8,037 research outputs found

    The linear rms-flux relation in an Ultraluminous X-ray Source

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    We report the first detection of a linear correlation between rms variability amplitude and flux in the Ultraluminous X-ray source NGC 5408 X-1. The rms-flux relation has previously been observed in several Galactic black hole X-ray binaries (BHBs), several Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) and at least one neutron star X-ray binary. This result supports the hypothesis that a linear rms-flux relation is common to all luminous black hole accretion and perhaps even a fundamental property of accretion flows about compact objects. We also show for the first time the cross-spectral properties of the variability of this ULX, comparing variations below and above 1 keV. The coherence and time delays are poorly constrained but consistent with high coherence between the two bands, over most of the observable frequency range, and a significant time delay (with hard leading soft variations). The magnitude and frequency dependence of the lags are broadly consistent with those commonly observed in BHBs, but the direction of the lag is reversed. These results indicate that ULX variability studies, using long X-ray observations, hold great promise for constraining the processes driving ULXs behaviour, and the position of ULXs in the scheme of black hole accretion from BHBs to AGN.Comment: 4 Pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication by MNRAS

    Towards Recyclable Insulation Materials for High Voltage Cables

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    The preferred material for modern extruded high voltage transmission cables is cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE). This material has excellent thermo-mechanical and dielectric properties, however it is not easily recycled at end of use, raising questions as to its long term sustainability [1]. Therefore research work at Southampton has sought to identify suitable recyclable alternatives to XLPE. Such candidate materials need to have low temperature flexibility and high temperature mechanical stability combined with a sufficiently high electrical breakdown strength

    Visualising London's Suburbs

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    2 - 4 April 200

    Do the suburbs exist? Discovering complexity and specificity in suburban built form

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    In human geography cities are routinely acknowledged as complex and dynamic built environments. This description is rarely extended to the suburbs, which are generally regarded as epiphenomena of the urbs and therefore of little intrinsic theoretical interest in themselves. This article presents a detailed critique of this widely held assumption by showing how the idea of 'the suburban' as an essentially non-problematic domain has been perpetuated from a range of contrasting disciplinary perspectives, including those that directly address suburban subject matter. The result has been that attempts to articulate the complex social possibilities of suburban space are easily caught between theories of urbanisation that are insensitive to suburban specificity and competing representations of the suburb that rarely move beyond the culturally specific to consider their generic significance. This article proposes that the development of a distinctively suburban theory would help to undermine one-dimensional approaches to the built environment by focusing on the relationship between social organisation and the dynamics of emergent built form

    A Comparison of Electrical Breakdown Characteristics of Composite Materials Prepared With Unmodified Micro and Nano Scale Barium Titanate

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    High permittivity polymer matrix composites (PMCs) have been widely researched, especially in the field of microelectronics. For this study, high permittivity materials were investigated for their potential to form part of a multi-layer electric field detector. The two main requirements for such composites were high permittivity and a dielectric strength comparable to most standard polymers used as dielectric materials. Polystyrene was selected as a host polymer due to its high dielectric strength and amorphous structure. Barium titanate, a ferroelectric ceramic from the perovskite family, was selected as a high permittivity filler. Polymer permittivity in PMCs is usually orders of magnitude lower compared to the filler permittivity, although the resultant permittivity of the composite is generally markedly lower than the permittivity of the filler may suggest. This is because very little energy is stored in the ceramic filler, such that any increase in composite permittivity is due to an increase in the average field with the polymer matrix.[1]Micro and nano scale barium titanate was blended into polystyrene in an effort to discern the initial differences between composites prepared with the two different filler types. It was found that the micro scale barium titanate was well dispersed and from studying SEM micrographs, appeared to have a good particle size distribution. The nanoscale barium titanate was found to be very poorly dispersed in polystyrene, with a wide particle size distributions formed of weakly bound aggregations and some seemingly chemically bonded agglomerations which were regular in shape with a surface texture which was indicative of tightly bound primary particles. Consistent with the differences in particle dispersion within the micro and nano composites, there was a marked difference in AC breakdown strength between the different materials. All electrical breakdown data was analysed using a 2 parameter Weibull distribution. Figure 1 compares the ? values for the micro and nano composites at different filler loadings.<br/

    Raman Microprobe Analysis of Electrical Treeing in Silicone Rubber

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    Previous papers have identified Raman microprobe analysis as a useful tool in the chemical analysis of electrical trees and have successfully applied the technique to trees grown in polyethylene. This paper comprises a detailed spectroscopic study of electrical trees grown in silicone rubber. A selection of trees of varying fractal dimensions were exposed using cryogenic microtomy and then the individual tree channels were subjected to surface specific Raman microprobe analysis. It was found that although some trees show that few chemical changes have occurred, some trees (including some where complete breakdown has occurred) show evidence of the presence of silica and carbon, the latter possibly originating from the side groups of the polymer chain. After this, some of the samples were then analyzed using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to provide an alternative method of analysis and to reinforce the conclusions made. Results are discussed in comparison to previously published results from a similar analysis on trees in polyethylene

    Population assessment of the vermilion snapper, Rhomboplites aurorubens, from the Southeastern United States

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    Changes in the age structure and population size of vermilion snapper, Rhornboplites aurorubens, from North Carolina through the Florida Keys were examined using records of landings and size frequencies of fish from commercial, recreational, and headboat fisheries from 1986-1996. Population size in numbers at age was estimated for each year by applying separable virtual population analysis (SVPA) to the landings in numbers at age. SVPA was used to estimate annual, age-specific fishing mortality (F) for four levels of natural mortality (M = 0.20, 0.25, 0.30, and 0.35). Although landings of vermilion snapper for the three fisheries have declined, minimum fish size regulations have resulted in an increase in the mean size of fish landed. Age at entry and age at full recruitment were age-1 andage-3 fDr 1986-1991, compared with age-1 and age-4, respectively, for 1992-1996. Levels of mortality from fishing (F) ranged from 0.38 - 0.61 for the entire period. Current spawning potential ratio (SPR) is 21% or 27% depending on the natural mortality estimate. SPR could be raised to 30% or 40% with a reduction in F, or by increasing the age at entry to the fisheries. The latter could be enhanced now if fishermen, particularly recreational, comply with minimum size regulations. However, released fish mortality, modeled in the assessment at 27%, will continue to make the achievement of 30% and 40% SPR more difficult. (PDF contains 63 pages

    The Spatial Morphology of Community in Chipping Barnet c.1800–2015: An Historical Dialogue of Tangible and Intangible Heritages

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    This article presents a case study of the London suburb of Chipping Barnet to show how a spatial-morphological approach to tangible heritage challenges its archetypal image as an affluent commuter suburb by highlighting its resilience as a generative patterning of social space that has weathered successive phases of social change. We argue that the enduring spatial-morphological definition of Barnet as a local centre explains how it has been possible to preserve something less tangible—namely its identity as a suburban community. We show how Barnet’s street network constitutes community heritage through a combination of local- and wider-scale affiliations that have sustained diverse localised socio-economic activity over an extended period of time. Noting how local histories often go further than sociological studies in emphasising the importance of the built environment for indexing the effects of social change on everyday life, we draw on a range of archive sources including the analysis of historical maps using space syntax techniques, to reveal Barnet’s street network as a dialogue of both tangible and intangible heritages that are formative of a suburban community
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