1,265 research outputs found

    Longitudinal Diffusion and Permeability of Nonpolar Gases in Eastern Hemlock

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    Longitudinal ethane diffusion and nitrogen permeability were measured in oven-dry eastern hemlock sapwood. Samples were selected from 2 trees, 3 heights, and 4 quadrants, and either air- or solvent-dried for aspirated or unaspirated conditions. An IR method was used to detect ethane concentration in nitrogen at 25 C from which diffusion coefficients were calculated. The mean diffusion coefficient of the solvent-dried samples was 40% of free diffusion; the air-dried coefficient was about 16% of the free diffusion coefficient. No significant differences were found between position in the tree or oven-dry density and the diffusion coefficients. Diffusion coefficients were used to determine tortuosity differences in air- and solvent-dried wood. Effective pore openings obtained from permeability measurements, the Klinkenberg equation, and the temperature coefficient of diffusion confirmed that diffusion was occurring in the Kundsen end of the slip-flow region. A linear relationship was found between the permeability constant and diffusion coefficient. Diffusion and permeability measurements produce separate and complementary data that can be used to determine the mode of conductivity of gases in wood

    Thermogravimetric Evaluation of Fungal Degradation of Wood

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    Yellow birch (Betula alleghaniensis Brit.) was degraded by a white rot fungus (Polyporus versicolor L. ex Fr.; now Coriolus versicolor (L.) Quél.) and a brown rot fungus (Poria monticola Murr.; now Poria placenta (Fr.) Cke.) under controlled conditions. Samples of known weight loss from fungi were milled to pass a 40-mesh screen, oven-dried, and then measured for rate of mass loss over selected temperature ranges. Rates of mass loss of nominal 4-mg samples were obtained isothermally in flowing oxygen using a thermo-gravimetric (TG) system containing a Cahn electrobalance. Activation energy (E) was found using zero-order kinetics for the initial mass loss. White-rotted birch (to 60% weight loss) had an E of 35 to 43 kcal/mole over the range of approximately 190 to 210 C. On the basis of TG data, the weight loss from fungal attack could be predicted within about 5%. Brown-rotted birch had more variation in E (30 to 44 kcal/mole), over a temperature range of 170 to 195 C. The rate of mass loss of brown-rotted birch (to 52% weight loss) was more sensitive to temperature because of the known nonlinear decrease in cellulose DP during fungal attack. Dynamic thermogravimetry, a much simpler method, indicated a similar degree of instability from fungal attack as did the isothermal tests. TG appears to be a viable research method to evaluate fungal attack of wood

    Observations of celestial X-ray sources above 20 keV with the high-energy scintillation spectrometer on board OSO 8

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    High-energy X-ray spectra of the Crab Nebula, Cyg- XR-1, and Cen A were determined from observations with the scintillation spectrometer on board the OSO-8 satellite, launched in June, 1975. Each of these sources was observed over two periods of 8 days or more, enabling a search for day-to-day and year to year variations in the spectral and temporal characteristics of the X-ray emission. No variation in the light curve of the Crab pulsar was found from observations which span a 15-day period in March 1976, with demonstrable phase stability. Transitions associated with the binary phase of Cyg XR-1 and a large change in the emission from Con A are reported

    Applications of aerospace technology in biology and medicine

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    Utilization of National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) technology in medicine is discussed. The objective is best obtained by stimulation of the introduction of new or improved commercially available medical products incorporating aerospace technology. A bipolar donor/recipient model of medical technology transfer is presented to provide a basis for the team's methodology. That methodology is designed to: (1) identify medical problems and NASA technology that, in combination, constitute opportunities for successful medical products; (2) obtain the early participation of industry in the transfer process; and (3) obtain acceptance by the medical community of new medical products based on NASA technology. Two commercial transfers were completed: the Stowaway, a lightweight wheelchair that provides mobility for the disabled and elderly in the cabin of commercial aircraft, and Micromed, a portable medication infusion pump for the reliable, continuous infusion of medications such as heparin or insulin. The marketing and manufacturing factors critical to the commercialization of the lightweight walker incorporating composite materials were studied. Progress was made in the development and commercialization of each of the 18 currently active projects

    Detection of high energy X-rays from the galactic center region

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    Observations of the galactic center region made with the high energy X-ray detector on OSO-8 are discussed. A strong hard X-ray which was detected during these observations from the vicinity of the galactic center are examined. The counting rate spectrum and the photon number spectrum of the flux are determined. Comparisons with the high energy X-ray fluxes observed from sources in the region by others are discussed

    Unified Universal Seesaw Models

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    A set of Grand Unified Theories based upon the gauge groups SU(5)_\L \times SU(5)_\R, SO(10)_\L \times SO(10)_\R and SU(4)_\C \times SU(4)_\L \times SU(4)_\R is explored. Several novel features distinguish these theories from the well-known SU(5)SU(5), SO(10)SO(10) and SU(4)_\C \times SU(2)_\L \times SU(2)_\R models which they generalize. Firstly, Standard Model quarks and leptons are accompanied by and mix with heavy SU(2)_\L \times SU(2)_\R singlet partners. The resulting fermion mass matrices are seesaw in form. Discrete parity symmetries render the determinants of these mass matrices real and eliminate CP violating gauge terms. The unified seesaw models consequently provide a possible resolution to the strong CP problem. Secondly, \sinsq at the unification scale is numerically smaller than the experimentally measured ZZ scale value. The weak angle must therefore increase as it evolves down in energy. Finally, proton decay is suppressed by small seesaw mixing factors in all these theories.Comment: 22 pages with 2 figures not included but available upon request, CALT-68-185

    Sub-dekahertz ultraviolet spectroscopy of 199Hg+

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    Using a laser that is frequency-locked to a Fabry-Perot etalon of high finesse and stability, we probe the 5d10 6s 2S_1/2 (F=0) - 5d9 6s 2D_5/2 (F=2) Delta-m_F = 0 electric-quadrupole transition of a single laser-cooled 199Hg+ ion stored in a cryogenic radio-frequency ion trap. We observe Fourier-transform limited linewidths as narrow as 6.7 Hz at 282 nm (1.06 X 10^15 Hz), yielding a line Q = 1.6 X 10^14. We perform a preliminary measurement of the 5d9 6s2 2D_5/2 electric-quadrupole shift due to interaction with the static fields of the trap, and discuss the implications for future trapped-ion optical frequency standards.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted for publicatio
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