4,066 research outputs found
Laser extensometer
A drift compensated and intensity averaged extensometer for measuring the diameter or other properties of a substantially cylindrical sample based upon the shadow of the sample is described. A beam of laser light is shaped to provide a beam with a uniform intensity along an axis normal to the sample. After passing the sample, the portion of the beam not striking said sample is divided by a beam splitter into a reference signal and a measurement signal. Both of these beams are then chopped by a light chopper to fall upon two photodiode detectors. The resulting ac currents are rectified and then divided into one another, with the final output being proportional to the size of the sample shadow
Formation of small-scale structure in SUSY CDM
The lightest supersymmetric particle, most likely the lightest neutralino, is
one of the most prominent particle candidates for cold dark matter (CDM). We
show that the primordial spectrum of density fluctuations in neutralino CDM has
a sharp cut-off, induced by two different damping mechanisms. During the
kinetic decoupling of neutralinos, non-equilibrium processes constitute
viscosity effects, which damp or even absorb density perturbations in CDM.
After the last scattering of neutralinos, free streaming induces neutralino
flows from overdense to underdense regions of space. Both damping mechanisms
together define a minimal mass scale for perturbations in neutralino CDM,
before the inhomogeneities enter the nonlinear epoch of structure formation. We
find that the very first gravitationally bound neutralino clouds ought to have
masses above 10^{-6} solar masses, which is six orders of magnitude above the
mass of possible axion miniclusters.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, to appear in proceedings of "IDM 2002, 4th
International Workshop on the Identification of Dark Matter
Aerodynamic performance of conventional and advanced design labyrinth seals with solid-smooth abradable, and honeycomb lands
Labyrinth air seal static and dynamic performance was evaluated using solid, abradable, and honeycomb lands with standard and advanced seal designs. The effects on leakage of land surface roughness, abradable land porosity, rub grooves in abradable lands, and honeycomb land cell size and depth were studied using a standard labyrinth seal. The effects of rotation on the optimum seal knife pitch were also investigated. Selected geometric and aerodynamic parameters for an advanced seal design were evaluated to derive an optimized performance configuration. The rotational energy requirements were also measured to determine the inherent friction and pumping energy absorbed by the various seal knife and land configurations tested in order to properly assess the net seal system performance level. Results indicate that: (1) seal leakage can be significantly affected with honeycomb or abradable lands; (2) rotational energy absorption does not vary significantly with the use of a solid-smooth, an abradable, or a honeycomb land; and (3) optimization of an advanced lab seal design produced a configuration that had leakage 25% below a conventional stepped seal
The non-Abelian feature of parton energy loss in energy dependence of jet quenching in high-energy heavy-ion collisions
One of the non-Abelian features of parton energy loss is the ratio between gluon and quark jets. Since jet production rate is
dominated by quark jets at high and by gluon jets at low
, high hadron suppression in high-energy heavy-ion collisions should
reflect such a non-Abelian feature. Within a leading order perturbative QCD
parton model that incorporates transverse expansion and Woods-Saxon nuclear
distribution, the energy dependence of large GeV/ hadron
suppression is found to be sensitive to the non-Abelian feasture of parton
energy loss and could be tested by data from low energy runs at RHIC or data
from LHC.Comment: RevTex 4, 7 pages, 3 figure
NASA Lunar Dust Filtration and Separations Workshop Report
NASA Glenn Research Center hosted a 2.5-day workshop, entitled "NASA Lunar Dust Filtration and Separations Workshop" at the Ohio Aerospace Institute in Cleveland, Ohio, on November 18 to 20, 2008. The purpose of the workshop was to address the issues and challenges of particulate matter removal from the cabin atmospheres in the Altair lunar lander, lunar habitats, and in pressurized rovers. The presence of lunar regolith dust inside the pressurized volumes was a theme of particular interest. The workshop provided an opportunity for NASA, industry experts, and academia to identify and discuss the capabilities of current and developing air and gas particulate matter filtration and separations technologies as they may apply to NASA s needs. A goal of the workshop was to provide recommendations for strategic research areas in cabin atmospheric particulate matter removal and disposal technologies that will advance and/or supplement the baseline approach for these future lunar surface exploration missions
Some rare cases of chimerism in twin cattle and their proposed use in determining germinal cell migration
Three dizygotic, heterosexual twins with chimerisms carrying marker chromosomes are described. Phenotypic and cytogenetic methods were used to identify these animals. The occurrence of germinal cell migration causing gonad chimerism can be detected by the marker chromosome event under conditions described in this repor
Global warming will affect the maximum potential abundance of boreal plant species
Forecasting the impact of future global warming on biodiversity requires understanding how temperature limits the distribution of species. Here we rely on Liebig's Law of Minimum to estimate the effect of temperature on the maximum potential abundance that a species can attain at a certain location. We develop 95%âquantile regressions to model the influence of effective temperature sum on the maximum potential abundance of 25 common understory plant species of Finland, along 868 nationwide plots sampled in 1985. Fifteen of these species showed a significant response to temperature sum that was consistent in temperatureâonly models and in allâpredictors models, which also included cumulative precipitation, soil texture, soil fertility, tree species and stand maturity as predictors. For species with significant and consistent responses to temperature, we forecasted potential shifts in abundance for the period 2041â2070 under the IPCC A1B emission scenario using temperatureâonly models. We predict major potential changes in abundance and average northward distribution shifts of 6â8âkmâyrâ1. Our results emphasize interâspecific differences in the impact of global warming on the understory layer of boreal forests. Species in all functional groups from dwarf shrubs, herbs and grasses to bryophytes and lichens showed significant responses to temperature, while temperature did not limit the abundance of 10 species. We discuss the interest of modelling the âmaximum potential abundanceâ to deal with the uncertainty in the predictions of realized abundances associated to the effect of environmental factors not accounted for and to dispersal limitations of species, among others. We believe this concept has a promising and unexplored potential to forecast the impact of specific drivers of global change under future scenarios.202
Evaluating Home Health Care Nursing Outcomes With OASIS and NOC
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73163/1/j.1547-5069.2007.00209.x.pd
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