1,401 research outputs found
Non-linear Elastic Response in Solid Helium: critical velocity or strain
Torsional oscillator experiments show evidence of mass decoupling in solid
4He. This decoupling is amplitude dependent, suggesting a critical velocity for
supersolidity. We observe similar behavior in the elastic shear modulus. By
measuring the shear modulus over a wide frequency range, we can distinguish
between an amplitude dependence which depends on velocity and one which depends
on some other parameter like displacement. In contrast to the torsional
oscillator behavior, the modulus depends on the magnitude of stress, not
velocity. We interpret our results in terms of the motion of dislocations which
are weakly pinned by 3He impurities but which break away when large stresses
are applied
Low frequency elastic measurements on solid He in Vycor using a torsional oscillator
Torsional oscillator experiments involving solid He confined in the
nanoscale pores of Vycor glass showed anomalous frequency changes at
temperatures below 200 mK. These were initially attributed to decoupling of
some of the helium's mass from the oscillator, the expected signature of a
supersolid. However, these and similar anomalous effects seen with bulk
He now appear to be artifacts arising from large shear modulus changes
when mobile dislocations are pinned by He impurities. We have used a
torsional oscillator (TO) technique to directly measure the shear modulus of
the solid He/Vycor system at a frequency (1.2 kHz) comparable to that
used in previous TO experiments. The shear modulus increases gradually as the
TO is cooled from 1 K to 20 mK. We attribute the gradual modulus change to the
freezing out of thermally activated relaxation processes in the solid helium.
The absence of rapid changes below 200 mK is expected since mobile dislocations
could not exist in pores as small as those of Vycor. Our results support the
interpretation of a recent torsional oscillator experiment that showed no
anomaly when elastic effects in bulk helium were eliminated by ensuring that
there were no gaps around the Vycor sample.Comment: Accepted by Journal of Low Temperature Physic
Dislocation networks in helium-4 crystals
The mechanical behavior of crystals is dominated by dislocation networks,
their structure and their interactions with impurities or thermal phonons.
However, in classical crystals, networks are usually random with impurities
often forming non-equilibrium clusters when their motion freezes at low
temperature. Helium provides unique advantages for the study of dislocations:
crystals are free of all but isotopic impurities, the concentration of these
can be reduced to the ppb level, and the impurities are mobile at all
temperatures and therefore remain in equilibrium with the dislocations. We have
achieved a comprehensive study of the mechanical response of 4He crystals to a
driving strain as a function of temperature, frequency and strain amplitude.
The quality of our fits to the complete set of data strongly supports our
assumption of string-like vibrating dislocations. It leads to a precise
determination of the distribution of dislocation network lengths and to
detailed information about the interaction between dislocations and both
thermal phonons and 3He impurities. The width of the dissipation peak
associated with impurity binding is larger than predicted by a simple Debye
model, and much of this broadening is due to the distribution of network
lengths.Comment: accepted by Phys. Rev.
The Turkish Dilatancy Project (TDP3): multidisciplinary studies of a potential earthquake source region
The section of the North Anatolian Fault lying near the city of Izmit, at the east of the Marmara Sea, has been identified as a seismic gap and the possible site of a future major earthquake. Previously published studies of records from an earthquake swarm within the gap (TDPl and TDP2) provided the first evidence that shear-wave splitting occurs in earthquake source regions, a conclusion since verified by many studies at other locations. A third field study (TDP3) was mounted in the Izmit region during the summer of 1984. Observations were made over an eight-month period and included geomagnetic and geoelectric measurements in addition to a series of observations utilising dense arrays of three-component seismometers. Earthquake activity in the principal study area was monitored over a period of eight months. Records showed features similar to those observed in the earlier studies. In particular:
(1) almost all shear waves emerging within the shear-wave window displayed shear-wave splitting;
(2)the polarizations of the first arriving (faster) split shear-waves showed sub-parallel alignments, characteristic of propagation through a distribution of parallel vertical cracks striking perpendicular to the minimum compressional stress.
These and other observations support the conclusion of earlier studies - that the upper crust is pervaded by distributions of micro cracks aligned by stress, known as extensive-dilatancy anisotropy. A search for time dependence in shear-wave phenomena has revealed temporal variations in the delays between the split shear-waves throughout the course of the TDP3 study, but as yet this has not been correlated wi th specific earthquake activity
Internationalisation, cultural distance and country characteristics: a Bayesian analysis of SME's financial performance
Relying on the accounting data of a panel of 403 Italian manufacturing SMEs collected over a period of 5 years, we find results suggesting that multinationality per se does not impact on the economic performance of international small and medium sized firms. It is the characteristics of the country selected i.e. the political hazard, the financial stability and the economic performance that significantly influence SMEs financial performance. The management implication for small and medium sized firms selecting and entering new geographic markets is significant, since our results show that for SMEs it is the market selection process that really matters and not the degree of multinationality
Helium condensation in aerogel: avalanches and disorder-induced phase transition
We present a detailed numerical study of the elementary condensation events
(avalanches) associated to the adsorption of He in silica aerogels. We use
a coarse-grained lattice-gas description and determine the nonequilibrium
behavior of the adsorbed gas within a local mean-field analysis, neglecting
thermal fluctuations and activated processes. We investigate the statistical
properties of the avalanches, such as their number, size and shape along the
adsorption isotherms as a function of gel porosity, temperature, and chemical
potential. Our calculations predict the existence of a line of critical points
in the temperature-porosity diagram where the avalanche size distribution
displays a power-law behavior and the adsorption isotherms have a universal
scaling form. The estimated critical exponents seem compatible with those of
the field-driven Random Field Ising Model at zero temperature.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figure
Endoluminal Ultrasound of Neoduodenum Following Pancreas-Preserving Total Duodenectomy for Familial Adenomatous Polyposis
Context Familial adenomatous polyposis affects around 2-10 per 100,000 population. Untreated, it inevitably leads to colon cancer. Prophylactic panproctocolectomy has led to improved survival. The resulting extension to follow-up has revealed that 70-100% of patients with familial adenomatous polyposis go on to develop duodenal polyposis and the lifetime risk of duodenal carcinoma in this group is up to 10%. Treatment for those not locally resectable requires pancreaticoduodenectomy. In recent years, pancreas-preserving total duodenectomy has emerged as a safe alternative to pancreaticoduodenectomy. Endoscopy has previously been safely performed in patients following pancreas-preserving total duodenectomy. Case report We report successful endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) assessment and trans-neoduodenal EUS-guided fine needle aspiration biopsy (EUS-FNA) of the pancreas and adjacent tissue in a 45-year-old man with familial adenomatous polyposis who has previously undergone pancreas-preserving total duodenectomy. EUS confirmed the mass was most likely to represent a metastasis in a local lymph node. EUS-FNA confirmed invasive malignancy. A Kausch-Whipple pancreaticoduodenectomy was performed successfully and post-operative recovery has been excellent. Conclusion The authors consider this to be the first report of successful EUS and EUS-FNA performed through the neoduodenum fashioned during pancreas-preserving total duodenectomy
The Murdoch-Godfrey Letters of 1869: A Nova Scotia - Maine Historical Correspondence
An introduction, source notes, and transcription of three letters from Beamis Murdoch in Halifax, Nova Scotia, to John Edward Godfrey in Bangor, Maine, February 8 to 27, 1869
Using radioelement distributions to classify a composite granite batholith in the South West England Orefield
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the DOI in this record
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