69,047 research outputs found
Preparation of high purity copper fluoride by fluorinating copper hydroxyfluoride
Copper fluoride containing no more than 50 ppm of any contaminating element was prepared by the fluorination of copper hydroxyfluoride. The impurity content was obtained by spark source mass spectrometry. High purity copper fluoride is needed as a cathode material for high energy density batteries
Simple, reproducible methods for thermal shock testing of brittle materials
Technique requires radio frequency induction power source, induction furnace and good vacuum system to induce brittle material thermal shock testing
Fuelling Active Galactic Nuclei
We suggest that most nearby active galactic nuclei are fed by a series of
small--scale, randomly--oriented accretion events. Outside a certain radius
these events promote rapid star formation, while within it they fuel the
supermassive black hole. We show that the events have a characteristic time
evolution. This picture agrees with several observational facts. The expected
luminosity function is broadly in agreement with that observed for
moderate--mass black holes. The spin of the black hole is low, and aligns with
the inner disc in each individual feeding event. This implies radio jets
aligned with the axis of the obscuring torus, and uncorrelated with the
large--scale structure of the host galaxy. The ring of young stars observed
about the Galactic Centre are close to where our picture predicts that star
formation should occur.Comment: MNRAS, in pres
Industry Implications of Value Creation and Appropriation Investment Decisions
As managers weigh their resource investment decisions, we argue that these investments have a direct impact on the growth and volatility of the firm’s industry. With data covering 377 industries across 16 years, we investigate relationships for aggregate firm investments on the growth and volatility of industry profit and sales. Results reveal important, complex relationships between investment in value creation and appropriation and different elements of the industry environment
The Virtual Runner Learning Game
A learning game has been developed which allows learners to study and learn about the significance of three important variables in human physiology (lactate, glycogen, and hydration) and their influence on sports performance during running. The player can control the speed of the runner, and as a consequence the resulting physiological processes are simulated in real-time. The performance degradation of the runner due to these processes requires that different strategies for pacing the running speed are applied by the player, depending on the total length of the run. The game has been positively evaluated in a real learning context of academic physiology teaching
Blunting the Spike: the CV Minimum Period
The standard picture of CV secular evolution predicts a spike in the CV
distribution near the observed short-period cutoff P_0 ~ 78 min, which is not
observed. We show that an intrinsic spread in minimum (`bounce') periods P_b
resulting from a genuine difference in some parameter controlling the evolution
can remove the spike without smearing the sharpness of the cutoff. The most
probable second parameter is different admixtures of magnetic stellar wind
braking (at up to 5 times the GR rate) in a small tail of systems, perhaps
implying that the donor magnetic field strength at formation is a second
parameter specifying CV evolution. We suggest that magnetic braking resumes
below the gap with a wide range, being well below the GR rate in most CVs, but
significantly above it in a small tail.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in MNRA
Copper emissions from a high volume air sampler
High volume air samplers (hi vols) are described which utilize a brush-type electric motor to power the fans used for pulling air through the filter. Anomalously high copper values were attributed to removal of copper from the commutator into the air stream due to arcing of the brushes and recirculation through the filter. Duplicate hi vols were set up under three operating conditions: (1) unmodified; (2) gasketed to prevent internal recirculation; and (3) gasketed and provided with a pipe to transport the motor exhaust some 20 feet away. The results of 5 days' operation demonstrate that hi vols can suddenly start emitting increased amounts of copper with no discernible operational indication, and that recirculation and capture on the filter can take place. Copper levels found with hi vols whose exhaust was discharged at a distance downwind were among the lowest found, and apparently provides a satisfactory solution to copper contamination
Ray methods for free boundary problems
We discuss the use of the WKB ansatz in a variety of parabolic problems involving a small parameter. We analyse the Stefan problem for small latent heat, the Black–Scholes problem for an American put option, and some nonlinear diffusion equations, in each case constructing an asymptotic solution by the use of ray methods
A Firm Upper Limit to the Radius of the Neutron Star in SAX J1808.4-3658
We show that observations of X-ray pulsing from SAX J1808.4-3658 place a firm
upper limit of 13.8 m^{1/3} km on the radius of the neutron star, where m is
its mass in solar units. The limit is independent of distance or assumptions
about the magnetospheric geometry, and could be significantly tightened by
observations of the pulsations in the near future. We discuss the implications
for the equation of state and the possible neutron star mass.Comment: (7 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
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