19,453 research outputs found
Experimental Effervescence and Freezing Point Depression Measurements of Nitrogen in Liquid Methane-Ethane Mixtures
NASA is designing an unmanned submarine to explore the depths of the hydrocarbon-rich seas on Saturn's moon Titan. Data from Cassini indicates that the Titan north polar environment sustains stable seas of variable concentrations of ethane, methane, and nitrogen, with a surface temperature near 93 K. The submarine must operate autonomously, study atmosphere/sea exchange, interact with the seabed, hover at the surface or any depth within the sea, and be capable of tolerating variable hydrocarbon compositions. Currently, the main thermal design concern is the effect of effervescence on submarine operation, which affects the ballast system, science instruments, and propellers. Twelve effervescence measurements on various liquid methane-ethane compositions with dissolved gaseous nitrogen are thus presented from 1.5 bar to 4.5 bar at temperatures from 92 K to 96 K to simulate the conditions of the seas. After conducting effervescence measurements, two freezing point depression measurements were conducted. The freezing liquid line was depressed more than 15 K below the triple point temperatures of pure ethane (90.4 K) and pure methane (90.7 K). Experimental effervescence measurements will be used to compare directly with effervescence modeling to determine if changes are required in the design of the thermal management system as well as the propellers
Leech Parasitism of the Gulf Coast Box Turtle, Terrapene carolina major (Testudines:Emydidae) in Mississippi, USA
Ten leeches were collected from a Gulf Coast box turtle, Terrapene carolina major, found crossing a road in Gulfport, Harrison County, Mississippi, USA. Eight of the leeches were identified as Placobdella multilineata and 2 were identified as Helobdella europaea. This represents the second vouchered report of leeches from a box turtle. Helobdella europaea is reported for the first time associated with a turtle and for the second time from the New World
Laplacian Growth and Whitham Equations of Soliton Theory
The Laplacian growth (the Hele-Shaw problem) of multi-connected domains in
the case of zero surface tension is proven to be equivalent to an integrable
systems of Whitham equations known in soliton theory. The Whitham equations
describe slowly modulated periodic solutions of integrable hierarchies of
nonlinear differential equations. Through this connection the Laplacian growth
is understood as a flow in the moduli space of Riemann surfaces.Comment: 33 pages, 7 figures, typos corrected, new references adde
Parental approaches to enhancing young people's online safety
Although there is evidence that young people are tech-savvy with the know-how to keep themselves safe online, this review has demonstrated that the technological generational gap remains large.
There are divergent opinions over what constitutes online risks, dangers or threats to young people online. Online environments fostering anonymity, for example, can be perceived as both a risk and benefit to young people. Conversation between young people and adults regarding online safety is imperative to parents understanding cybersafety and young people staying safe online. It remains crucial that research is conducted to explore these questions with adults and young people
Thermodynamic properties of a small superconducting grain
The reduced BCS Hamiltonian for a metallic grain with a finite number of
electrons is considered. The crossover between the ultrasmall regime, in which
the level spacing, , is larger than the bulk superconducting gap, ,
and the small regime, where , is investigated analytically
and numerically. The condensation energy, spin magnetization and tunneling peak
spectrum are calculated analytically in the ultrasmall regime, using an
approximation controlled by as small parameter, where is the
number of interacting electron pairs. The condensation energy in this regime is
perturbative in the coupling constant , and is proportional to . We find that also in a large regime with
, in which pairing correlations are already rather well developed,
the perturbative part of the condensation energy is larger than the singular,
BCS, part. The condition for the condensation energy to be well approximated by
the BCS result is found to be roughly . We show how
the condensation energy can, in principle, be extracted from a measurement of
the spin magnetization curve, and find a re-entrant susceptibility at zero
temperature as a function of magnetic field, which can serve as a sensitive
probe for the existence of superconducting correlations in ultrasmall grains.
Numerical results are presented which suggest that in the large limit the
1/N correction to the BCS result for the condensation energy is larger than
.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Titanium Plasma Spectroscopy Studies under Double Pulse Laser Excitation
Laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) was applied for parametric studies of titanium (Ti) plasma using single and double pulsed laser excitation scheme. Here a pulsed Nd:YAG laser was employed for generation of laser produced plasma from solid Ti target at ambient pressure. Several ionized titanium lines were recorded in the 312-334 nm UV region. The temporal evolution of plasma parameters such as excitation temperature and electron number density was evaluated. The effect of incident laser irradiance, position of the laser beam focal point with respect to the surface of illumination, single and double laser pulse effect on plasma parameters were also investigated. This study contributes to a better understanding of the LIBS plasma dynamics of the double laser pulse effect on the temporal evolution of various Ti emission lines, the detection sensitivity and the optimal dynamics of plasma for ionized states of Ti. The results demonstrate a faster decay of the continuum and spectral lines and a shorter plasma life time for the double pulse excitation scheme as compared with single laser pulse excitation. For double pulse excitation technique, the emissions of Ti lines intensities are enhanced by a factor of five which could help in the improvement of analytical performance of LIBS technique. In addition, this study proved that to avoid inhomogeneous effects in the laser produced plasma under high laser intensities, short delay times between the incident laser pulse and ICCD gate are required
Echo traces associated with thermoclines
Echoes received from the depth of the thermocline in Windermere, the North Sea, the Barents Sea and off Spitsbergen have been associated with aggregations of plankton organisms: zooplankton at a density of 25/litre in Windermere and phytoplankton at a density of 100,000 cells/litre (Thalassiosira gravida and Chaetoceros sp.) in the Barents Sea
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