23,865 research outputs found
Composite solid propellant flame microstructure determination Annual report, 23 Jun. 1967 - 22 Jun. 1968
Composite solid propellant flame microstructure determination
- nucleus relativistic mean field potentials consistent with kaonic atoms
atomic data are used to test several models of the nucleus
interaction. The t() optical potential, due to coupled channel
models incorporating the (1405) dynamics, fails to reproduce these
data. A standard relativistic mean field (RMF) potential, disregarding the
(1405) dynamics at low densities, also fails. The only successful
model is a hybrid of a theoretically motivated RMF approach in the nuclear
interior and a completely phenomenological density dependent potential, which
respects the low density theorem in the nuclear surface region. This best-fit
optical potential is found to be strongly attractive, with a depth of 180
\pm 20 MeV at the nuclear interior, in agreement with previous phenomenological
analyses.Comment: revised, Phys. Rev. C in pres
Doctor of Physical Therapy students’ experience with microaggressions in the clinic: a call to action
As Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) students fulfill off-campus clinical experience requirements at healthcare institutions, they are mentored by clinical instructors who are employees of said healthcare institutions. Clinical instructors, patients, or other staff members there may commit microaggressions against physical therapy students with varying subject matters, intentions, and effects on the students. Microaggressions are brief verbal humiliations which may or may not be intentional, but nonetheless convey derogatory slights or insults towards a target group. This article explores DPT students’ real-life experiences with microaggressions within the clinical education realm and the challenges a Director of Clinical Education faced in efforts to advocate for students. It also delves into the current literature available on the topic, while identifying gaps in research. It is imperative that Doctor of Physical Therapy academic institutions and researchers gather more information on the experiences of DPT students’ experiences with microaggressions and establish corresponding policies so that the prevalence of DPT students’ experiences with microaggressions is reduced and the negative effects mitigated
Chiral Dynamics of Deeply Bound Pionic Atoms
We present and discuss a systematic calculation, based on two-loop chiral
perturbation theory, of the pion-nuclear s-wave optical potential. A proper
treatment of the explicit energy dependence of the off-shell pion self-energy
together with (electromagnetic) gauge invariance of the Klein-Gordon equation
turns out to be crucial. Accurate data for the binding energies and widths of
the 1s and 2p levels in pionic ^{205}Pb and ^{207}Pb are well reproduced, and
the notorious "missing repulsion" in the pion-nuclear s-wave optical potential
is accounted for. The connection with the in-medium change of the pion decay
constant is clarified.Comment: preprint ECT*-02-16, 4 pages, 3 figure
Testing Einstein's time dilation under acceleration using M\"ossbauer spectroscopy
The Einstein time dilation formula was tested in several experiments. Many
trials have been made to measure the transverse second order Doppler shift by
M\"{o}ssbauer spectroscopy using a rotating absorber, to test the validity of
this formula. Such experiments are also able to test if the time dilation
depends only on the velocity of the absorber, as assumed by Einstein's clock
hypothesis, or the present centripetal acceleration contributes to the time
dilation. We show here that the fact that the experiment requires -ray
emission and detection slits of finite size, the absorption line is broadened;
by geometric longitudinal first order Doppler shifts immensely. Moreover, the
absorption line is non-Lorenzian. We obtain an explicit expression for the
absorption line for any angular velocity of the absorber.
The analysis of the experimental results, in all previous experiments which
did not observe the full absorption line itself, were wrong and the conclusions
doubtful. The only proper experiment was done by K\"{u}ndig (Phys. Rev. 129
(1963) 2371), who observed the broadening, but associated it to random
vibrations of the absorber. We establish necessary conditions for the
successful measurement of a transverse second order Doppler shift by
M\"{o}ssbauer spectroscopy. We indicate how the results of such an experiment
can be used to verify the existence of a Doppler shift due to acceleration and
to test the validity of Einstein's clock hypothesis.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Measurement of Magnetization Dynamics in Single-Molecule Magnets Induced by Pulsed Millimeter-Wave Radiation
We describe an experiment aimed at measuring the spin dynamics of the Fe8
single-molecule magnet in the presence of pulsed microwave radiation. In
earlier work, heating was observed after a 0.2-ms pulse of intense radiation,
indicating that the spin system and the lattice were out of thermal equilibrium
at millisecond time scale [Bal et al., Europhys. Lett. 71, 110 (2005)]. In the
current work, an inductive pick-up loop is used to probe the photon-induced
magnetization dynamics between only two levels of the spin system at much
shorter time scales (from ns to us). The relaxation time for the magnetization,
induced by a pulse of radiation, is found to be on the order of 10 us.Comment: 3 RevTeX pages, including 3 eps figures. The paper will appear in the
Journal of Applied Physics as MMM'05 conference proceeding
Ground states of supersymmetric Yang-Mills-Chern-Simons theory
We consider minimally supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory with a Chern-Simons
term on a flat spatial two-torus. The Witten index may be computed in the weak
coupling limit, where the ground state wave-functions localize on the moduli
space of flat gauge connections. We perform such computations by considering
this moduli space as an orbifold of a certain flat complex torus. Our results
agree with those obtained previously by instead considering the moduli space as
a complex projective space. An advantage of the present method is that it
allows for a more straightforward determination of the discrete electric 't
Hooft fluxes of the ground states in theories with non-simply connected gauge
groups. A consistency check is provided by the invariance of the results under
the mapping class group of a (Euclidean) three-torus.Comment: 18 page
Modification of turbulent transport with continuous variation of flow shear in the Large Plasma Device
Continuous control over azimuthal flow and shear in the edge of the Large
Plasma Device (LAPD) has been achieved using a biasable limiter which has
allowed a careful study of the effect of flow shear on pressure-gradient-driven
turbulence and transport in LAPD. LAPD rotates spontaneously in the ion
diamagnetic direction (IDD); positive limiter bias first reduces, then
minimizes (producing a near-zero shear state), and finally reverses the flow
into the electron diamagnetic direction (EDD). Degradation of particle
confinement is observed in the minimum shearing state and reduction in
turbulent particle flux is observed with increasing shearing in both flow
directions. Near-complete suppression of turbulent particle flux is observed
for shearing rates comparable to the turbulent autocorrelation rate measured in
the minimum shear state. Turbulent flux suppression is dominated by amplitude
reduction in low-frequency (kHz) density fluctuations. An increase in
fluctuations for the highest shearing states is observed with the emergence of
a coherent mode which does not lead to net particle transport. The variations
of density fluctuations are fit well with power-laws and compare favorably to
simple models of shear suppression of transport.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures; Submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Models of helically symmetric binary systems
Results from helically symmetric scalar field models and first results from a
convergent helically symmetric binary neutron star code are reported here;
these are models stationary in the rotating frame of a source with constant
angular velocity omega. In the scalar field models and the neutron star code,
helical symmetry leads to a system of mixed elliptic-hyperbolic character. The
scalar field models involve nonlinear terms that mimic nonlinear terms of the
Einstein equation. Convergence is strikingly different for different signs of
each nonlinear term; it is typically insensitive to the iterative method used;
and it improves with an outer boundary in the near zone. In the neutron star
code, one has no control on the sign of the source, and convergence has been
achieved only for an outer boundary less than approximately 1 wavelength from
the source or for a code that imposes helical symmetry only inside a near zone
of that size. The inaccuracy of helically symmetric solutions with appropriate
boundary conditions should be comparable to the inaccuracy of a waveless
formalism that neglects gravitational waves; and the (near zone) solutions we
obtain for waveless and helically symmetric BNS codes with the same boundary
conditions nearly coincide.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures. Expanded version of article to be published in
Class. Quantum Grav. special issue on Numerical Relativit
Radiation- and Phonon-Bottleneck-Induced Tunneling in the Fe8 Single-Molecule Magnet
We measure magnetization changes in a single crystal of the single-molecule
magnet Fe8 when exposed to intense, short (<20 s) pulses of microwave
radiation resonant with the m = 10 to 9 transition. We find that radiation
induces a phonon bottleneck in the system with a time scale of ~5 s. The
phonon bottleneck, in turn, drives the spin dynamics, allowing observation of
thermally assisted resonant tunneling between spin states at the 100-ns time
scale. Detailed numerical simulations quantitatively reproduce the data and
yield a spin-phonon relaxation time of T1 ~ 40 ns.Comment: 6 RevTeX pages, including 4 EPS figures, version accepted for
publicatio
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