42,422 research outputs found
X-ray measurements of stresses and defects in EFG and large grained polycrystalline silicon ribbons
The Bond method was employed to measure the lattice parameter in an area of 0.4 mm in diameter of EFG Si-ribbons to an accuracy of + or - 0.00008 A. A Bond goniometer was built which included a goniostat with a special specimen holder to mount ribbons 1 m in length and 75 mm in width which could be rotated about two orthogonal axes, and a Leitz microscope for precision alignment of a particular area into the center of the goniostat and the small primary X-ray beam. The (321) planes were found to be parallel to the surface of the ribbons with an angular spread of about 15 deg. The poles of the (111) planes clustered about an angle of 25 deg away from the surface normal, again with a spread of 10 deg. The lattice parameter of a small piece of ribbon material was found to be a sub o = 5.43075 A. A maximum stress of 115 MPa was observed in a fractured ribbon which corresponded to the fracture stress of single crystals of Si
Wedges, Cones, Cosmic Strings, and the Reality of Vacuum Energy
One of J. Stuart Dowker's most significant achievements has been to observe
that the theory of diffraction by wedges developed a century ago by Sommerfeld
and others provided the key to solving two problems of great interest in
general-relativistic quantum field theory during the last quarter of the
twentieth century: the vacuum energy associated with an infinitely thin,
straight cosmic string, and (after an interchange of time with a space
coordinate) the apparent vacuum energy of empty space as viewed by an
accelerating observer. In a sense the string problem is more elementary than
the wedge, since Sommerfeld's technique was to relate the wedge problem to that
of a conical manifold by the method of images. Indeed, Minkowski space, as well
as all cone and wedge problems, are related by images to an infinitely sheeted
master manifold, which we call Dowker space. We review the research in this
area and exhibit in detail the vacuum expectation values of the energy density
and pressure of a scalar field in Dowker space and the cone and wedge spaces
that result from it. We point out that the (vanishing) vacuum energy of
Minkowski space results, from the point of view of Dowker space, from the
quantization of angular modes, in precisely the way that the Casimir energy of
a toroidal closed universe results from the quantization of Fourier modes; we
hope that this understanding dispels any lingering doubts about the reality of
cosmological vacuum energy.Comment: 28 pages, 16 figures. Special volume in honor of J. S. Dowke
Surface tension of electrolytes: Hydrophilic and hydrophobic ions near an interface
We calculate the ion distributions around an interface in fluid mixtures of
highly polar and less polar fluids (water and oil) for two and three ion
species. We take into account the solvation and image interactions between ions
and solvent. We show that hydrophilic and hydrophobic ions tend to undergo a
microphase separation at an interface, giving rise to an enlarged electric
double layer. We also derive a general expression for the surface tension of
electrolyte systems, which contains a negative electrostatic contribution
proportional to the square root of the bulk salt density. The amplitude of this
square-root term is small for hydrophilic ion pairs, but is much increased for
hydrophilic and hydrophobic ion pairs. For three ion species including
hydrophilic and hydrophobic ions, we calculate the ion distributions to explain
those obtained by x-ray reflectivity measurements.Comment: 8 figure
Direct Measurement of 2D and 3D Interprecipitate Distance Distributions from Atom-Probe Tomographic Reconstructions
Edge-to-edge interprecipitate distance distributions are critical for
predicting precipitation strengthening of alloys and other physical phenomena.
A method to calculate this 3D distance and the 2D interplanar distance from
atom-probe tomographic data is presented. It is applied to nanometer-sized
Cu-rich precipitates in an Fe-1.7 at.% Cu alloy. Experimental interprecipitate
distance distributions are discussed
ROSAT HRI observations of Centaurus A
We present results from a sensitive high-resolution X-ray observation of the
nearby active galaxy Centaurus A (NGC 5128) with the ROSAT HRI. The 65~ksec
X-ray image clearly distinguishes different components of the X-ray emission
from Cen A: the nucleus and the jet, the diffuse galaxy halo, and a number of
individual sources associated with the galaxy. The luminosity of the nucleus
increased by a factor of two compared to an earlier ROSAT observation in 1990.
The high spatial resolution of the ROSAT HRI shows that most of the knots in
the jet are extended both along and perpendicular to the jet axis. We report
the detection of a new X-ray feature, at the opposite side of the X-ray jet
which is probably due to compression of hot interstellar gas by the expanding
southwestern inner radio lobe.Comment: To be published in Astrophys. Journal Letters. 4 pages, 3 plate
Simulation of associative learning with the replaced elements model
Associative learning theories can be categorised according to whether they treat the representation of stimulus compounds in an elemental or configural manner. Since it is clear that a simple elemental approach to stimulus representation is inadequate there have been several attempts to produce more elaborate elemental models. One recent approach, the Replaced Elements Model (Wagner, 2003), reproduces many results that have until recently been uniquely predicted by Pearceās Configural Theory (Pearce, 1994). Although it is possible to simulate the Replaced Elements Model using āstandardā simulation programs the generation of the correct stimulus representation is complex. The current paper describes a method for simulation of the Replaced Elements Model and presents the results of two example simulations that show differential predictions of Replaced Elements and Pearceās Configural Theor
Bound pair states beyond the condensate for Fermi systems below T_c: the pseudogap as a necessary condition
As is known, the 1/q^2 theorem of Bogoliubov asserts that the mean density of
the fermion pair states with the total momentum q obeys the inequality n_q >
C/q^2 (q \to 0) in the case of the Fermi system taken at nonzero temperature
and in the superconducting state provided the interaction term of its
Hamiltonian is locally gauge invariant. With the principle of correlation
weakening it is proved in this paper that the reason for the mentioned singular
behaviour of n_q is the presence of the bound states of particle pairs with
nonzero total momenta. Thus, below the temperature of the superconducting phase
transition there always exist the bound states of the fermion couples beyond
the pair condensate. If the pseudogap observed in the normal phase of the
high-T_c superconductors is stipulated by the presence of the electron bound
pairs, then the derived result suggests, in a model-independent manner, that
the pseudogap survives below T_c.Comment: REVTeX, 8 pages, no figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Elucidating the structural composition of a Fe-N-C catalyst by nuclear and electron resonance techniques
FeāNāC catalysts are very promising materials for fuel cells and metalāair batteries. This work gives fundamental insights into the structural composition of an FeāNāC catalyst and highlights the importance of an inādepth characterization. By nuclearā and electronāresonance techniques, we are able to show that even after mild pyrolysis and acid leaching, the catalyst contains considerable fractions of Ī±āiron and, surprisingly, iron oxide. Our work makes it questionable to what extent FeN4 sites can be present in FeāNāC catalysts prepared by pyrolysis at 900āĀ°C and above. The simulation of the iron partial density of phonon states enables the identification of three FeN4 species in our catalyst, one of them comprising a sixfold coordination with endāon bonded oxygen as one of the axial ligands
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