1,621 research outputs found
An all-electrical torque differential magnetometer operating under ambient conditions
An all-electrical torque differential magnetometry (also known as cantilever
magnetometry) setup employing piezoelectric quartz tuning forks is
demonstrated. The magnetometer can be operated under ambient conditions as well
as low temperatures and pressures. It extends the allowed specimen mass range
up to several 10 g without any significant reduction in the sensitivity.
Operation under ambient conditions and a simple all-electrical design of the
magnetometer should allow for an easy integration with other experimental
setups. The uniaxial magnetic anisotropy of a 25 m diameter iron wire,
measured under ambient conditions with a high signal to noise ratio, was found
to be in good agreement with its literature value. Further applications of the
technique are discussed.Comment: 9 two-column pages, 9 figure
Responses to intimate partners’ attempts to change health behavior: The role of readiness
Intimate partners seeking to influence one another’s health may do so by providing support for positive health behavior and attempting to change negative health behavior (social control). Research findings examining the effectiveness of intimate partners’ attempts to influence health behavior are mixed however, and the purpose of the present research is to examine individuals’ responses to hypothetical health behavior influence attempts by an intimate partner. Specifically, we examine the role of readiness to change, cognitive appraisals, and affective responses to partner change attempts. Undergraduate students (n = 185) who reported infrequent exercise or unhealthy eating habits were asked to respond to a variety of tactics an intimate partner might use to try to change their health behavior. In the first phase of the study, we examine a model wherein individuals’ readiness to change influences their perceptions of, and affective reactions to, attempts to influence health behavior and the subsequent likelihood of making a behavioral change. In Phase 2, we use a within-subjects experimental design to simulate changes in readiness and assess resulting changes to affective and perceptual responses to a variety of hypothetical support and control attempts by an intimate partner. The findings indicate that a comprehensive model that includes readiness to change more fully accounts for variance in how individuals respond to partners’ change attempts. Theoretical and clinical implications are discussed
Hubble Space Telescope Imaging in the Chandra Deep Field South: III. Quantitative Morphology of the 1Ms Chandra Counterparts and Comparison with the Field Population
We present quantitative morphological analyses of 37 HST/WFPC2 counterparts
of X-ray sources in the 1 Ms Chandra Deep Field-South (CDFS). We investigate:
1) 1-D surface brightness profiles via isophotal ellipse fitting; 2) 2-D, PSF-
convolved, bulge+disk+nucleus profile-fitting; 3) asymmetry and concentration
indices compared with all ~3000 sources in our three WFPC2 fields; and 4) near-
neighbor analyses comparing local environments of X-ray sources versus the
field control sample. Significant nuclear point-source optical components
appear in roughly half of the resolved HST/WFPC2 counterparts, showing a narrow
range of F_X/F_{opt,nuc} consistent with the several HST-unresolved X-ray
sources (putative type-1 AGN) in our fields. We infer roughly half of the
HST/WFPC2 counterparts host unobscured AGN, which suggests no steep decline in
the type-1/type-2 ratio out to the redshifts z~0.5-1 typical of our sources.
The concentration indices of the CDFS counterparts are clearly larger on
average than those of the field distribution, at 5-sigma, suggesting that the
strong correlation between central black hole mass and host galaxy properties
(including concentration index) observed in nearby galaxies is already evident
by z~0.5-1. By contrast, the asymmetry index distribution of the 21 resolved
CDFS sources at I<23 is indistinguishable from the I<23 field. Moreover, the
frequency of I<23 near neighbors around the CDFS counterparts is not
significantly different from the field sample. These results, combined with
previous similar findings for local samples, suggest that recent merger/
interaction history is not a good indicator of AGN activity over a substantial
range of look-back time.Comment: 30 pages, incl. 8 figures; accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
HST Imaging in the Chandra Deep Field South: II. WFPC2 Observations of an X-Ray Flux-Limited Sample from the 1 Msec Chandra Catalog
We present HST/WFPC2 observations of a well-defined sample of 40 X-ray
sources with X-ray fluxes above the detection threshold of the full 1 Msec
Chandra Deep Field South (CDFS). The sensitivity and spatial resolution of our
HST observations are sufficient to detect the optical counterparts of 37 of the
X-ray sources, yielding information on their morphologies and environments. In
this paper we extend the results obtained in our previous study on the 300 ks
CDFS X-ray data (Schreier et al. 2001, Paper I). Specifically, we show that the
optical counterparts to the X-ray sources are divided into two distinct
populations: 1) an optically faint group with relatively blue colors, similar
to the faint blue field galaxy population, and 2) an optically brighter group,
including resolved galaxies with average colors significantly redder than the
corresponding bright field galaxy population. The brighter objects comprise a
wide range of types, including early and late type galaxies, starbursts, and
AGN. By contrast, we show that the faint blue X-ray population are most
consistent with being predominantly Type 2 AGN of low to moderate luminosity,
located at higher redshifts (z ~ 1 - 2). This conclusion is supported by
luminosity function models of the various classes of objects. Hence, the
combination of deep X-ray data with the high spatial resolution of HST are for
the first time allowing us to probe the faint end of the AGN luminosity
function at cosmologically interesting redshifts.Comment: AASTEX-Latex, 25 pages, 4 postscript figures, 9 jpg figures. Accepted
by the Astrophysical Journal. Full-size postscript images and figures,
included in the preprint, are available from:
http://www.stsci.edu/~koekemoe/papers/cdfs-hst
Sign of inverse spin Hall voltages generated by ferromagnetic resonance and temperature gradients in yttrium iron garnet|platinum bilayers
We carried out a concerted effort to determine the absolute sign of the
inverse spin Hall effect voltage generated by spin currents injected into a
normal metal. We focus on yttrium iron garnet (YIG)|platinum bilayers at room
temperature, generating spin currents by microwaves and temperature gradients.
We find consistent results for different samples and measurement setups that
agree with theory. We suggest a right-hand-rule to define a positive spin Hall
angle corresponding to with the voltage expected for the simple case of
scattering of free electrons from repulsive Coulomb charges.Comment: incorporated additions from the published versio
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