26,944 research outputs found
Evaluation of Stress Corrosion Cracking Susceptibility Using Fracture Mechanics Techniques, Part 1
Stress corrosion cracking (SSC) tests were performed on 13 aluminum alloys, 13 precipitation hardening stainless steels, and two titanium 6Al-4V alloy forgings to compare fracture mechanics techniques with the conventional smooth specimen procedures. Commercially fabricated plate and rolled or forged bars 2 to 2.5-in. thick were tested. Exposures were conducted outdoors in a seacoast atmosphere and in an inland industrial atmosphere to relate the accelerated tests with service type environments. With the fracture mechanics technique tests were made chiefly on bolt loaded fatigue precracked compact tension specimens of the type used for plane-strain fracture toughness tests. Additional tests of the aluminum alloy were performed on ring loaded compact tension specimens and on bolt loaded double cantilever beams. For the smooth specimen procedure 0.125-in. dia. tensile specimens were loaded axially in constant deformation type frames. For both aluminum and steel alloys comparative SCC growth rates obtained from tests of precracked specimens provide an additional useful characterization of the SCC behavior of an alloy
Invertible Dirac operators and handle attachments on manifolds with boundary
For spin manifolds with boundary we consider Riemannian metrics which are
product near the boundary and are such that the corresponding Dirac operator is
invertible when half-infinite cylinders are attached at the boundary. The main
result of this paper is that these properties of a metric can be preserved when
the metric is extended over a handle of codimension at least two attached at
the boundary. Applications of this result include the construction of
non-isotopic metrics with invertible Dirac operator, and a concordance
existence and classification theorem.Comment: Accepted for publication in Journal of Topology and Analysi
Interviewing suspects: examining the association between skills, questioning, evidence disclosure, and interview outcomes
The interviewing of suspects is an important element in the investigation of crime. However, studies concerning actual performance of investigators when undertaking such interviews remain sparse. Nevertheless, in England and Wales, since the introduction of a prescribed framework over 20 years ago, field studies have generally shown an improvement in interviewing performance, notwithstanding ongoing concerns largely relating to the more demanding aspects (such as building/maintaining rapport, intermittent summarising and the logical development of topics). Using a sample of 70 real-life interviews, the present study examined questioning and various evidence disclosure strategies (which have also been found demanding), examining their relationships between interview skills and interview outcomes. It was found that when evidence was disclosed gradually (but revealed later), interviews were generally both more skilled and involved the gaining of comprehensive accounts, whereas when evidence was disclosed either early or very late, interviews were found to be both less skilled and less likely to involve this outcome. These findings contribute towards an increased research base for the prescribed framework
Tunable Resonant Raman Scattering from Singly Resonant Single Wall Carbon Nanotubes
We perform tunable resonant Raman scattering on 17 semiconducting and 7
metallic singly resonant single wall carbon nanotubes. The measured scattering
cross-section as a function laser energy provides information about a tube's
electronic structure, the lifetime of intermediate states involved in the
scattering process and also energies of zone center optical phonons. Recording
the scattered Raman signal as a function of tube location in the microscope
focal plane allows us to construct two-dimensional spatial maps of singly
resonant tubes. We also describe a spectral nanoscale artifact we have coined
the "nano-slit effect"
Space station automation of common module power management and distribution
The purpose is to automate a breadboard level Power Management and Distribution (PMAD) system which possesses many functional characteristics of a specified Space Station power system. The automation system was built upon 20 kHz ac source with redundancy of the power buses. There are two power distribution control units which furnish power to six load centers which in turn enable load circuits based upon a system generated schedule. The progress in building this specified autonomous system is described. Automation of Space Station Module PMAD was accomplished by segmenting the complete task in the following four independent tasks: (1) develop a detailed approach for PMAD automation; (2) define the software and hardware elements of automation; (3) develop the automation system for the PMAD breadboard; and (4) select an appropriate host processing environment
Beneficial hemodynamic effects of intravenous and oral diltiazem in severe congestive heart failure
Concern persists about the potential negative inotropic effects of calcium channel blockers in patients with severely depressed myocardial function. Therefore, intravenous diltiazem (100 to 200 ltg/kg per min infusion) was administered for 40 minutes followed by oral diltiazem (90 to 120 mg/8 hours) for 24 hours to patients with advanced congestive heart failure (New York Heart Association class III to IV, mean ejection fraction 26 ± 4 [SD]). Intravenous diltiazem (eight patients) increased cardiac index 20% (2.05 ± 0.8 to 2.47 ± 0.8 liters/min per MZ, p < 0.01), stroke volume index 50% (22 ± 9 to 33 ± 12 MI/M2, p < 0.001) and stroke work index 27% (19 ± 10 to 24 ± 10 g-m/MZ, p < 0.05); while reducing heart rate 23% (97 ± 18 to 75 ± 11 beats/min, p < 0.01), mean arterial pressure 18% (95 ± 13 to 78 ± 7 mm Hg) and pulmonary wedge pressure 34% (29 ± 9 to 19 ± 7 mm Hg), without altering maximal first derivative of left ventricular pressure (dP/dtmax). Oral diltiazem (seven patients) produced equivalent hemodynamic effects. Transient junctional arrhythmias were observed in three of eight patients with intravenous diltiazem and one of seven patients with oral diltiazem.It is concluded that intravenous and short-term oral diltiazem improve left ventricular performance and reduce myocardial oxygen demand by heart rate and afterload reduction without significantly depressing contractile function in severe congestive heart failure. Caution should be exercised to avoid potential adverse, druginduced electrophysiologic effects in such patients
Encouraging Undergraduate-Faculty Collaborative Research
This paper is the result of the authors’ participation in a panel session at the Southwest Regional Meeting of the American Accounting Association in Houston, Texas in March 2008. Robert J. Walsh presented an earlier version of this manuscript at the Northeast Regional Meeting of the American Accounting Association in Newport, Rhode Island in November 2008. The authors wish to recognize the contributions of the program chairs, anonymous reviewers, and panel session participants for their helpful comments and suggestions
Iterative techniques for the decomposition of long-slit spectra
Two iterative techniques are described for decomposing a long-slit spectrum
into the individual spectra of the point sources along the slit and the
spectrum of the underlying background. One technique imposes the strong
constraint that the spectrum of the background is spatially-invariant; the
other relaxes this constraint. Both techniques are applicable even when there
are numerous overlapping point sources superposed on a structurally-complex
background. The techniques are tested on simulated as well as real long-slit
data from the ground and from space.Comment: Accepted by AJ. 20 pages, 4 figure
Argon metastable dynamics in a filamentary jet micro-discharge at atmospheric pressure
Space and time resolved concentrations of Ar () metastable atoms at
the exit of an atmospheric pressure radio-frequency micro-plasma jet were
measured using tunable diode laser absorption spectroscopy. The discharge
features a coaxial geometry with a hollow capillary as an inner electrode and a
ceramic tube with metal ring as outer electrode. Absorption profiles of
metastable atoms as well as optical emission measurements reveal the dynamics
and the filamentary structure of the discharge. The average spatial
distribution of Ar metastables is characterized with and without a target in
front of the jet, showing that the target potential and therewith the electric
field distribution substantially changes the filaments' expansion. Together
with the detailed analysis of the ignition phase and the discharge's behavior
under pulsed operation, the results give an insight into the excitation and
de-excitation mechanisms
Foetal vascular responses to thromboxane receptor blockade
We hypothesized that foetal administration of SQ-29,548,
a putative thromboxane receptor blocker, would prevent
foeto–placental vasoconstriction produced by the thromboxane
mimic U46619. Arterial blood gases, continuous
monitoring of maternal and foetal heart rates and blood
pressures were performed in chronically catheterized pregnant
ewes. Foetal blood flows and vascular resistance were
determined with radioactive microspheres. SQ-29,548
effectively blocked the expected vasoconstrictive effects of
thromboxane. However, prolonged infusion of SQ-29,548
resulted in significant decreases in umbilical–placental
blood flow and foetal mean arterial pressure. This was
accompanied by a respiratory acidemia. Potential therapy
for the vasoconstrictive disorders of pregnancy with SQ-29,548
awaits further investigation of its intrinsic vasoactive
properties in the umbilical–placental vasculature
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