14,093 research outputs found

    Plane-stress, elastic-plastic states in the vicinity of crack tips

    Get PDF
    Plane stress analysis of elastic-plastic states in vicinity of straight crack tip in thin plat

    Two Conditions for Galaxy Quenching: Compact Centres and Massive Haloes

    Full text link
    We investigate the roles of two classes of quenching mechanisms for central and satellite galaxies in the SDSS (z<0.075z<0.075): those involving the halo and those involving the formation of a compact centre. For central galaxies with inner compactness Σ1kpc1099.4Mkpc2\Sigma_{\rm 1kpc} \sim 10^{9-9.4}M_{\odot} {\rm kpc}^{-2}, the quenched fraction fqf_{q} is strongly correlated with Σ1kpc\Sigma_{\rm 1kpc} with only weak halo mass MhM_{\rm h} dependence. However, at higher and lower Σ1kpc\Sigma_{\rm 1kpc}, sSFR is a strong function of MhM_{\rm h} and mostly independent of Σ1kpc\Sigma_{\rm 1kpc}. In other words, Σ1kpc1099.4Mkpc2\Sigma_{\rm 1kpc} \sim 10^{9-9.4} M_{\odot} {\rm kpc}^{-2} divides galaxies into those with high sSFR below and low sSFR above this range. In both the upper and lower regimes, increasing MhM_{\rm h} shifts the entire sSFR distribtuion to lower sSFR without a qualitative change in shape. This is true even at fixed MM_{*}, but varying MM_{*} at fixed MhM_{\rm h} adds no quenching information. Most of the quenched centrals with Mh>1011.8MM_{\rm h} > 10^{11.8}M_{\odot} are dense (Σ1kpc>109 Mkpc2\Sigma_{\rm 1kpc} > 10^{9}~ M_{\odot} {\rm kpc}^{-2}), suggesting compaction-related quenching maintained by halo-related quenching. However, 21% are diffuse, indicating only halo quenching. For satellite galaxies in the outskirts of halos, quenching is a strong function of compactness and a weak function of host MhM_{\rm h}. In the inner halo, MhM_{\rm h} dominates quenching, with 90%\sim 90\% of the satellites being quenched once Mh>1013MM_{\rm h} > 10^{13}M_{\odot}. This regional effect is greatest for the least massive satellites. As demonstrated via semi-analytic modelling with simple prescriptions for quenching, the observed correlations can be explained if quenching due to central compactness is rapid while quenching due to halo mass is slow.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, MNRAS accepte

    Interplay of disorder and geometrical frustration in doped Gadolinium Gallium Garnet

    Get PDF
    The geometrically-frustrated, triangular antiferromagnet GGG exhibits a rich mix of short-range order and isolated quantum states. We investigate the effects of up to 1% Neodymium substitution for Gallium on the ac magnetic response at temperatures below 1 K in both the linear and nonlinear regimes. Substitutional disorder actually drives the system towards a more perfectly frustrated state, apparently compensating for the effect of imperfect Gadolinium/Gallium stoichiometry, while at the same time more closely demarcating the boundaries of isolated, coherent clusters composed of hundreds of spins. Optical measurements of the local Nd environment substantiate the picture of an increased frustration index with doping.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure

    Airborne bacterial populations above desert soils of the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica

    Get PDF
    Bacteria are assumed to disperse widely via aerosolized transport due to their small size and resilience. The question of microbial endemicity in isolated populations is directly related to the level of airborne exogenous inputs, yet this has proven hard to identify. The ice-free terrestrial ecosystem of Antarctica, a geographically and climatically isolated continent, was used to interrogate microbial bio-aerosols in relation to the surrounding ecology and climate. High-throughput sequencing of bacterial ribosomal RNA (rRNA) genes was combined with analyses of climate patterns during an austral summer. In general terms, the aerosols were dominated by Firmicutes, whereas surrounding soils supported Actinobacteria-dominated communities. The most abundant taxa were also common to aerosols from other continents, suggesting that a distinct bio-aerosol community is widely dispersed. No evidence for significant marine input to bio-aerosols was found at this maritime valley site, instead local influence was largely from nearby volcanic sources. Back trajectory analysis revealed transport of incoming regional air masses across the Antarctic Plateau, and this is envisaged as a strong selective force. It is postulated that local soil microbial dispersal occurs largely via stochastic mobilization of mineral soil particulates

    Time scale based analysis of in-situ crystal formation in droplet undergoing rapid dehydration

    Full text link
    The surface structure of crystalline particles affects the functionality of the particles in drug delivery. Prediction of the final structure of particles that crystallize easily within the spray drying process is of interests for many applications. A theoretical framework was developed for the prediction of crystal structure precipitating on the surface of the particle. This model was based on the dimensionless Damkohler number (Da), to be an indicator of final particle morphology. Timescales of evaporation and reaction were required for calculation of the Damkohler number. The modified evaporation time scale was estimated based on the time that is available for the crystal to precipitate after supersaturation. The reaction time scale was estimated based on the time scale for induction time. Mannitol was produced under different processing conditions in order to validate the theoretical model. Results showed for the high Damkohler numbers, the surface structure of the particle was rough, while smaller Damkohler numbers led to relatively smooth particle surfaces. Additionally, although the beta polymorph was dominant in all of the experiments, alpha polymorph was precipitated in the experiments with a large Damkohler number. The theoretical framework developed will be a useful predictive tool to guide the manipulation of particle crystallization in spray dryers

    The role of the intermediate stage of drying on particle in-situ crystallization in spray dryers

    Full text link
    In-situ crystallization of particles in spray drying has several advantages particularly for product quality modification in the pharmaceutical industry. This process was investigated in a counter current spray dryer using lactose as a model material by manipulation of the local humidity within the drying chamber. Sample collection and humidity injection at different location of the dryer were carried out to better understand the mechanism of particle formation and solidification which are essential components of in-situ crystallization. They revealed that particle formation can be delayed by local humidity elevation. Differential scanning calorimetry and XRD of the yields showed that humidity manipulation was capable to produce semi crystalline lactose of up to 90% crystallinity. The results confirmed that there is a critical period for crystallization such that extending this period would significantly increase the degree of crystallization. Comparison on different requirements of crystallization indicated that extending the time for nucleation and the growth at the critical period via humidity manipulation has the most significant effect on the in-situ crystallization process

    Model-Based Edge Detector for Spectral Imagery Using Sparse Spatiospectral Masks

    Get PDF
    Two model-based algorithms for edge detection in spectral imagery are developed that specifically target capturing intrinsic features such as isoluminant edges that are characterized by a jump in color but not in intensity. Given prior knowledge of the classes of reflectance or emittance spectra associated with candidate objects in a scene, a small set of spectral-band ratios, which most profoundly identify the edge between each pair of materials, are selected to define a edge signature. The bands that form the edge signature are fed into a spatial mask, producing a sparse joint spatiospectral nonlinear operator. The first algorithm achieves edge detection for every material pair by matching the response of the operator at every pixel with the edge signature for the pair of materials. The second algorithm is a classifier-enhanced extension of the first algorithm that adaptively accentuates distinctive features before applying the spatiospectral operator. Both algorithms are extensively verified using spectral imagery from the airborne hyperspectral imager and from a dots-in-a-well midinfrared imager. In both cases, the multicolor gradient (MCG) and the hyperspectral/spatial detection of edges (HySPADE) edge detectors are used as a benchmark for comparison. The results demonstrate that the proposed algorithms outperform the MCG and HySPADE edge detectors in accuracy, especially when isoluminant edges are present. By requiring only a few bands as input to the spatiospectral operator, the algorithms enable significant levels of data compression in band selection. In the presented examples, the required operations per pixel are reduced by a factor of 71 with respect to those required by the MCG edge detector

    Excitation spectroscopy of vortex lattices in a rotating Bose-Einstein condensate

    Full text link
    Excitation spectroscopy of vortex lattices in rotating Bose-Einstein condensates is described. We numerically obtain the Bogoliubov-deGenne quasiparticle excitations for a broad range of energies and analyze them in the context of the complex dynamics of the system. Our work is carried out in a regime in which standard hydrodynamic assumptions do not hold, and includes features not readily contained within existing treatments.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Submitted for publicatio
    corecore