3,797 research outputs found
Low-temperature anomalies of a vapor deposited glass
We investigate the low temperature properties of two-dimensional
Lennard-Jones glass films, prepared in silico both by liquid cooling and by
physical vapor deposition. We identify deep in the solid phase a crossover
temperature , at which slow dynamics and enhanced heterogeneity emerge.
Around , localized defects become visible, leading to vibrational
anomalies as compared to standard solids. We find that on average,
decreases in samples with lower inherent structure energy, suggesting that such
anomalies will be suppressed in ultra-stable glass films, prepared both by very
slow liquid cooling and vapor deposition.Comment: 10 pages including appendices, 8 figures. Version accepted for
Physical Review Material
Ideal isotropic auxetic networks from random networks
Auxetic materials are characterized by a negative Poisson's ratio,
. As the Poisson's ratio becomes negative and approaches the
lower isotropic mechanical limit of , materials show
enhanced resistance to impact and shear, making them suitable for applications
ranging from robotics to impact mitigation. Past experimental efforts aimed at
reaching the limit have resulted in highly anisotropic
materials, which show a negative Poisson's ratio only when subjected to
deformations along specific directions. Isotropic designs have only attained
moderately auxetic behavior, or have led to structures that cannot be
manufactured in 3D. Here, we present a design strategy to create isotropic
structures from disordered networks that leads to Poisson's ratios as low as
. The materials conceived through this approach are
successfully fabricated in the laboratory and behave as predicted. The
Poisson's ratio is found to depend on network structure and bond
strengths; this sheds light on the structural motifs that lead to auxetic
behavior. The ideas introduced here can be generalized to 3D, a wide range of
materials, and a spectrum of length scales, thereby providing a general
platform that could impact technology.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure
Power, clock, and data recovery in a wireless neural recording device
Journal ArticleFor many medical applications, neural recording systems should be fully implantable. Transcutaneous wires must be compleley eliminated, and this necessitates the wireless transfer of power, clock and configuration data to the device. We have developed, fabricated, and tested cirucits that recover power from a a wireless power transmitter and produce a clock from its carries. A novel data recovery scheme is alos presented that allows configuration and command data to be recovered from the amplitude-modulated power wavefrom. This scheme is robust against glitches and offsets, and requires a minimum modulation depth of 29%. All of these circuits together consume 0.366 mm2 of area in a 0.5-μm CMOS process and have a total current draw of 511 μA
The Impact of Non-Equipartition on Cosmological Parameter Estimation from Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Surveys
The collisionless accretion shock at the outer boundary of a galaxy cluster
should primarily heat the ions instead of electrons since they carry most of
the kinetic energy of the infalling gas. Near the accretion shock, the density
of the intracluster medium is very low and the Coulomb collisional timescale is
longer than the accretion timescale. Electrons and ions may not achieve
equipartition in these regions. Numerical simulations have shown that the
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich observables (e.g., the integrated Comptonization parameter
Y) for relaxed clusters can be biased by a few percent. The Y-mass relation can
be biased if non-equipartition effects are not properly taken into account.
Using a set of hydrodynamical simulations, we have calculated three potential
systematic biases in the Y-mass relations introduced by non-equipartition
effects during the cross-calibration or self-calibration when using the galaxy
cluster abundance technique to constraint cosmological parameters. We then use
a semi-analytic technique to estimate the non-equipartition effects on the
distribution functions of Y (Y functions) determined from the extended
Press-Schechter theory. Depending on the calibration method, we find that
non-equipartition effects can induce systematic biases on the Y functions, and
the values of the cosmological parameters Omega_8, sigma_8, and the dark energy
equation of state parameter w can be biased by a few percent. In particular,
non-equipartition effects can introduce an apparent evolution in w of a few
percent in all of the systematic cases we considered. Techniques are suggested
to take into account the non-equipartition effect empirically when using the
cluster abundance technique to study precision cosmology. We conclude that
systematic uncertainties in the Y-mass relation of even a few percent can
introduce a comparable level of biases in cosmological parameter measurements.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal, abstract abridged slightly. Typos corrected in version
A consistent scalar-tensor cosmology for inflation, dark energy and the Hubble parameter
The authors are grateful for financial support to the Cruickshank Trust (CW), EPSRC/GG-Top (CW, JR), Omani Government (MA), Science Without Borders programme, CNPq, Brazil (DR), and STFC/CfFP (CW, AM, RB, JM). CW and AM acknowledge the hospitality of CERN, where this work was started. The University of Aberdeen and University of Edinburgh are charitable bodies registered in Scotland, with respective registration numbers SC013683 and SC005336.Peer reviewedPostprin
Measuring Building Height Using Point Cloud Data Derived from Unmanned Aerial System Imagery in an Undergraduate Geospatial Science Course
The use of Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS), also known as drones is increasing in geospatial science curricula within the United States. Within the Arthur Temple College of Forestry and Agriculture (ATCOFA) at Stephen F. Austin State University, Texas, seniors in the geospatial science program complete capstone projects to evaluate current geospatial technology to investigate complex ecological, social and environmental issues. Under the umbrella of a student initiated and designed senior project, students designed a study to estimate height of buildings with UAS data incorporating UAS data, LP360 and ArcScene programs, and Pictometry web-based interface. Results from a statistical analysis of the data confirm that geospatial science height estimation techniques can provide accurate estimates of height remotely. The independence of the students completing the project with UAS data for LP360 and ArcScene estimations, and utilizing Pictometry as an on-onscreen measuring tool, point to the need to integrate remote sensing, statistical analysis and synthesis of data into undergraduate geospatial science curricula. This reinforces the hands-on learning approach within ATCOFA and provides guidance to integrate the use of UAS in natural resource education
Integration of CITYgreen Landscape Ecological Analysis into a Capstone Environmental Science Course
CITYgreen Geographic Information Systems software was used to develop a campus wide cover type map for Stephen F. Austin State University in an environmental science landscape ecology course. The finding indicated an equal division of forest cover type compared to impervious surface of buildings and paved surface. Once the classification was completed, students chose an area for reforestation identified in CITYgreen, while raising funds for the purchase of trees for the project. Before completing the project, students reviewed tenets of landscape ecology, civic ecology education, and benefits of urban forestry. At the completion of the project, students reviewed service-learning aspects of campus beautification reflecting on making a difference, working outdoors, and using high end technology to complete a real-world environmental project incorporating partnerships and teamwork. The outcome demonstrates the benefits of applying ecological planning to complete an environmental project based on a perceived need within a campus setting
- …