4,977 research outputs found
Internal-state thermometry by depletion spectroscopy in a cold guided beam of formaldehyde
We present measurements of the internal state distribution of
electrostatically guided formaldehyde. Upon excitation with continuous tunable
ultraviolet laser light the molecules dissociate, leading to a decrease in the
molecular flux. The population of individual guided states is measured by
addressing transitions originating from them. The measured populations of
selected states show good agreement with theoretical calculations for different
temperatures of the molecule source. The purity of the guided beam as deduced
from the entropy of the guided sample using a source temperature of 150K
corresponds to that of a thermal ensemble with a temperature of about 30 K
Muon Spin Relaxation Studies of Superconductivity in a Crystalline Array of Weakly Coupled Metal Nanoparticles
We report Muon Spin Relaxation studies in weak transverse fields of the
superconductivity in the metal cluster compound,
Ga[N(SiMe)]-LiBr(thf)2toluene. The temperature and field dependence of the muon spin relaxation
rate and Knight shift clearly evidence type II bulk superconductivity below
K, with T,
T, and weak flux pinning. The data
are well described by the s-wave BCS model with weak electron-phonon coupling
in the clean limit. A qualitative explanation for the conduction mechanism in
this novel type of narrow band superconductor is presented.Comment: 4 figures, 5 page
Electrostatic extraction of cold molecules from a cryogenic reservoir
We present a method which delivers a continuous, high-density beam of slow
and internally cold polar molecules. In our source, warm molecules are first
cooled by collisions with a cryogenic helium buffer gas. Cold molecules are
then extracted by means of an electrostatic quadrupole guide. For ND the
source produces fluxes up to molecules/s with
peak densities up to molecules/cm. For
HCO the population of rovibrational states is monitored by depletion
spectroscopy, resulting in single-state populations up to .Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, changes to the text, updated figures and
reference
Geometric Mechanics of Curved Crease Origami
Folding a sheet of paper along a curve can lead to structures seen in
decorative art and utilitarian packing boxes. Here we present a theory for the
simplest such structure: an annular circular strip that is folded along a
central circular curve to form a three-dimensional buckled structure driven by
geometrical frustration. We quantify this shape in terms of the radius of the
circle, the dihedral angle of the fold and the mechanical properties of the
sheet of paper and the fold itself. When the sheet is isometrically deformed
everywhere except along the fold itself, stiff folds result in creases with
constant curvature and oscillatory torsion. However, relatively softer folds
inherit the broken symmetry of the buckled shape with oscillatory curvature and
torsion. Our asymptotic analysis of the isometrically deformed state is
corroborated by numerical simulations which allow us to generalize our analysis
to study multiply folded structures
Fission product release profiles from spherical HTR fuel elements at accident temperatures
With the construction of the cold finger apparatus, a new method has been developed to determine fission product release profiles during heating tests of irradiated spherical fuel elements. It is shown that this equipment works with high sensitivity and great precision for all important fission product nuclides up to 1800 °C.Together with the existing equipment, a total of 22 fuel elements with modern TRISO particles has been tested in the temperature range of 1500 - 2500 °C. In addition, experiments were done on seven UO samples at 1400 to 1800 °C. For heating times up to 100 hours at the maximum temperature, the followingresults were obtained: silver is the only fission product to be released at 1200 - 1600 °C by diffusion through intact SiC, but is of low significance in accident scenarios; caesium, iodine, strontium and noble gas releases up to 1600 °C are solely due to various forms of contamination. At 1700 - 1800 °C, corrosion-induced SiC defects cause the release of Cs, Sr, I/Xe/Kr. Above 2000 °C, thermal decomposition of the silicon carbide layer sets in, while pyrocarbons still remain intact. Around 1600 °C, the accident specific contribution of caesium, strontium, iodine and noble gas release is negligible. This report is a translation of Jül-2091 published October 1986 in German
Estabelecimento de cultura in vitro de células embrionárias do carrapato Boophilus microplus.
bitstream/item/137709/1/PESQ-EM-ANDAMENTO-54.pdfCNPGC
Impact heat driven volatile redistribution at Occator crater on Ceres as a comparative planetary process
Hydrothermal processes in impact environments on water-rich bodies such as Mars and Earth are relevant to the origins of life. Dawn mapping of dwarf planet (1) Ceres has identified similar deposits within Occator crater. Here we show using Dawn high-resolution stereo imaging and topography that Ceres' unique composition has resulted in widespread mantling by solidified water- and salt-rich mud-like impact melts with scattered endogenic pits, troughs, and bright mounds indicative of outgassing of volatiles and periglacial-style activity during solidification. These features are distinct from and less extensive than on Mars, indicating that Occator melts may be less gas-rich or volatiles partially inhibited from reaching the surface. Bright salts at Vinalia Faculae form thin surficial precipitates sourced from hydrothermal brine effusion at many individual sites, coalescing in several larger centers, but their ages are statistically indistinguishable from floor materials, allowing for but not requiring migration of brines from deep crustal source(s). Dawn mission's second extended phase provided high resolution observations of Occator crater of the dwarf planet Ceres. Here, the authors show stereo imaging and topographic maps of this crater revealing the influence of crustal composition on impact related melt and hydrothermal processes, and compare features to those on Mars, Earth and the Moon
Thermal Pions at Finite Isospin Chemical Potential
The density corrections, in terms of the isospin chemical potential ,
to the mass of the pions are studied in the framework of the SU(2) low energy
effective chiral lagrangian. The pion decay constant is
also analized. As a function of temperature for , the mass remains
quite stable, starting to grow for very high values of , confirming previous
results. However, there are interesting corrections to the mass when both
effects (temperature and chemical potential) are simultaneously present. At
zero temperature the should condensate when . This is not longer valid anymore at finite . The mass of the
acquires also a non trivial dependence on due to the finite
temperature.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
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