71,116 research outputs found
Improved ion exchange membrane
Membrane, made from commercially-available hollow fibers, is used in reverse osmosis, or dialysis. Fiber has skin layers which pass only small molecules. Macromolecules cannot penetrate skin. Fibers can also be used to remove other undesirable anions, such as phosphate, sulfate, carbonate, and uranium in form of uranium-sulfate complex
Ion-exchange hollow fibers
An ion-exchange hollow fiber is prepared by introducing into the wall of the fiber polymerizable liquid monomers, and polymerizing the monomers therein to form solid, insoluble, crosslinked, ion-exchange resin particles which embed in the wall of the fiber. Excess particles blocking the central passage or bore of the fiber are removed by forcing liquid through the fiber. The fibers have high ion-exchange capacity, a practical wall permeability and good mechanical strength even with very thin wall dimensions. Experimental investigation of bundles of ion-exchange hollow fibers attached to a header assembly have shown the fiber to be very efficient in removing counterions from solution
Foundations of self-consistent particle-rotor models and of self-consistent cranking models
The Kerman-Klein formulation of the equations of motion for a nuclear shell
model and its associated variational principle are reviewed briefly. It is then
applied to the derivation of the self-consistent particle-rotor model and of
the self-consistent cranking model, for both axially symmetric and triaxial
nuclei. Two derivations of the particle-rotor model are given. One of these is
of a form that lends itself to an expansion of the result in powers of the
ratio of single-particle angular momentum to collective angular momentum, that
is essentual to reach the cranking limit. The derivation also requires a
distinct, angular-momentum violating, step. The structure of the result implies
the possibility of tilted-axis cranking for the axial case and full
three-dimensional cranking for the triaxial one. The final equations remain
number conserving. In an appendix, the Kerman-Klein method is developed in more
detail, and the outlines of several algorithms for obtaining solutions of the
associated non-linear formalism are suggested.Comment: 29 page
Quantum theory of large amplitude collective motion and the Born-Oppenheimer method
We study the quantum foundations of a theory of large amplitude collective
motion for a Hamiltonian expressed in terms of canonical variables. In previous
work the separation into slow and fast (collective and non-collective)
variables was carried out without the explicit intervention of the Born
Oppenheimer approach. The addition of the Born Oppenheimer assumption not only
provides support for the results found previously in leading approximation, but
also facilitates an extension of the theory to include an approximate
description of the fast variables and their interaction with the slow ones.
Among other corrections, one encounters the Berry vector and scalar potential.
The formalism is illustrated with the aid of some simple examples, where the
potentials in question are actually evaluated and where the accuracy of the
Born Oppenheimer approximation is tested. Variational formulations of both
Hamiltonian and Lagrangian type are described for the equations of motion for
the slow variables.Comment: 29 pages, 1 postscript figure, preprint no UPR-0085NT. Latex + epsf
styl
Antivortices due to competing orbital and paramagnetic pair-breaking effects
Thermodynamically stable vortex-antivortex structures in a
quasi-two-dimensional superconductor in a tilted magnetic field are predicted.
For this geometry, both orbital and spin pair-breaking effects exist, with
their relative strength depending on the tilt angle \Theta. The spectrum of
possible states contains as limits the ordinary vortex state (for large \Theta)
and the Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov state (for \Theta=0). The
quasiclassical equations are solved near H_{c2} for arbitrary \Theta and it is
shown that stable states with coexisting vortices and antivortices exist in a
small interval close to \Theta=0. The results are compared with recent
predictions of antivortices in mesoscopic samples.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Kerman-Klein-Donau-Frauendorf model for odd-odd nuclei: formal theory
The Kerman-Klein-Donau-Frauendorf (KKDF) model is a linearized version of the
Kerman-Klein (equations of motion) formulation of the nuclear many-body
problem. In practice, it is a generalization of the standard core-particle
coupling model that, like the latter, provides a description of the
spectroscopy of odd nuclei in terms of the properties of neighboring even
nuclei and of single-particle properties, that are the input parameters of the
model. A divers sample of recent applications attest to the usefulness of the
model. In this paper, we first present a concise general review of the
fundamental equations and properties of the KKDF model. We then derive a
corresponding formalism for odd-odd nuclei that relates their properties to
those of four neighboring even nuclei, all of which enter if one is to include
both multipole and pairing forces. We treat these equations in two ways. In the
first we make essential use of the solutions of the neighboring odd nucleus
problem, as obtained by the KKDF method. In the second, we relate the
properties of the odd-odd nuclei directly to those of the even nuclei. For both
choices, we derive equations of motion, normalization conditions, and an
expression for transition amplitudes. We also solve the problem of choosing the
subspace of physical solutions that arises in an equations of motion approach
that includes pairing interactions.Comment: 27 pages, Late
Genetic variation within and among asexual populations of Porphyra umbilicalis KĂŒtzing (Bangiales, Rhodophyta) in the Gulf of Maine, USA
The intertidal marine red alga Porphyra umbilicalis reproduces asexually in the Northwest Atlantic. We looked for population substructure among typical open-coastal and atypical estuarine habitats in seven asexual populations of P. umbilicalis from Maine to New Hampshire using eight expressed sequence tag-simple sequence repeats (EST-SSR) or microsatellite loci. Six genotypes were identified, four of which may represent recombinant genotypes from a recombination event that took place locally, or that took place prior to introduction to the Northwest Atlantic. Genotypic diversity was lowest in a population from Wiscasset, Maine, which inhabits an atypical habitat high in the intertidal zone of a bridge piling in an estuarine tidal rapid. Genotypic diversity was highest in the southernmost populations from New Hampshire; we identified two genotypes that were unique to the southernmost populations, and probably represent the most derived genotypes. We looked at genetic distances among populations in similar habitats, and found that populations were more closely related to their closest neighboring population than to a population in a similar habitat. We show that genotypic diversity within P. umbilicalis populations in the Gulf of Maine is relatively high and thus fits a model of high steady-state variation within asexual populations
A psychoanalytic concept illustrated: Will, must, may, can â revisiting the survival function of primitive omnipotence
The author explores the linear thread connecting the theory of Freud and Klein, in terms of the central significance of the duality of the life and death instinct and the capacity of the ego to tolerate contact with internal and external reality. Theoretical questions raised by later authors, informed by clinical work with children who have suffered deprivation and trauma in infancy, are then considered. Theoretical ideas are illustrated with reference to observational material of a little boy who suffered deprivation and trauma in infancy. He was first observed in the middle of his first year of life while he was living in foster care, and then later at the age of two years and three months, when he had been living with his adoptive parents for more than a year
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