19,081 research outputs found
Inference of stress and texture from angular dependence of ultrasonic plate mode velocities
The theory for the angular dependence of the ultrasonic wave velocity in a symmetry plane of an orthorhombic, stressed material is presented. The two waves having polarizations in this plane are shown to have velocities which can be estimated from measurements of the SH sub 0 and S sub 0 guided modes of a thin plate: the relationship being exact for the SH sub 0 mode and requiring a 10% correction for the S sub 0 mode at long wavelength. It is then shown how stress and texture can be independently inferred from various features of the angular dependence of these two velocities. From the SH sub 0 data, the ability to determine the directions and differences in magnitudes of principal stresses is described and supported by experimental data on several materials. From a combination of the SH sub 0 and S sub 0 data, a procedure is proposed for determining the coefficients W sub 400, W sub 420 and W sub 440 of an expansion of the crystallite orientation distribution function in terms of generalized Legendre functions. Possible applications in process control are indicated
Presure-Induced Superconducting State of Antiferromagnetic CaFeAs
The antiferromagnet CaFeAs does not become superconducting when
subject to ideal hydrostatic pressure conditions, where crystallographic and
magnetic states also are well defined. By measuring electrical resistivity and
magnetic susceptibility under quasi-hydrostatic pressure, however, we find that
a substantial volume fraction of the sample is superconducting in a narrow
pressure range where collapsed tetragonal and orthorhombic structures coexist.
At higher pressures, the collapsed tetragonal structure is stabilized, with the
boundary between this structure and the phase of coexisting structures strongly
dependent on pressure history. Fluctuations in magnetic degrees of freedom in
the phase of coexisting structures appear to be important for
superconductivity.Comment: revised (6 pages, 5 figures) - includes additional experimental
result
Method of ultrasonic measurement of texture
A method for measuring texture of metal plates or sheets using non-destructive ultrasonic investigation includes measuring the velocity of ultrasonic energy waves in lower order plate modes in one or more directions, and measuring phase velocity dispersion of higher order modes of the plate or sheet if needed. Texture or preferred grain orientation can be derived from these measurements with improves reliability and accuracy. The method can be utilized in production on moving metal plate or sheet
The photopic negative response in autism spectrum disorder
Background:
Visual function can be atypical in autism spectrum disorder and structural imaging of the ganglion cell layers has been reported to differ in these individuals. Therefore, we sought to investigate if the photopic negative response of the full field electroretinograms, a measure of ganglion cell function, could help explain the visual perceptual differences in autism spectrum disorder and support the structural changes observed. /
Methods:
Participants (n = 55 autism spectrum disorder, aged 5.4–26.7 years) and control (n = 87, aged 5.4–27.3 years) were recruited for the study. Full-field light-adapted electroretinograms using a Troland protocol with 10 flash strengths from −0.367 to 1.204 log photopic cd.s.m−2 were recorded in each eye. The photopic negative response amplitudes at Tmin and at t = 72 ms were compared between groups along with the a- and b-wave values. /
Results:
There were no significant interactions between groups for the Photopic Negative Response measures of amplitude or time (p > 0.30). There was a group interaction between groups and flash strengths for the b-wave amplitude as previously reported (p < 0.001). /
Conclusion:
The photopic negative response results suggest that there are no significant differences in the summed retinal ganglion cell responses produced by a full-field stimulus
Effects of pressure on the ferromagnetic state of the CDW compound SmNiC2
We report the pressure response of charge-density-wave (CDW) and
ferromagnetic (FM) phases of the rare-earth intermetallic SmNiC2 up to 5.5 GPa.
The CDW transition temperature (T_{CDW}), which is reflected as a sharp
inflection in the electrical resistivity, is almost independent of pressure up
to 2.18 GPa but is strongly enhanced at higher pressures, increasing from 155.7
K at 2.2 GPa to 279.3 K at 5.5 GPa. Commensurate with the sharp increase in
T_{CDW}, the first-order FM phase transition, which decreases with applied
pressure, bifurcates into the upper (T_{M1}) and lower (T_c) phase transitions
and the lower transition changes its nature to second order above 2.18 GPa.
Enhancement both in the residual resistivity and the Fermi-liquid T^2
coefficient A near 3.8 GPa suggests abundant magnetic quantum fluctuations that
arise from the possible presence of a FM quantum critical point.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Infall models of Class 0 protostars
We have carried out radiative transfer calculations of infalling, dusty
envelopes surrounding embedded protostars to understand the observed properties
of the recently identified ``Class 0'' sources. To match the far-infrared peaks
in the spectral energy distributions of objects such as the prototype Class 0
source VLA 1623, pure collapse models require mass infall rates
\sim10^{-4}\msunyr. The radial intensity distributions predicted by
such infall models are inconsistent with observations of VLA 1623 at sub-mm
wavelengths, in agreement with the results of Andre et al. (1993) who found a
density profile of rather than the expected gradient. To resolve this conflict, while still invoking
infall to produce the outflow source at the center of VLA 1623, we suggest that
the observed sub-mm intensity distribution is the sum of two components: an
inner infall zone, plus an outer, more nearly constant-density region. This
explanation of the observations requires that roughly half the total mass
observed within 2000 AU radius of the source lies in a region external to the
infall zone. The column densities for this external region are comparable to
those found in the larger Oph A cloud within which VLA 1623 is embedded. The
extreme environments of Class 0 sources lead us to suggest an alternative or
additional interpretation of these objects: rather than simply concluding with
Andre et al. that Class 0 objects only represent the earliest phases of
protostellar collapse, and ultimately evolve into older ``Class I'' protostars,
we suggest that many Class 0 sources could be the protostars of very dense
regions. (Shortened)Comment: 22 pages, including 3 PostScript figures, accepted for publication in
The Astrophysical Journa
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