9,718 research outputs found
OBSERVATIONS OF PROPERTIES OF SINTERED WROUGHT TUNGSTEN SHEET AT VERY HIGH TEMPERATURES
Examination of mechanical properties of tungsten sheet at very high temperature
A Note on Dressed S-Matrices in Models with Long-Range Interactions
The {\sl dressed} Scattering matrix describing scattering of quasiparticles
in various models with long-range interactions is evaluated by means of
Korepin's method\upref vek1/. For models with -interactions
the S-matrix is found to be a momentum-independent phase, which clearly
demonstrates the ideal gas character of the quasiparticles in such models. We
then determine S-matrices for some models with -interaction
and find them to be in general nontrivial. For the -limit of the
-interaction we recover trivial S-matrices, thus exhibiting
a crossover from interacting to noninteracting quasiparticles. The relation of
the S-matrix to fractional statistics is discussed.Comment: 18 pages, jyTeX (macro included - just TeX the file) BONN-TH-94-13,
revised version: analysis of models with 1/sinh^2 interaction adde
Exact calculation of the ground-state dynamical spin correlation function of a S=1/2 antiferromagnetic Heisenberg chain with free spinons
We calculate the exact dynamical magnetic structure factor S(Q,E) in the
ground state of a one-dimensional S=1/2 antiferromagnet with gapless free S=1/2
spinon excitations, the Haldane-Shastry model with inverse-square exchange,
which is in the same low-energy universality class as Bethe's nearest-neighbor
exchange model. Only two-spinon excited states contribute, and S(Q,E) is found
to be a very simple integral over these states.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX, RevTeX 3.0, cond-mat/930903
Meltwater Intrusions Reveal Mechanisms for Rapid Submarine Melt at a Tidewater Glacier
Submarine melting has been implicated as a driver of glacier retreat and sea level rise, but to date melting has been difficult to observe and quantify. As a result, melt rates have been estimated from parameterizations that are largely unconstrained by observations, particularly at the near-vertical termini of tidewater glaciers. With standard coefficients, these melt parameterizations predict that ambient
melting (the melt away from subglacial discharge outlets) is negligible compared to discharge-driven melting for typical tidewater glaciers. Here, we present new data from LeConte Glacier, Alaska, that challenges this paradigm. Using autonomous kayaks, we observe ambient meltwater intrusions that are ubiquitous within 400 m of the terminus, and we provide the first characterization of their properties, structure, and distribution. Our results suggest that ambient melt rates are substantially higher (Ă100) than standard theory predicts and that ambient melting is a significant part of the total submarine melt flux. We explore modifications to the prevalent melt parameterization to provide a path forward for improved modeling of ocean-glacier interactions.This work was funded by NSF OPP Grants 1503910, 1504191, 1504288,
and 1504521 and National Geographic Grant CP4-171R-17. Additionally, this research was supported by the NOAA Climate and Global Change Postdoctoral Fellowship Program, administered by UCARâs Cooperative Programs for the Advancement of Earth System Science (CPAESS) under award #NA18NWS4620043B. These observations would not be possible without the skilled engineering team who developed the autonomous kayaksâincluding Jasmine Nahorniak, June Marion, Nick McComb, Anthony Grana, and Corwin Perrenâand also the Captain and crew of the M/V Amber Anne. We thank Donald Slater and an anonymous reviewer for valuable feedback that improved this manuscript. Data availability: All of the oceanographic data collected by ship and kayak have been archived with the National Centers for Environmental Information (Accession 0189574, https://accession.nodc.noaa.gov/ 0189574). The glacier data have been archived at the Arctic Data Center (https://doi.org/10.18739/A22G44).Ye
The development of low temperature curing adhesives
An approach for the development of a practical low temperature (293 K-311 K/68 F-100 F) curing adhesive system based on a family of amide/ester resins was studied and demonstrated. The work was conducted on resin optimization and adhesive compounding studies. An improved preparative method was demonstrated which involved the reaction of an amine-alcohol precursor, in a DMF solution with acid chloride. Experimental studies indicated that an adhesive formulation containing aluminum powder provided the best performance when used in conjunction with a commercial primer
Exact Results of the 1D Supersymmetric t-J Model without Translational Invariance
In this work, we continue the study of the supersymmetric t-J model with
1/r^2 hopping and exchange without translational invariance. A set of Jastrow
wavefunctions are obtained for the system, with eigenenergies explicitly
calculated. The ground state of the t-J model is included in this set of
wavefunctions. The spectrum of this t-J model consists of equal-distant energy
levels which are highly degenerate.Comment: 14 pages, Late
Thermalization of acoustic excitations in a strongly interacting one-dimensional quantum liquid
We study inelastic decay of bosonic excitations in a Luttinger liquid. In a
model with linear excitation spectrum the decay rate diverges. We show that
this difficulty is resolved when the interaction between constituent particles
is strong, and the excitation spectrum is nonlinear. Although at low energies
the nonlinearity is weak, it regularizes the divergence in the decay rate. We
develop a theoretical description of the approach of the system to thermal
equilibrium. The typical relaxation rate scales as the fifth power of
temperature
Short-timescale Fluctuations in the Difference Light Curves of QSO 0957+561A,B: Microlensing or Noise?
From optical R band data of the double quasar QSO 0957+561A,B, we made two
new difference light curves (about 330 days of overlap between the time-shifted
light curve for the A image and the magnitude-shifted light curve for the B
image). We observed noisy behaviours around the zero line and no
short-timescale events (with a duration of months), where the term event refers
to a prominent feature that may be due to microlensing or another source of
variability. Only one event lasting two weeks and rising - 33 mmag was found.
Measured constraints on the possible microlensing variability can be used to
obtain information on the granularity of the dark matter in the main lensing
galaxy and the size of the source. In addition, one can also test the ability
of the observational noise to cause the rms averages and the local features of
the difference signals. We focused on this last issue. The combined
photometries were related to a process consisting of an intrinsic signal plus a
Gaussian observational noise. The intrinsic signal has been assumed to be
either a smooth function (polynomial) or a smooth function plus a stationary
noise process or a correlated stationary process. Using these three pictures
without microlensing, we derived some models totally consistent with the
observations. We finally discussed the sensitivity of our telescope (at Teide
Observatory) to several classes of microlensing variability.Comment: MNRAS, in press (LaTeX, 14 pages, 22 eps figures
"Caring for Insiderness": Phenomenologically informed insights that can guide practice.
Understanding the ââinsiderââ perspective has been a pivotal strength of qualitative research. Further than this, within the more applied fields in which the human activity of ââcaringââ takes place, such understanding of ââwhat it is likeââ for people from within their lifeworlds has also been acknowledged as the foundational starting point in order for ââcareââ to be caring. But we believe that more attention needs to be paid to this foundational generic phenomenon: what it means to understand the ââinsidernessââ of another, but more importantly, how to act on this in caring ways. We call this human phenomenon ââcaring for insiderness.ââ Drawing on existing phenomenological studies of marginal caring situations at the limits of caring capability, and through a process of phenomenologically oriented reflection, we interrogated some existential themes implicit in these publications that could lead to deeper insights for both theoretical and applied purposes. The paper provides direction for practices of caring by highlighting some dangers as well as some remedies along this path
Some Properties of the Calogero-Sutherland Model with Reflections
We prove that the Calogero-Sutherland Model with reflections (the BC_N model)
possesses a property of duality relating the eigenfunctions of two Hamiltonians
with different coupling constants. We obtain a generating function for their
polynomial eigenfunctions, the generalized Jacobi polynomials. The symmetry of
the wave-functions for certain particular cases (associated to the root systems
of the classical Lie groups B_N, C_N and D_N) is also discussed.Comment: 16 pages, harvmac.te
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