3,733 research outputs found
Etching of aluminum for bonding Patent
Etching aluminum alloys with aqueous solution containing sulfuric acid, hydrofluoric acid, and an alkali metal dischromate for adhesive bondin
High-concentration Er:YAG single-crystal fibers grown by laser-heated pedestal growth technique
High-concentration Er:YAG single-crystal fibers have been grown using the laser-heated pedestal growth technique. Instability in the melt and concomitant opacity of fibers were observed at source concentrations higher than 15 mol.%. Spectroscopic examination shows that broadening of the linewidth of the I<sub>13/2</sub>4→I<sub>15/2</sub>4 transition is strongly dependent on Er<sup>3+</sup> concentration
The EU and Asia within an evolving global order: what is Europe? Where is Asia?
The papers in this special edition are a very small selection from those presented at the EU-NESCA (Network of European Studies Centres in Asia) conference on "the EU and East Asia within an Evolving Global Order: Ideas, Actors and Processes" in November 2008 in Brussels. The conference was the culmination of three years of research activity involving workshops and conferences bringing together scholars from both regions primarily to discuss relations between Europe and Asia, perceptions of Europe in Asia, and the relationship between the European regional project and emerging regional forms in Asia. But although this was the last of the three major conferences organised by the consortium, it in many ways represented a starting point rather than the end; an opportunity to reflect on the conclusions of the first phase of collaboration and point towards new and continuing research agendas for the future
Adsorption and two-body recombination of atomic hydrogen on He-He mixture films
We present the first systematic measurement of the binding energy of
hydrogen atoms to the surface of saturated He-He mixture films.
is found to decrease almost linearly from 1.14(1) K down to 0.39(1) K, when the
population of the ground surface state of He grows from zero to
cm, yielding the value K cm
for the mean-field parameter of H-He interaction in 2D. The experiments
were carried out with overall He concentrations ranging from 0.1 ppm to 5 %
as well as with commercial and isotopically purified He at temperatures
70...400 mK. Measuring by ESR the rate constants and for
second-order recombination of hydrogen atoms in hyperfine states and we
find the ratio to be independent of the He content and to
grow with temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, all zipped in a sigle file. Submitted to Phys.
Rev. Let
Idarucizumab for Dabigatran Reversal - Full Cohort Analysis.
BACKGROUND: Idarucizumab, a monoclonal antibody fragment, was developed to reverse the anticoagulant effect of dabigatran.
METHODS: We performed a multicenter, prospective, open-label study to determine whether 5 g of intravenous idarucizumab would be able to reverse the anticoagulant effect of dabigatran in patients who had uncontrolled bleeding (group A) or were about to undergo an urgent procedure (group B). The primary end point was the maximum percentage reversal of the anticoagulant effect of dabigatran within 4 hours after the administration of idarucizumab, on the basis of the diluted thrombin time or ecarin clotting time. Secondary end points included the restoration of hemostasis and safety measures.
RESULTS: A total of 503 patients were enrolled: 301 in group A, and 202 in group B. The median maximum percentage reversal of dabigatran was 100% (95% confidence interval, 100 to 100), on the basis of either the diluted thrombin time or the ecarin clotting time. In group A, 137 patients (45.5%) presented with gastrointestinal bleeding and 98 (32.6%) presented with intracranial hemorrhage; among the patients who could be assessed, the median time to the cessation of bleeding was 2.5 hours. In group B, the median time to the initiation of the intended procedure was 1.6 hours; periprocedural hemostasis was assessed as normal in 93.4% of the patients, mildly abnormal in 5.1%, and moderately abnormal in 1.5%. At 90 days, thrombotic events had occurred in 6.3% of the patients in group A and in 7.4% in group B, and the mortality rate was 18.8% and 18.9%, respectively. There were no serious adverse safety signals.
CONCLUSIONS: In emergency situations, idarucizumab rapidly, durably, and safely reversed the anticoagulant effect of dabigatran. (Funded by Boehringer Ingelheim; RE-VERSE AD ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT02104947 .)
Nonlinear acoustic and microwave absorption in disordered semiconductors
Nonlinear hopping absorption of ultrasound and electromagnetic waves in
amorphous and doped semiconductors is considered. It is shown that even at low
amplitudes of the electric (or acoustic) field the nonlinear corrections to the
relaxational absorption appear anomalously large. The physical reason for such
behavior is that the nonlinear contribution is dominated by a small group of
close impurity pairs having one electron per pair. Since the group is small, it
is strongly influenced by the field. An external magnetic field strongly
influences the absorption by changing the overlap between the pair components'
wave functions. It is important that the influence is substantially different
for the linear and nonlinear contributions. This property provides an
additional tool to extract nonlinear effects.Comment: correction : misspelled name in references correcte
A Numerical Study of Transport and Shot Noise at 2D Hopping
We have used modern supercomputer facilities to carry out extensive Monte
Carlo simulations of 2D hopping (at negligible Coulomb interaction) in
conductors with the completely random distribution of localized sites in both
space and energy, within a broad range of the applied electric field and
temperature , both within and beyond the variable-range hopping region. The
calculated properties include not only dc current and statistics of localized
site occupation and hop lengths, but also the current fluctuation spectrum.
Within the calculation accuracy, the model does not exhibit noise, so
that the low-frequency noise at low temperatures may be characterized by the
Fano factor . For sufficiently large samples, scales with conductor
length as , where , and
parameter is interpreted as the average percolation cluster length. At
relatively low , the electric field dependence of parameter is
compatible with the law which follows from directed
percolation theory arguments.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures; Fixed minor typos and updated reference
Disk Planet Interactions and Early Evolution in Young Planetary Systems
We study and review disk protoplanet interactions using local shearing box
simulations. These suffer the disadvantage of having potential artefacts
arising from periodic boundary conditions but the advantage, when compared to
global simulations, of being able to capture much of the dynamics close to the
protoplanet at high resolution for low computational cost. Cases with and
without self sustained MHD turbulence are considered. The conditions for gap
formation and the transition from type I migration are investigated and found
to depend on whether the single parameter M_p R^3/(M_* H^3), with M_p, M_*, R
and H being the protoplanet mass, the central mass, the orbital radius and the
disk semi-thickness respectively exceeds a number of order unity. We also
investigate the coorbital torques experienced by a moving protoplanet in an
inviscid disk. This is done by demonstrating the equivalence of the problem for
a moving protoplanet to one where the protoplanet is in a fixed orbit which the
disk material flows through radially as a result of the action of an
appropriate external torque. For sustainable coorbital torques to be realized a
quasi steady state must be realized in which the planet migrates through the
disk without accreting significant mass. In that case although there is
sensitivity to computational parameters, in agreement with earlier work by
Masset & Papaloizou (2003) based on global simulations, the coorbital torques
are proportional to the migration speed and result in a positive feedback on
the migration, enhancing it and potentially leading to a runaway. This could
lead to a fast migration for protoplanets in the Saturn mass range in massive
disks and may be relevant to the mass period correlation for extrasolar planets
which gives a preponderance of sub Jovian masses at short orbital period.Comment: To appear in Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical Astronomy (with higher
resolution figures
UV Circular Polarisation in Star Formation Regions : The Origin of Homochirality?
Ultraviolet circularly polarised light has been suggested as the initial cause of the homochirality of organic molecules in terrestrial organisms, via enantiomeric selection of prebiotic molecules by asymmetric photolysis. We present a theoretical investigation of mechanisms by which ultraviolet circular polarisation may be produced in star formation regions. In the scenarios considered here, light scattering produces only a small percentage of net circular polarisation at any point in space, due to the forward throwing nature of the phase function in the ultraviolet. By contrast, dichroic extinction can produce a fairly high percentage of net circular polarisation (∼10%) and may therefore play a key role in producing an enantiomeric excessPeer reviewe
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