8,768 research outputs found
Indium antimonide crystal growth experiment M562
It was established that ideal diffusion controlled steady state conditions, never accomplished on earth, were achieved during the growth of Te-doped InSb crystals in Skylab. Surface tension effects led to nonwetting conditions under which free surface solidification took place in confined geometry. It was further found that, under forced contact conditions, surface tension effects led to the formation of surface ridges (not previously observed on earth) which isolated the growth system from its container. In addition, it was possible, for the first time, to identify unambiguously: the origin of segregation discontinuities associated with facet growth, the mode of nucleation and propagation of rotational twin boundaries, and the specific effect of mechanical-shock perturbations on segregation. The results obtained prove the advantageous conditions provided by outer space. Thus, fundamental data on solidification thought to be unattainable because of gravity-induced interference on earth are now within reach
Solidification (crystal growth) in the presence of gravitational forces
The surface tension behavior of doped and undoped InSb melts was investigated as well as their temperature and composition dependence. Surface tension in InSb melts was determined using the sessile-drop technique covering the temperature range from 530 C to 880 C. A linear regression of the data obtained shows that the temperature dependence of sigma is 392- (T-530) x (7000) plus or minus 10 dyne/cm. The d sigma/d Tau for intrinsics InSb is less than that previously reported. On the basis of the surface tension data obtained, it is concluded that surface tension induced convective flow velocities in InSb under reduced gravity conditions range from zero to at most 1 cm/sec. Accordingly, no interference with dopant segregation can be expected during growth in space because the momentum boundary layer (at the crystal melt interface) associated with any Marangoni-type convective flows would, at the given growth rate, be significantly larger than the predicted diffusion boundary layer thickness
Preparation of homogeneous vitreous materials for electronic and optical devices
Vitreous material builds up as series of solidified layers on inside walls of sealed quartz ampoule containing molten constituents of material, and forms well defined shapes to close dimensional tolerances. Ampoules are made of material which does not react with melt and has lower thermal expansion coefficient than solidified layer
The nature of the red disk-like galaxies at high redshift: dust attenuation and intrinsically red stellar populations
We investigate which conditions of dust attenuation and stellar populations
allow models of dusty, continuously star-forming, bulge-less disk galaxies at
0.8<z<3.2 to meet the different colour selection criteria of high-z ``red''
galaxies (e.g. Rc-K>5.3, Ic-K>4, J-K>2.3). As a main novelty, we use stellar
population models that include the thermally pulsating Asymptotic Giant Branch
(TP-AGB) phase of stellar evolution. The star formation rate of the models
declines exponentially as a function of time, the e-folding time being longer
than 3 Gyr. In addition, we use calculations of radiative transfer of the
stellar and scattered radiation through different dusty interstellar media in
order to explore the wide parameter space of dust attenuation. We find that
synthetic disks can exhibit red optical/near-infrared colours because of
reddening by dust, but only if they have been forming stars for at least about
1 Gyr. Extremely few models barely exhibit Rc-K>5.3, if the inclination i=90
deg and if the opacity 2*tauV>6. Hence, Rc-K-selected galaxies at 1<z<2 most
probably are either systems with an old, passively evolving bulge or
starbursts. Synthetic disks at 1<z<2 exhibit 4<Ic-K<4.8, if they are seen edge
on (i.e. at i about 90 deg) and if 2*tauV>0.5. This explains the large fraction
of observed, edge-on disk-like galaxies with Ks4. Finally,
models with 2<z<3.2 exhibit 2.3<J-K<3, with no bias towards i about 90 deg and
for a large range in opacity (e.g. 2*tauV>1 for i about 70 deg). In conclusion,
red disk-like galaxies at 0.8<z<3.2 may not necessarily be dustier than nearby
disk galaxies (with 0.5<2*tauV<2) and/or much older than about 1 Gyr. This
result is due both to a realistic description of dust attenuation and to the
emission contribution by TP-AGB stars... (Abridged)Comment: 16 pages, 8 ps figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Magnification relations in gravitational lensing via multidimensional residue integrals
We investigate the so-called magnification relations of gravitational lensing
models. We show that multidimensional residue integrals provide a simple
explanation for the existence of these relations, and an effective method of
computation. We illustrate the method with several examples, thereby deriving
new magnification relations for galaxy lens models and microlensing (point mass
lensing).Comment: 16 pages, uses revtex4, submitted to Journal of Mathematical Physic
Roll diffusion bonding of titanium alloy panels
Roll diffusion bonding technique is used for fabricating T-stiffened panel assemblies from titanium alloy. The single unit fabrication exhibits excellent strength characteristics under tensile and compressive loads. This program is applied to structures in which weight/strength ratio and integral construction are important considerations
Chronic lung allograft dysfunction following lung transplantation: Challenges and solutions
Bradford C Bemiss, Chad A WittDepartment of Internal Medicine, Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO, USAAbstract: Chronic rejection is a major cause of death after the first year following lung transplantation. Bronchiolitis obliterans (BO) is the most common pathologic finding on biopsy, characterized by fibrous granulation tissue, which obliterates the lumen of the bronchiole. Clinically, in the absence of tissue for pathology, BO syndrome refers to a progressive irreversible drop in the forced expiratory volume in 1 second. Recently, a broader definition of chronic rejection, termed "chronic lung allograft dysfunction", has been used to encompass a more inclusive definition of posttransplant dysfunction. Recently, the lung transplant community has come to realize that chronic rejection may be the final common result after repetitive epithelial insults. Acute rejection, infection, and alloreactivity to mismatched HLA antigens are a few of these insults that damage the surface of the bronchioles. Recent evidence of autoimmunity to the normally hidden structural proteins collagen V and K-α1 tubulin have been correlated with a BO phenotype as well, perhaps correlating the epithelial damage with a mechanism for developing BO lesions. Many immunomodulatory medications and treatments have been studied for effectiveness for the treatment of chronic lung allograft dysfunction. New drugs, which more precisely target the immune system, are being developed and tested. Further study is required, but recent advances have improved our understanding of the pathogenesis and potential intervention for this common and deadly complication of lung transplantation.Keywords: lung transplant, bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome, rejectio
Polymerization of Methyl Methacrylate by Heat-Catalyst and Gamma-Irradiation Methods
Methyl methacrylate (MMA) was bulk-polymerized with 0 to 4% crosslinker (ethylene glycol dimethacrylate, EGDM, and trimethylol propane trimethacrylate, TMPTM), initiated with 0.05 to 5% catalyst (Vazo) at 65-75 C or 0.1 to 1 Mrad/hr gamma radiation at 20 C. Heat-catalyzed MMA conversion to polymer vs. time was obtained directly from polymer mass, which indicated that about 90% conversion had occurred at the exothermic peak temperature. The time to the exothermic peak temperature was used to determine sample polymerization time. The over-all polymerization rate varied with the half-power of initiator concentration. An Arrhenius plot of the initiator-time data gave an activation energy of 18 kcal/mole. A log-log relationship was found between crosslinker concentration and polymerization time over the 65-75 C temperature and 0.1-0.4% initiator range. The crosslinkers were found equally efficient in reducing polymerization time. Peak exothermie temperature varied directly with time, irrespective of the initiator and crosslinker concentrations or bath temperature except as they affected time. In the irradiation tests, the crosslinkers exhibited different data fits: log-log with EGDM and semilog for TMPTM. The time-dose rate equation for uncrosslinked MMA was analogous to that for heat-catalyzed polymerization. Molecular weight of uncrosslinked PMMA was determined as a function of temperature and catalyst concentration, and dose rate. Similar molecular weights were obtained for heat-catalyzed polymerization at 65 C and gamma irradiation at 20 C for numerically the same initiator concentration (%) and does rate (Mrad/hr)
Localized energy for wave equations with degenerate trapping
Localized energy estimates have become a fundamental tool when studying wave
equations in the presence of asymptotically at background geometry. Trapped
rays necessitate a loss when compared to the estimate on Minkowski space. A
loss of regularity is a common way to incorporate such. When trapping is
sufficiently weak, a logarithmic loss of regularity suffices. Here, by studying
a warped product manifold introduced by Christianson and Wunsch, we encounter
the first explicit example of a situation where an estimate with an algebraic
loss of regularity exists and this loss is sharp. Due to the global-in-time
nature of the estimate for the wave equation, the situation is more complicated
than for the Schr\"{o}dinger equation. An initial estimate with sub-optimal
loss is first obtained, where extra care is required due to the low frequency
contributions. An improved estimate is then established using energy
functionals that are inspired by WKB analysis. Finally, it is shown that the
loss cannot be improved by any power by saturating the estimate with a
quasimode.Comment: 18 page
The Flux Ratio Method for Determining the Dust Attenuation of Starburst Galaxies
The presence of dust in starburst galaxies complicates the study of their
stellar populations as the dust's effects are similar to those associated with
changes in the galaxies' stellar age and metallicity. This degeneracy can be
overcome for starburst galaxies if UV/optical/near-infrared observations are
combined with far-infrared observations. We present the calibration of the flux
ratio method for calculating the dust attenuation at a particular wavelength,
Att(\lambda), based on the measurement of F(IR)/F(\lambda) flux ratio. Our
calibration is based on spectral energy distributions (SEDs) from the PEGASE
stellar evolutionary synthesis model and the effects of dust (absorption and
scattering) as calculated from our Monte Carlo radiative transfer model. We
tested the attenuations predicted from this method for the Balmer emission
lines of a sample starburst galaxies against those calculated using radio
observations and found good agreement. The UV attenuation curves for a handful
of starburst galaxies were calculated using the flux ratio method, and they
compare favorably with past work. The relationship between Att(\lambda) and
F(IR)/F(\lambda) is almost completely independent of the assumed dust
properties (grain type, distribution, and clumpiness). For the UV, the
relationship is also independent of the assumed stellar properties (age,
metallicity, etc) accept for the case of very old burst populations. However at
longer wavelengths, the relationship is dependent on the assumed stellar
properties.Comment: accepted by the ApJ, 18 pages, color figures, b/w version at
http://mips.as.arizona.edu/~kgordon/papers/fr_method.htm
- …