5,751 research outputs found

    Infusorial earth and its uses

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    Mechanical and engineering section

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    Geology and ground-water resources of Cerro Gordo County, Iowa

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    https://ir.uiowa.edu/igs_wsb/1008/thumbnail.jp

    Factors Influencing Largemouth Bass Recruitment: Implications for the Illinois Management and Stocking Program

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    Annual Progress Report issued August 2002; NOTE: Two different reports numbered 02/06 were issued from the CAE.Report issued on: August 2002INHS Technical Report prepared for Division of Fisheries Illinois Department of Natural Resource

    Conditional regularity of solutions of the three dimensional Navier-Stokes equations and implications for intermittency

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    Two unusual time-integral conditional regularity results are presented for the three-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations. The ideas are based on L2mL^{2m}-norms of the vorticity, denoted by Ωm(t)\Omega_{m}(t), and particularly on Dm=ΩmαmD_{m} = \Omega_{m}^{\alpha_{m}}, where αm=2m/(4m3)\alpha_{m} = 2m/(4m-3) for m1m\geq 1. The first result, more appropriate for the unforced case, can be stated simply : if there exists an 1m<1\leq m < \infty for which the integral condition is satisfied (Zm=Dm+1/DmZ_{m}=D_{m+1}/D_{m}) 0tln(1+Zmc4,m)dτ0 \int_{0}^{t}\ln (\frac{1 + Z_{m}}{c_{4,m}}) d\tau \geq 0 then no singularity can occur on [0,t][0, t]. The constant c4,m2c_{4,m} \searrow 2 for large mm. Secondly, for the forced case, by imposing a critical \textit{lower} bound on 0tDmdτ\int_{0}^{t}D_{m} d\tau, no singularity can occur in Dm(t)D_{m}(t) for \textit{large} initial data. Movement across this critical lower bound shows how solutions can behave intermittently, in analogy with a relaxation oscillator. Potential singularities that drive 0tDmdτ\int_{0}^{t}D_{m} d\tau over this critical value can be ruled out whereas other types cannot.Comment: A frequency was missing in the definition of D_{m} in (I5) v3. 11 pages, 1 figur

    MoS2 nanoparticle formation in a low pressure environment

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    Formation of MoS2 nanoparticles at pressures between 0.5 and 10 Torr has been studied. Two different chemistries for the particle nucleation are compared: one based on MoCl5 and H2S, and the other based on MoCl5 and S. In both cases particle formation has been studied in a thermal oven and in a radio-frequency discharge. Typically, the reaction rates at low pressures are too low for an efficient thermal particle production. At pressures below 10 Torr no particle production in the oven is achieved in H2S chemistry. In the more reactive chemistry based on sulfur, the optimal conditions for thermal particle growth are found at 10 Torr and low gas flows, using excess of hydrogen. In the radio-frequency discharge, nanoparticles are readily formed in both chemistries at 0.5 Torr and can be detected in situ by laser light scattering. In the H2S chemistry particles smaller than 100 nm diameter have been synthesized, the sulfur chemistry yields somewhat larger grains. Both in thermal and plasma-enhanced particle syntheses, using excess of hydrogen is beneficial for the stability and purity of the particles

    The CRESST Dark Matter Search

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    We present first competitive results on WIMP dark matter using the phonon-light-detection technique. A particularly strong limit for WIMPs with coherent scattering results from selecting a region of the phonon-light plane corresponding to tungsten recoils. The observed count rate in the neutron band is compatible with the rate expected from neutron background. CRESST is presently being upgraded with a 66 channel SQUID readout system, a neutron shield and a muon veto system. This results in a significant improvement in sensitivity.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to be published in the proceedings of the 5th International Workshop on the Identification and Detection of Dark Matter IDM 2004, Edinburgh, Sept. 2004, World Scientifi
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