495 research outputs found

    Behavior of the lean methane-air flame at zero-gravity

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    A special rig was designed and constructed to be compatible with the NASA Lewis Research Center Airborne Research Laboratory to allow the study of the effect of gravity on the behavior of lean limit in a standard 50.4 mm (2 in.) internal diameter tube when the mixtures are ignited at the open end and propagate towards the closed end of the tube. The lean limit at zero gravity was found to be 5.10% methane and the flame was found to extenguish in a manner previously observed for downward propagating flames at one g. It was observed that g-jitter could be maintained at less than + or 0.04 g on most zero g trajectories. All of propagating lean limit flames were found to be sporadically cellularly unstable at zero g. There was no observable correlation between the occurrence of g-jitter and the lean limit, average propagation speed of the flame through the tube or the occurrence of cellular instability

    Addressing social and emotional learning: Fostering resilience and academic self-efficacy in educationally disadvantaged learners transitioning to university

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    In recent years, the impact of mental health issues on university students’ ability to successfully access, transition and participate in university has gained increasing attention. Mental wellbeing is of particular concern in pre-university enabling programs which often specifically target educationally-disadvantaged equity groups. It has become increasingly clear that in addition to ‘academic skills’, these students also need to be equipped with social and emotional skills that support their transition to university, as well as promote resilience, sustained motivation and academic self- efficacy. In response to this, we reviewed and revised the curricula of two of Murdoch University’s key enabling programs to incorporate material which focused on developing these skills. This paper presents our rationale and examples of our diverse approaches to addressing social and emotional learning in curricula which aims to support and enable the transition of educationally disadvantaged students into undergraduate studies

    Evidence for a Second Order Phase Transition in Glasses at Very Low Temperatures -- A Macroscopic Quantum State of Tunneling Systems

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    Dielectric measurements at very low temperature indicate that in a glass with the eutectic composition BaO-Al2_2O3_3-SiO2_2 a phase transition occurs at 5.84 mK. Below that temperature small magnetic fields of the order of 10 μ\muT cause noticeable changes of the dielectric constant although the glass is insensitive to fields up to 20 T above 10 mK. The experimental findings may be interpreted as the signature of the formation of a new phase in which many tunneling systems perform a coherent motion resulting in a macroscopic wave function.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let

    The effects of CPE on primary relationships - Is it worth exploring?

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    Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE) can be a life transforming experience for students, but does it also transform students' primary relationships? An online survey of past CPE students at Royal Perth Hospital, Western Australia, found that--overall--CPE had a positive effect on primary relations in key areas, in particular communication, intimacy and spirituality. Recent relationships were more negatively affected. Some relationships did not survive CPE. Structural and pedagogical implications require further research

    The influence of long- and short-term volcanic strain on aquifer pressure:a case study from Soufrière Hills Volcano, Montserrat (W.I.)

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    Aquifers are poroelastic bodies that respond to strain by changes in pore pressure. Crustal deformation due to volcanic processes induces pore pressure variations that are mirrored in well water levels. Here, we investigate water level changes in the Belham valley on Montserrat over the course of two years (2004-2006). Using finite element analysis, we simulate crustal deformation due to different volcanic strain sources and the dynamic poroelastic aquifer response. While some additional hydrological drivers cannot be excluded, we suggest that a poroelastic strain response of the aquifer system in the Belham valley is a possible explanation for the observed water level changes. According to our simulations, the shallow Belham aquifer responds to a steadily increasing sediment load due to repeated lahar sedimentation in the valley with rising aquifer pressures. A wholesale dome collapse in May 2006 on the other hand induced dilatational strain and thereby a short-term water level drop in a deeper-seated aquifer, which caused groundwater leakage from the Belham aquifer and thereby induced a delayed water level fall in the wells. The system thus responded to both gradual and rapid transient strain associated with the eruption of Soufrière Hills Volcano (Montserrat). This case study gives field evidence for theoretical predictions on volcanic drivers behind hydrological transients, demonstrating the potential of hydrological data for volcano monitoring. Interrogation of such data can provide valuable constraints on stress evolution in volcanic systems and therefore complement other monitoring systems. The presented models and inferred results are conceptually applicable to volcanic areas worldwide

    Comparative study of the effects of electron irradiation and natural disorder in single crystals of SrFe2_{2}(As1−x_{1-x}Px_x)2_2 (x=x=0.35) superconductor

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    London penetration depth, λ(T)\lambda(T), was measured in single crystals of SrFe2_2(As1−x_{1-x}Px_x)2_2 (x=x=0.35) iron - based superconductor. The influence of disorder on the transition temperature, TcT_c, and on λ(T)\lambda(T) was investigated. The effects of scattering controlled by the annealing of as-grown crystals was compared with the effects of artificial disorder introduced by 2.5~MeV electron irradiation. The low temperature behavior of λ(T)\lambda(T) can be described by a power-law function, Δλ(T)=ATn\Delta \lambda (T)=AT^n, with the exponent nn close to one in pristine annealed samples, as expected for superconducting gap with line nodes. Upon 1.2×10191.2 \times 10^{19} \ecm irradiation, the exponent nn increases rapidly exceeding a dirty limit value of n=n= 2 implying that the nodes in the superconducting gap are accidental and can be lifted by the disorder. The variation of the exponent nn with TcT_c is much stronger in the irradiated crystals compared to the crystals in which disorder was controlled by the annealing of the growth defects. We discuss the results in terms of different influence of different types of disorder on intra- and inter- band scattering

    Correlated Persistent Tunneling Currents in Glasses

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    Low temperature properties of glasses are derived within a generalized tunneling model, considering the motion of charged particles on a closed path in a double-well potential. The presence of a magnetic induction field B violates the time reversal invariance due to the Aharonov-Bohm phase, and leads to flux periodic energy levels. At low temperature, this effect is shown to be strongly enhanced by dipole-dipole and elastic interactions between tunneling systems and becomes measurable. Thus, the recently observed strong sensitivity of the electric permittivity to weak magnetic fields can be explained. In addition, superimposed oscillations as a function of the magnetic field are predicted.Comment: 4 page

    Magnetic field effect on the dielectric constant of glasses: Evidence of disorder within tunneling barriers

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    The magnetic field dependence of the low frequency dielectric constant ere_r(H) of a structural glass a - SiO2 + xCyHz was studied from 400 mK to 50 mK and for H up to 3T. Measurement of both the real and the imaginary parts of ere_r is used to eliminate the difficult question of keeping constant the temperature of the sample while increasing H: a non-zero ere_r(H) dependence is reported in the same range as that one very recently reported on multicomponent glasses. In addition to the recently proposed explanation based on interactions, the reported ere_r(H) is interpreted quantitatively as a consequence of the disorder lying within the nanometric barriers of the elementary tunneling systems of the glass.Comment: latex Bcorrige1.tex, 5 files, 4 figures, 7 pages [SPEC-S02/009

    Low temperature acoustic properties of amorphous silica and the Tunneling Model

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    Internal friction and speed of sound of a-SiO(2) was measured above 6 mK using a torsional oscillator at 90 kHz, controlling for thermal decoupling, non-linear effects, and clamping losses. Strain amplitudes e(A) = 10^{-8} mark the transition between the linear and non-linear regime. In the linear regime, excellent agreement with the Tunneling Model was observed for both the internal friction and speed of sound, with a cut-off energy of E(min) = 6.6 mK. In the non-linear regime, two different behaviors were observed. Above 10 mK the behavior was typical for non-linear harmonic oscillators, while below 10 mK a different behavior was found. Its origin is not understood.Comment: 1 tex file, 6 figure
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