1,105 research outputs found
Grain boundary oxidation and its effects on high temperature fatigue life
Fatigue lives at elevated temperatures are often shortened by creep and/or oxidation. Creep causes grain boundary void nucleation and grain boundary cavitation. Grain boundary voids and cavities will accelerate fatigue crack nucleation and propagation, and thereby shorten fatigue life. The functional relationships between the damage rate of fatigue crack nucleation and propagation and the kinetic process of oxygen diffusion depend on the detailed physical processes. The kinetics of grain boundary oxidation penetration was investigated. The statistical distribution of grain boundary penetration depth was analyzed. Its effect on high temperature fatigue life are discussed. A model of intermittent micro-ruptures of grain boundary oxide was proposed for high temperature fatigue crack growth. The details of these studies are reported
Blocks at Your Fingertips: Blurring the Line Between Blocks and Text in GP
Visual blocks languages offer many advantages to the beginner or “casual” programmer. They eliminate syntax issues, allow the user to work with logical program chunks, provide affordances such as drop-down menus, and leverage the fact that recognition is easier than recall. However, as users gain experience and start creating larger programs, they encounter two inconvenient properties of pure blocks languages: blocks take up more screen real-estate than textual languages and dragging blocks from a palette is slower than typing.
This paper describes three experiments in blurring the line between blocks and textual code in GP, a new blocks language for casual programmers currently under development
Disorder-sensitive superconductivity in the iron silicide LuFeSi studied by the Lu-site substitutions
We studied effect of non-magnetic and magnetic impurities on
superconductivity in LuFeSi by small amount substitution of the Lu
site, which investigated structural, magnetic, and electrical properties of
non-magnetic (LuSc)FeSi,
(LuY)FeSi, and magnetic
(LuDy)FeSi. The rapid depression of by
non-magnetic impurities in accordance with the increase of residual resistivity
reveals the strong pair breaking dominated by disorder. We provide compelling
evidence for the sign reversal of the superconducting order parameter in
LuFeSi.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Onset of Collective Oscillation in Chemical Turbulence under Global Feedback
Preceding the complete suppression of chemical turbulence by means of global
feedback, a different universal type of transition, which is characterized by
the emergence of small-amplitude collective oscillation with strong turbulent
background, is shown to occur at much weaker feedback intensity. We illustrate
this fact numerically in combination with a phenomenological argument based on
the complex Ginzburg-Landau equation with global feedback.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures; to appear in Phys. Rev.
Effective long-time phase dynamics of limit-cycle oscillators driven by weak colored noise
An effective white-noise Langevin equation is derived that describes
long-time phase dynamics of a limit-cycle oscillator subjected to weak
stationary colored noise. Effective drift and diffusion coefficients are given
in terms of the phase sensitivity of the oscillator and the correlation
function of the noise, and are explicitly calculated for oscillators with
sinusoidal phase sensitivity functions driven by two typical colored Gaussian
processes. The results are verified by numerical simulations using several
types of stochastic or chaotic noise. The drift and diffusion coefficients of
oscillators driven by chaotic noise exhibit anomalous dependence on the
oscillator frequency, reflecting the peculiar power spectrum of the chaotic
noise.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figure
A new quadruple gravitational lens from the Hyper Suprime-Cam Survey: the puzzle of HSC~J115252+004733
We report the serendipitous discovery of a quadruply lensed source at , HSC~J115252+004733, from the Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) Survey. The
source is lensed by an early-type galaxy at and a satellite
galaxy. Here, we investigate the properties of the source by studying its size
and luminosity from the imaging and the luminosity and velocity width of the
Ly- line from the spectrum. Our analyses suggest that the source is
most probably a low-luminosity active galactic nucleus (LLAGN) but the
possibility of it being a compact bright galaxy (e.g., a Lyman- emitter
or Lyman Break Galaxy) cannot be excluded. The brighter pair of lensed images
appears point-like except in the HSC -band (with a seeing ). The
extended emission in the -band image could be due to the host galaxy
underneath the AGN, or alternatively, due to a highly compact lensed galaxy
(without AGN) which appears point-like in all bands except in -band. We also
find that the flux ratio of the brighter pair of images is different in the
Ks-band compared to optical wavelengths. Phenomena such as differential
extinction and intrinsic variability cannot explain this chromatic variation.
While microlensing from stars in the foreground galaxy is less likely to be the
cause, it cannot be ruled out completely. If the galaxy hosts an AGN, then this
represents the highest redshift quadruply imaged AGN known to date, enabling
study of a distant LLAGN. Discovery of this unusually compact and faint source
demonstrates the potential of the HSC survey.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, 3 Tables, MNRAS accepted, text reduce
Elastic properties of the Non-Fermi liquid metal and the Dense Kondo semiconductor
We have investigated the elastic properties of the Ce-based filled
skutterudite antimonides CeRuSb and CeOsSb by means
of ultrasonic measurements. CeRuSb shows a slight increase around
130 K in the temperature dependence of the elastic constants ,
(-)/2 and . No apparent softening toward low
temperature due to a quadrupolar response of the 4-electronic ground state
of the Ce ion was observed at low temperatures. In contrast CeOsSb
shows a pronounced elastic softening toward low temperature in the longitudinal
as a function of temperature () below about 15 K, while a slight
elastic softening was observed in the transverse below about 1.5 K.
Furthermore, CeOsSb shows a steep decrease around a phase
transition temperature of 0.9 K in both and. The elastic
softening observed in below about 15 K cannot be explained
reasonably only by the crystalline electric field effect. It is most likely to
be responsible for the coupling between the elastic strain and the
quasiparticle band with a small energy gap in the vicinity of Fermi level. The
elastic properties and the 4 ground state of Ce ions in CeRuSb
and CeOsSb are discussed from the viewpoint of the crystalline
electric field effect and the band structure in the vicinity of Fermi level.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figures, regular pape
Distribution of partition function zeros of the model on the Bethe lattice
The distribution of partition function zeros is studied for the model
of spin glasses on the Bethe lattice. We find a relation between the
distribution of complex cavity fields and the density of zeros, which enables
us to obtain the density of zeros for the infinite system size by using the
cavity method. The phase boundaries thus derived from the location of the zeros
are consistent with the results of direct analytical calculations. This is the
first example in which the spin glass transition is related to the distribution
of zeros directly in the thermodynamical limit. We clarify how the spin glass
transition is characterized by the zeros of the partition function. It is also
shown that in the spin glass phase a continuous distribution of singularities
touches the axes of real field and temperature.Comment: 23 pages, 12 figure
Noise-induced Turbulence in Nonlocally Coupled Oscillators
We demonstrate that nonlocally coupled limit-cycle oscillators subject to
spatiotemporally white Gaussian noise can exhibit a noise-induced transition to
turbulent states. After illustrating noise-induced turbulent states with
numerical simulations using two representative models of limit-cycle
oscillators, we develop a theory that clarifies the effective dynamical
instabilities leading to the turbulent behavior using a hierarchy of dynamical
reduction methods. We determine the parameter region where the system can
exhibit noise-induced turbulent states, which is successfully confirmed by
extensive numerical simulations at each level of the reduction.Comment: 23 pages, 17 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
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