202,864 research outputs found

    Abundances of Na, Sc, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, and Cu in 92 meteorites, 9 terrestrial specimens, and 90 individual chondrules Quarterly progress report, 1 Sep. - 30 Nov. 1963

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    Elemental abundancies in individual chondrules, chondrites and terrestrial matter, whole rock- type meteorites, and carbonaceous chondrite

    The efficiency and the demagnetization field of a general Halbach cylinder

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    The maximum magnetic efficiency of a general multipole Halbach cylinder of order pp is found as function of pp. The efficiency is shown to decrease for increasing absolute value of pp. The optimal ratio between the inner and outer radius, i.e. the ratio resulting in the most efficient design, is also found as function of pp and is shown to tend towards smaller and smaller magnet sizes. Finally, the demagnetizing field in a general pp-Halbach cylinder is calculated, and it is shown that demagnetization is largest either at cos2pϕ=1\cos 2p\phi=1 or cos2pϕ=1\cos 2p\phi=-1. For the common case of a p=1p=1 Halbach cylinder the maximum values of the demagnetizing field is either at ϕ=0,π\phi = 0,\pi at the outer radius, where the field is always equal to the remanence, or at ϕ=±π/2\phi = \pm \pi/2 at the inner radius, where it is the magnitude of the field in the bore. Thus to avoid demagnetization the coercivity of the magnets must be larger than these values.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure

    Digital computing cardiotachometer

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    A tachometer is described which instantaneously measures heart rate. During the two intervals between three succeeding heart beats, the electronic system: (1) measures the interval by counting cycles from a fixed frequency source occurring between the two beats; and (2) computes heat rate during the interval between the next two beats by counting the number of times that the interval count must be counted to zero in order to equal a total count of sixty times (to convert to beats per minute) the frequency of the fixed frequency source

    Cardiotachometer displays heart rate on a beat-to-beat basis

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    Electronics for this system may be chosen so that complete calculation and display may be accomplished in a few milliseconds, far less than even the fastest heartbeat interval. Accuracy may be increased, if desired, by using higher-frequency timing oscillator, although this will require large capacity registers at increased cost

    Rare Earth Abundances in Meteoritic Chondrules

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    Rare earth elements abundance in meteoritic chondrites determined by radiochemical neutron activation analysi

    Direct observations in the dusk hours of the characteristics of the storm-time ring current particles during the beginning of magnetic storms

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    The characteristic features of the initial enhancement of the storm-time ring current particles in the evening hours are consistent with flow patterns resulting from a combination of inward convection, gradient drift, and corotation which carries plasma sheet protons into low L-values near midnight and the higher energy proton component into the plasmasphere and through the evening hours. Data from four magnetic storms during the early life of Explorer 45, when the local time of apogee was in the afternoon and evening hours, show that protons with lower magnetic moments penetrate deeper into the magnetosphere until a low limit, determined by the corotation and gradient drift forces, is reached. Such particle motions produce the stable energy dependent inner boundary of the ring current protons inside the plasmapause in the dusk sector and also provide the mechanism for energy injection into the ring current region. From the analyses of the pitch angle distributions it is evident that charge exchange and wave particle interactions are not the dominant causes of this inner boundary

    How effective is harassment on infalling late-type dwarfs?

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    A new harassment model is presented that models the complex, and dynamical tidal field of a Virgo like galaxy cluster. The model is applied to small, late-type dwarf disc galaxies (of substantially lower mass than in previous harassment simulations) as they infall into the cluster from the outskirts. These dwarf galaxies are only mildly affected by high speed tidal encounters with little or no observable consequences; typical stellar losses are <10%<10\%, producing very low surface brightness streams (μB>31\mu_B > 31 mag arcsec2^{-2}), and a factor of two drop in dynamical mass-to-light ratio. Final stellar discs remain disc-like, and dominated by rotation although often with tidally induced spiral structure. By means of Monte-Carlo simulations, the statistically likely influences of harassment on infalling dwarf galaxies are determined. The effects of harassment are found to be highly dependent on the orbit of the galaxy within the cluster, such that newly accreted dwarf galaxies typically suffer only mild harassment. Strong tidal encounters, that can morphologically transform discs into spheroidals, are rare occurring in <15%<15 \% of dwarf galaxy infalls for typical orbits of sub-structure within Λ\LambdaCDM cluster mass halos. For orbits with small apocentric distances (<<250 kpc), harassment is significantly stronger resulting in complete disruption or heavy mass loss (>90%>90 \% dark matter and >50%> 50 \% stellar), however, such orbits are expected to be highly improbable for newly infalling galaxies due to the deep potential well of the cluster.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures, 4 table

    Creep of current-driven domain-wall lines: intrinsic versus extrinsic pinning

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    We present a model for current-driven motion of a magnetic domain-wall line, in which the dynamics of the domain wall is equivalent to that of an overdamped vortex line in an anisotropic pinning potential. This potential has both extrinsic contributions due to, e.g., sample inhomogeneities, and an intrinsic contribution due to magnetic anisotropy. We obtain results for the domain-wall velocity as a function of current for various regimes of pinning. In particular, we find that the exponent characterizing the creep regime depends strongly on the presence of a dissipative spin transfer torque. We discuss our results in the light of recent experiments on current-driven domain-wall creep in ferromagnetic semiconductors, and suggest further experiments to corroborate our model.Comment: For figure in GIF format, see http://www.phys.uu.nl/~duine/mapping.gif v2: (hopefully) visible EPS figure added. v2: expanded new versio
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