17,430 research outputs found
Exact Casimir-Polder potentials: interaction of an atom with a conductor-patched dielectric surface
We study the interaction between a neutral atom or molecule and a
conductor-patched dielectric surface. We model this system by a perfectly
reflecting disc lying atop of a non-dispersive dielectric half-space, both
interacting with the neutral atom or molecule. We assume the interaction to be
non-retarded and at zero temperature. We find an exact solution to this
problem. In addition we generate a number of other useful results. For the case
of no substrate we obtain the exact formula for the van der Waals interaction
energy of an atom near a perfectly conducting disc. We show that the
Casimir-Polder force acting on an atom that is polarized in the direction
normal to the surface of the disc displays intricate behaviour. This part of
our results is directly relevant to recent matter-wave experiments in which
cold molecules are scattered by a radially symmetric object in order to study
diffraction patterns and the so-called Poisson spot. Furthermore, we give an
exact expression for the non-retarded limit of the Casimir-Polder interaction
between an atom and a perfectly-conducting bowl.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
Energy Loss from Reconnection with a Vortex Mesh
Experiments in superfluid 4He show that at low temperatures, energy
dissipation from moving vortices is many orders of magnitude larger than
expected from mutual friction. Here we investigate other mechanisms for energy
loss by a computational study of a vortex that moves through and reconnects
with a mesh of small vortices pinned to the container wall. We find that such
reconnections enhance energy loss from the moving vortex by a factor of up to
100 beyond that with no mesh. The enhancement occurs through two different
mechanisms, both involving the Kelvin oscillations generated along the vortex
by the reconnections. At relatively high temperatures the Kelvin waves increase
the vortex motion, leading to more energy loss through mutual friction. As the
temperature decreases, the vortex oscillations generate additional reconnection
events between the moving vortex and the wall, which decrease the energy of the
moving vortex by transfering portions of its length to the pinned mesh on the
wall.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
A user evaluation of hierarchical phrase browsing
Phrase browsing interfaces based on hierarchies of phrases extracted automatically from document collections offer a useful compromise between automatic full-text searching and manually-created subject indexes. The literature contains descriptions of such systems that many find compelling and persuasive. However, evaluation studies have either been anecdotal, or focused on objective measures of the quality of automatically-extracted index terms, or restricted to questions of computational efficiency and feasibility. This paper reports on an empirical, controlled user study that compares hierarchical phrase browsing with full-text searching over a range of information seeking tasks. Users found the results located via phrase browsing to be relevant and useful but preferred keyword searching for certain types of queries. Users experiences were marred by interface details, including inconsistencies between the phrase browser and the surrounding digital library interface
The Forest Resources of Iowa in 1980
The woodlands of Iowa have declined in area and public esteem. Iowa, at the time of settlement, was 19% forested. New immigrants and potential settlers east of the Mississippi River considered Iowa\u27s woodlands as essential to homesteading and paid premium prices for wooded property. By 1875 forest acreage was reduced from 6.7 million acres to 2.5 million acres (2.7 million to 1.01 million hectares). This acreage apparently did not change appreciably until the 1950\u27s. In the last twenty years to the present forest area has been reduced another million acres to 4% of Iowa\u27s land area. The current rate of removal of woodland is most severe in the least forested counties. The changes in public opinion respective to woodlands are discussed and present problems and future perspectives defined
A Kelvin-wave cascade on a vortex in superfluid He at a very low temperature
A study by computer simulation is reported of the behaviour of a quantized
vortex line at a very low temperature when there is continuous excitation of
low-frequency Kelvin waves. There is no dissipation except by phonon radiation
at a very high frequency. It is shown that non-linear coupling leads to a net
flow of energy to higher wavenumbers and to the development of a simple
spectrum of Kelvin waves that is insensitive to the strength and frequency of
the exciting drive. The results are likely to be relevant to the decay of
turbulence in superfluid He at very low temperatures
Topological defect motifs in two-dimensional Coulomb clusters
The most energetically favourable arrangement of low-density electrons in an
infinite two-dimensional plane is the ordered triangular Wigner lattice.
However, in most instances of contemporary interest one deals instead with
finite clusters of strongly interacting particles localized in potential traps,
for example, in complex plasmas. In the current contribution we study
distribution of topological defects in two-dimensional Coulomb clusters with
parabolic lateral confinement. The minima hopping algorithm based on molecular
dynamics is used to efficiently locate the ground- and low-energy metastable
states, and their structure is analyzed by means of the Delaunay triangulation.
The size, structure and distribution of geometry-induced lattice imperfections
strongly depends on the system size and the energetic state. Besides isolated
disclinations and dislocations, classification of defect motifs includes defect
compounds --- grain boundaries, rosette defects, vacancies and interstitial
particles. Proliferation of defects in metastable configurations destroys the
orientational order of the Wigner lattice.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures. This is an author-created, un-copyedited version
of an article accepted for publication in J. Phys.: Condens. Matter. IOP
Publishing Ltd is not responsible for any errors or omissions in this version
of the manuscript or any version derived from it. The definitive
publisher-authenticated version is available online at
10.1088/0953-8984/23/38/38530
Detection of a Moving Rigid Solid in a Perfect Fluid
In this paper, we consider a moving rigid solid immersed in a potential
fluid. The fluid-solid system fills the whole two dimensional space and the
fluid is assumed to be at rest at infinity. Our aim is to study the inverse
problem, initially introduced in [3], that consists in recovering the position
and the velocity of the solid assuming that the potential function is known at
a given time. We show that this problem is in general ill-posed by providing
counterexamples for which the same potential corresponds to different positions
and velocities of a same solid. However, it is also possible to find solids
having a specific shape, like ellipses for instance, for which the problem of
detection admits a unique solution. Using complex analysis, we prove that the
well-posedness of the inverse problem is equivalent to the solvability of an
infinite set of nonlinear equations. This result allows us to show that when
the solid enjoys some symmetry properties, it can be partially detected.
Besides, for any solid, the velocity can always be recovered when both the
potential function and the position are supposed to be known. Finally, we prove
that by performing continuous measurements of the fluid potential over a time
interval, we can always track the position of the solid.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figure
A direct optical method for the study of grain boundary melting
The structure and evolution of grain boundaries underlies the nature of
polycrystalline materials. Here we describe an experimental apparatus and light
reflection technique for measuring disorder at grain boundaries in optically
clear material, in thermodynamic equilibrium. The approach is demonstrated on
ice bicrystals. Crystallographic orientation is measured for each ice sample.
The type and concentration of impurity in the liquid can be controlled and the
temperature can be continuously recorded and controlled over a range near the
melting point. The general methodology is appropriate for a wide variety of
materials.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, updated with minor changes made to published
versio
Influence of FK 506 (tacrolimus) on circulating CD4 <sup>+</sup> t cells expressing cd25 and cd45ra antigens in 19 patients with chronic progressive multiple sclerosis participating in an open label drug safety trial
We have taken the opportunity of a clinical trial of the potential efficacy and safety of FK 506 (tacrolimus) in chronic progressive multiple sclerosis (MS) to examine the influence of this potent new immunosuppressant on circulating T-lymphocytes in an otherwise healthy non-transplant population. Peripheral blood levels of subsets of CD4+ T lymphocytes expressing the activation molecule interleukin-2 receptor (p55 α chain; CD25) or the CD45RA isoform were determined sequentially in 19 patients that were treated continuously with oral FK 506 (starting dose 0.15 mg/kg/day) for 12 months. No significant change in the proportion of circulating CD25 + CD4+ cells was observed over the study period in which the mean trough plasma FK 506 level rose from 0.3 ±0.2 to 0.5 ±0.4 ng/ml. There was also no significant effect of FK 506 on the percentage of CD45RA + CD4 + cells in the peripheral blood at 12 months compared with pretreatment values. Analysis of a subgroup of 7 patients, who showed a sustained reduction in CD25 + CD4+ cells and a reciprocal increase in CD45RA* CD4 * cells for at least 6 months after start of treatment, did not reveal any difference in disability at one year compared with the treatment group as a whole. The side effects of FK 506 were mild and the overall degree of disability estimated by the mean Kurtzke expanded disability status scale (EDSS) score or the ambulation index did not deteriorate significantly in the 19 patients studied over the 12 months of FK 506 administration. © 1994 Informa UK Ltd All rights reserved: reproduction in whole or part not permitted
- …