16,550 research outputs found
Edge coating of flat wires
An apparatus and technique is described for the coating of the edge surfaces of flat ribbon conductors with an adherent coating of a dielectric insulating material. Means for passing the ribbon conductors between a pair of generally axially aligned rollers is provided. The edge surfaces of the conductor are disposed adjacent to and generally tangentially to the confronting surfaces of the roller so as to form a fillet of dielectric material along the edge surface of the conductor
The implementation and use of Ada on distributed systems with reliability requirements
The issues involved in the use of the programming language Ada on distributed systems are discussed. The effects of Ada programs on hardware failures such as loss of a processor are emphasized. It is shown that many Ada language elements are not well suited to this environment. Processor failure can easily lead to difficulties on those processors which remain. As an example, the calling task in a rendezvous may be suspended forever if the processor executing the serving task fails. A mechanism for detecting failure is proposed and changes to the Ada run time support system are suggested which avoid most of the difficulties. Ada program structures are defined which allow programs to reconfigure and continue to provide service following processor failure
An evaluation of Skylab (EREP) remote sensing techniques applied to investigations of crustal structure
The author has identified the following significant results. Film positives (70mm) from all six S190A multispectral photographic camera stations for any one scene can be registered and analyzed in a color additive viewer. Using a multispectral viewer, S190A and B films can be projected directly onto published geologic and topographic maps at scales as large as 1:62,500 and 1:24,000 without significant loss of detail. S190A films and prints permit the detection of faults, fractures, and other linear features not visible in any other space imagery. S192 MSS imagery can be useful for rock-type discrimination studies and delineation of linear patterns and arcuate anomalies. Anomalous color reflectances and arcuate color patterns revealed mineralized zones, copper deposits, vegetation, and volcanic rocks in various locations such as Panamint Range (CA), Greenwater (Death Valley), Lava Mountains (CA), northwestern Arizona, and Coso Hot Springs (CA)
Suzaku observations of Markarian 335: evidence for a distributed reflector
We report on a 151 ks net exposure Suzaku observation of the Narrow Line
Seyfert 1 galaxy Mrk 335. The 0.5-40 keV spectrum contains a broad Fe line, a
strong soft excess below about 2 keV and a Compton hump around 20-30 keV. We
find that a model consisting of a power law and two reflectors provides the
best fit to the time-averaged spectrum. In this model, an ionized, heavily
blurred, inner reflector produces most of the soft excess, while an almost
neutral outer reflector (outside ~40 r_g) produces most of the Fe line
emission. The spectral variability of the observation is characterised by
spectral hardening at very low count rates. In terms of our power-law +
two-reflector model it seems like this hardening is mainly caused by pivoting
of the power law. The rms spectrum of the entire observation has the curved
shape commonly observed in AGN, although the shape is significantly flatter
when an interval which does not contain any deep dip in the lightcurve is
considered. We also examine a previous 133 ks XMM-Newton observation of Mrk
335. We find that the XMM-Newton spectrum can be fitted with a similar
two-reflector model as the Suzaku data and we confirm that the rms spectrum of
the observation is flat. The flat rms spectra, as well as the high-energy data
from the Suzaku PIN detector, disfavour an absorption origin for the soft
excess in Mrk 335.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Radio disappearance of the magnetar XTE J1810-197 and continued X-ray timing
We report on timing, flux density, and polarimetric observations of the
transient magnetar and 5.54 s radio pulsar XTE J1810-197 using the GBT, Nancay,
and Parkes radio telescopes beginning in early 2006, until its sudden
disappearance as a radio source in late 2008. Repeated observations through
2016 have not detected radio pulsations again. The torque on the neutron star,
as inferred from its rotation frequency derivative f-dot, decreased in an
unsteady manner by a factor of 3 in the first year of radio monitoring. In
contrast, during its final year as a detectable radio source, the torque
decreased steadily by only 9%. The period-averaged flux density, after
decreasing by a factor of 20 during the first 10 months of radio monitoring,
remained steady in the next 22 months, at an average of 0.7+/-0.3 mJy at 1.4
GHz, while still showing day-to-day fluctuations by factors of a few. There is
evidence that during this last phase of radio activity the magnetar had a steep
radio spectrum, in contrast to earlier behavior. There was no secular decrease
that presaged its radio demise. During this time the pulse profile continued to
display large variations, and polarimetry indicates that the magnetic geometry
remained consistent with that of earlier times. We supplement these results
with X-ray timing of the pulsar from its outburst in 2003 up to 2014. For the
first 4 years, XTE J1810-197 experienced non-monotonic excursions in f-dot by
at least a factor of 8. But since 2007, its f-dot has remained relatively
stable near its minimum observed value. The only apparent event in the X-ray
record that is possibly contemporaneous with the radio shut-down is a decrease
of ~20% in the hot-spot flux in 2008-2009, to a stable, minimum value. However,
the permanence of the high-amplitude, thermal X-ray pulse, even after the radio
demise, implies continuing magnetar activity.Comment: ApJ, accepted, 12 pages, 9 figure
Thermal compression of two-dimensional atomic hydrogen to quantum degeneracy
We describe experiments where 2D atomic hydrogen gas is compressed thermally
at a small "cold spot" on the surface of superfluid helium and detected
directly with electron-spin resonance. We reach surface densities up to 5e12
1/cm^2 at temperatures of approximately 100 mK corresponding to the maximum 2D
phase-space density of about 1.5. By independent measurements of the surface
density and its decay rate we make the first direct determination of the
three-body recombination rate constant and get the value of 2e-25 cm^4/s for
its upper bound, which is an order of magnitude smaller than previously
reported experimental results.Comment: 4 pages, 4 postscript figures, bibliography (.bbl) file, submitted to
PR
In-situ measurements of the optical absorption of dioxythiophene-based conjugated polymers
Conjugated polymers can be reversibly doped by electrochemical means. This
doping introduces new sub-bandgap optical absorption bands in the polymer while
decreasing the bandgap absorption. To study this behavior, we have prepared an
electrochemical cell allowing measurements of the optical properties of the
polymer. The cell consists of a thin polymer film deposited on gold-coated
Mylar behind which is another polymer that serves as a counterelectrode. An
infrared transparent window protects the upper polymer from ambient air. By
adding a gel electrolyte and making electrical connections to the
polymer-on-gold films, one may study electrochromism in a wide spectral range.
As the cell voltage (the potential difference between the two electrodes)
changes, the doping level of the conjugated polymer films is changed
reversibly. Our experiments address electrochromism in
poly(3,4-ethylene-dioxy-thiophene) (PEDOT) and
poly(3,4-dimethyl-propylene-dioxy-thiophene) (PProDOT-Me). This closed
electrochemical cell allows the study of the doping induced sub-bandgap
features (polaronic and bipolaronic modes) in these easily oxidized and highly
redox switchable polymers. We also study the changes in cell spectra as a
function of polymer thickness and investigate strategies to obtain cleaner
spectra, minimizing the contributions of water and gel electrolyte features
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