shape of the specimen and the test equipment. Data obtained from the different compound formulations were consistent with the theoretical background and resulted in similar ranking of compound crack growth resistance for the two testing modes; in addition, pure-shear mode showed a higher sensitivity to formula variations

    Optical production and detection of dark matter candidates

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    The PVLAS collaboration is at present running, at the Laboratori Nazionali di Legnaro of I.N.F.N., Padova, Italy, a very sensitive optical ellipsometer capable of measuring the small rotations or ellipticities which can be acquired by a linearly polarized laser beam propagating in vacuum through a transverse magnetic feld (vacuum magnetic birefringence). The apparatus will also be able to set new limits on mass and coupling constant of light scalar/pseudoscalar particles coupling to two photons by both producing and detecting the hypothetical particles. The axion, introduced to explain parity conservation in strong interactions, is an example of this class of particles, all of which are considered possible dark matter candidates. The PVLAS apparatus consists of a very high finesse (> 140000), 6.4 m long, Fabry-Perot cavity immersed in an intense dipolar magnetic field (~6.5 T). A linearly polarized laser beam is frequency locked to the cavity and analysed, using a heterodyne technique, for rotation and/or ellipticity acquired within the magnetic field.Comment: presented at "Frontier Detectors for Frontier Physics - 8th Pisa Meeting on Advanced Detectors - May 21-27, 2000" to appear in: Nucl.Instr. and Meth.

    Dynamical response of the "GGG" rotor to test the Equivalence Principle: theory, simulation and experiment. Part I: the normal modes

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    Recent theoretical work suggests that violation of the Equivalence Principle might be revealed in a measurement of the fractional differential acceleration η\eta between two test bodies -of different composition, falling in the gravitational field of a source mass- if the measurement is made to the level of η1013\eta\simeq 10^{-13} or better. This being within the reach of ground based experiments, gives them a new impetus. However, while slowly rotating torsion balances in ground laboratories are close to reaching this level, only an experiment performed in low orbit around the Earth is likely to provide a much better accuracy. We report on the progress made with the "Galileo Galilei on the Ground" (GGG) experiment, which aims to compete with torsion balances using an instrument design also capable of being converted into a much higher sensitivity space test. In the present and following paper (Part I and Part II), we demonstrate that the dynamical response of the GGG differential accelerometer set into supercritical rotation -in particular its normal modes (Part I) and rejection of common mode effects (Part II)- can be predicted by means of a simple but effective model that embodies all the relevant physics. Analytical solutions are obtained under special limits, which provide the theoretical understanding. A simulation environment is set up, obtaining quantitative agreement with the available experimental data on the frequencies of the normal modes, and on the whirling behavior. This is a needed and reliable tool for controlling and separating perturbative effects from the expected signal, as well as for planning the optimization of the apparatus.Comment: Accepted for publication by "Review of Scientific Instruments" on Jan 16, 2006. 16 2-column pages, 9 figure

    Agrivoltaic System: a Case Study of PV Production and Olive Cultivation in Southern Italy

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    The double use of the land in the AgriVoltaic (AV) sites allows to "doubly harvest from the sun", increasing the land use exploitation with lower environmental impact. This effect strongly depends on the system configuration for both the PV and agricultural sides. The choice is between a high-density PV module arrangement, with high PV production and low agricultural harvesting, or a highly spaced arrangement with lower PV production. The present work presents a case study in Southern Italy: the simulated PV plant can have two different layouts (rated power of 7.13 MW or 5.68 MW), and each hectare can include the plantation of about 900 Arbequina olive trees

    New PVLAS results and limits on magnetically induced optical rotation and ellipticity in vacuum

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    IIn 2006 the PVLAS collaboration reported the observation of an optical rotation generated in vacuum by a magnetic field. To further check against possible instrumental artifacts several upgrades to the PVLAS apparatus have been made during the last year. Two data taking runs, at the wavelength of 1064 nm, have been performed in the new configuration with magnetic field strengths of 2.3 T and 5 T. The 2.3 T field value was chosen in order to avoid stray fields. The new observations do not show the presence of a rotation signal down to the levels of 1.21081.2\cdot 10^{-8} rad at 5 T and 1.01081.0\cdot 10^{-8} rad at 2.3 T (at 95% c.l.) with 45000 passes in the magnetic field zone. In the same conditions no ellipticity signal was detected down to 1.41081.4\cdot 10^{-8} at 2.3 T (at 95% c.l.), whereas at 5 T a signal is still present. The physical nature of this ellipticity as due to an effect depending on B2B^2 can be excluded by the measurement at 2.3 T. These new results completely exclude the previously published magnetically induced vacuum dichroism results, indicating that they were instrumental artifacts. These new results therefore also exclude the particle interpretation of the previous PVLAS results as due to a spin zero boson. The background ellipticity at 2.3 T can be used to determine a new limit on the total photon-photon scattering cross section of σγγ<4.51034\sigma_{\gamma\gamma} < 4.5 \cdot10^{-34} barn at 95% c.l..Comment: 25 pages, 7 figures Main changes rel. to v.2: minor changes to abstract, replaced Figures 4,5,6, corrected typographical errors. Paper submitted to Physical Review

    Limits on the violation of g-universality with a Galileo-type experiment

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    Abstract We present new results for a Galilean experiment using two masses of copper and tungsten in simultaneous free fall. The experiment searches for a possible difference in the free-fall acceleration Δ g and it is sensitive to any composition-dependent interaction between the test masses and the earth, whose range exceeds 10 km. The results show no evidence for any composition-dependent gravity-like interaction within Δg μ Gal

    Limits on Low Energy Photon-Photon Scattering from an Experiment on Magnetic Vacuum Birefringence

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    Experimental bounds on induced vacuum magnetic birefringence can be used to improve present photon-photon scattering limits in the electronvolt energy range. Measurements with the PVLAS apparatus (E. Zavattini {\it et al.}, Phys. Rev. D {\bf77} (2008) 032006) at both λ=1064\lambda = 1064 nm and 532 nm lead to bounds on the parameter {\it Ae_{e}}, describing non linear effects in QED, of Ae(1064)<6.61021A_{e}^{(1064)} < 6.6\cdot10^{-21} T2^{-2} @ 1064 nm and Ae(532)<6.31021A_{e}^{(532)} < 6.3\cdot10^{-21} T2^{-2} @ 532 nm, respectively, at 95% confidence level, compared to the predicted value of Ae=1.321024A_{e}=1.32\cdot10^{-24} T2^{-2}. The total photon-photon scattering cross section may also be expressed in terms of AeA_e, setting bounds for unpolarized light of σγγ(1064)<4.61062\sigma_{\gamma\gamma}^{(1064)} < 4.6\cdot10^{-62} m2^{2} and σγγ(532)<2.71060\sigma_{\gamma\gamma}^{(532)} < 2.7\cdot10^{-60} m2^{2}. Compared to the expected QED scattering cross section these results are a factor of 2107\simeq2\cdot10^{7} higher and represent an improvement of a factor about 500 on previous bounds based on ellipticity measurements and of a factor of about 101010^{10} on bounds based on direct stimulated scattering measurements

    SerpinB3 as hepatic marker of post-resective shear stress

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    Post-resective liver failure is a frequent complication of liver surgery and it is due to portal hyperperfusion of the remnant liver and to arterial vasoconstriction, as buffer response of the hepatic artery. In this context, splenectomy allows a reduction of portal flow and increases the survival chance in preclinical models. SerpinB3 is over-expressed in the liver in oxidative stress conditions, as a mechanism of cell defense to provide survival by apoptosis inhibition and cell proliferation. In this study, the expression of SerpinB3 was assessed as predictor of liver damage in in vivo models of major hepatic resection with or without splenectomy. Wistar male rats were divided into 4 groups: group A received 30% hepatic resection, group B > 60% resection, group C > 60% resection with splenectomy and group D sham-operated. Before and after surgery liver function tests, echo Doppler ultrasound and gene expression were assessed. Transaminase values and ammonium were significantly higher in groups that underwent major hepatic resection. Echo Doppler ultrasound showed the highest portal flow and resistance of the hepatic artery in the group with > 60% hepatectomy without splenectomy, while the association of splenectomy determined no increase in portal flow and hepatic artery resistance. Only the group of rats without splenectomy showed higher shear-stress conditions, reflected by higher levels of HO-1, Nox1 and of Serpinb3, the latter associated with an increase of IL-6. In conclusion, splenectomy controls inflammation and oxidative damage, preventing the expression of Serpinb3. Therefore, SerpinB3 can be considered as a marker of post-resective shear stress
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