703 research outputs found
The measurement of lubricant-film thickness using ultrasound
Ultrasound is reflected from a liquid layer between two solid bodies. This reflection depends on the ultrasonic frequency, the acoustic properties of the liquid and solid, and the layer thickness. If the wavelength is much greater than the liquid-layer thickness, then the response is governed by the stiffness of the layer. If the wavelength and layer thickness are similar, then the interaction of ultrasound with the layer is controlled by its resonant behaviour. This stiffness governed response and resonant response can be used to determine the thickness of the liquid layer, if the other parameters are known.
In this paper, ultrasound has been developed as a method to determine the thickness of lubricating films in bearing systems. An ultrasonic transducer is positioned on the outside of a bearing shell such that the wave is focused on the lubricant-film layer. The transducer is used to both emit and receive wide-band ultrasonic pulses. For a particular lubricant film, the reflected pulse is processed to give a reflection-coefficient spectrum. The lubricant-film thickness is then obtained from either the layer stiffness or the resonant frequency.
The method has been validated using fluid wedges at ambient pressure between flat and curved surfaces. Experiments on the elastohydrodynamic film formed between a sliding ball and a flat surface were performed. Film-thickness values in the range 50-500 nm were recorded, which agreed well with theoretical film-formation predictions. Similar measurements have been made on the oil film between the balls and outer raceway of a deep-groove ball bearing
Auto-calibration of ultrasonic lubricant-film thickness measurements
The measurement of oil film thickness in a lubricated component is essential information for performance monitoring and design. It is well established that such measurements can be made ultrasonically if the lubricant film is modelled as a collection of small springs. The ultrasonic method requires that component faces are separated and a reference reflection recorded in order to obtain a reflection coefficient value from which film thickness is calculated. The novel and practically useful approach put forward in this paper and validated experimentally allows reflection coefficient measurement without the requirement for a reference. This involves simultaneously measuring the amplitude and phase of an ultrasonic pulse reflected from a layer. Provided that the acoustic properties of the substrate are known, the theoretical relationship between the two can be fitted to the data in order to yield reflection coefficient amplitude and phase for an infinitely thick layer. This is equivalent to measuring a reference signal directly, but importantly does not require the materials to be separated. The further valuable aspect of this approach, which is demonstrated experimentally, is its ability to be used as a self-calibrating routine, inherently compensating for temperature effects. This is due to the relationship between the amplitude and phase being unaffected by changes in temperature which cause unwanted changes to the incident pulse. Finally, error analysis is performed showing how the accuracy of the results can be optimized. A finding of particular significance is the strong dependence of the accuracy of the technique on the amplitude of reflection coefficient input data used. This places some limitations on the applicability of the technique. Ă© 2008 IOP Publishing Ltd
Similarities and differences of pumping conventional and self-compacting concrete
In Practice, Self-Compacting Concrete (SCC) is Considered as a Simple Extension of Conventional Vibrated Concrete (CVC) When Pumping is Concerned. the Same Equipment, Materials, Pumping Procedures and Guidelines Used for CVC Are Applied When Pumping SCC. on the Other Hand, It Has Been Clearly Shown that the Rheological Properties and the Mix Design of SCC Are Different Than CVC. Can the Same Pumping Principles Employed for CVC Be Applied for SCC? This Paper Compares the Some Published Results of Pumping of CVC with Those for SCC. a First Striking Difference between Pumping of CVC and SCC is the Flow Behaviour in the Pipes. the Flow of CVC is a Plug, Surrounded by a Lubricating Layer, While during the Flow of SCC, Part of the Concrete Volume itself is Sheared Inside the Pipe. as a Result, the Importance of Viscosity Increases in Case of SCC. Due to the Low Yield Stress of SCC, the Behaviour in Bends is Different, But Quite Complex to Study. Due to the Lower Content of Aggregate and Better Stability of SCC, as It is Less Prone to Internal Water Migration, Blocking is Estimated to Occur at Lower Frequency in Case of SCC. © RILEM 2010
Lemur Systematics and Hemoglobin Phylogeny a
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73526/1/j.1749-6632.1988.tb51443.x.pd
The Diboson Excess: Experimental Situation and Classification of Explanations; A Les Houches Pre-Proceeding
We examine the `diboson' excess at TeV seen by the LHC experiments
in various channels. We provide a comparison of the excess significances as a
function of the mass of the tentative resonance and give the signal cross
sections needed to explain the excesses. We also present a survey of available
theoretical explanations of the resonance, classified in three main approaches.
Beyond that, we discuss methods to verify the anomaly, determining the major
properties of the various surpluses and exploring how different models can be
discriminated. Finally, we give a tabular summary of the numerous explanations,
presenting their main phenomenological features.Comment: 37 pages, 9 Figures, 1 Tabl
Probing CP Violation with and without Momentum Reconstruction at the LHC
We study the potential to observe CP-violating effects in SUSY cascade decay
chains at the LHC. We consider squark and gluino production followed by
subsequent decays into neutralinos with a three-body leptonic decay in the
final step. Asymmetries composed by triple products of momenta of the final
state particles are sensitive to CP-violating effects. Due to large boosts
these asymmetries can be difficult to observe at a hadron collider. We show
that using all available kinematic information one can reconstruct the decay
chains on an event-by-event basis even in the case of 3-body decays, neutrinos
and LSPs in the final state. We also discuss the most important experimental
effects like major backgrounds and momentum smearing due to finite detector
resolution. We show that with 300 fb of collected data, CP violation may
be discovered at the LHC for a wide range of the phase of the bino mass
parameter .Comment: Version accepted for publication in JHEP. Clarifications added on the
assumptions used for plots. New references adde
Impairment of germline transmission after blastocyst injection with murine embryonic stem cells cultured with mouse hepatitis virus and mouse minute virus
The aim of this study was to determine the susceptibility of murine embryonic stem (mESCs) to mouse hepatitis virus (MHV-A59) and mouse minute virus (MMVp) and the effect of these viruses on germline transmission (GLT) and the serological status of recipients and pups. When recipients received 10 blastocysts, each injected with 100 TCID50 MHV-A59, three out of five recipients and four out of 14 pups from three litters became seropositive. When blastocysts were injected with 10â5 TCID50 MMVp, all four recipients and 14 pups from four litters remained seronegative. The mESCs replicated MHV-A59 but not MMVp, MHV-A59 being cytolytic for mESCs. Exposure of mESCs to the viruses over four to five passages but not for 6 h affected GLT. Recipients were seropositive for MHV-A59 but not for MMVp when mESCs were cultured with the virus over four or five passages. The data show that GLT is affected by virus-contaminated mESCs
Momentum asymmetries as CP violating observables
Three body decays can exhibit CP violation that arises from interfering
diagrams with different orderings of the final state particles. We construct
several momentum asymmetry observables that are accessible in a hadron collider
environment where some of the final state particles are not reconstructed and
not all the kinematic information can be extracted. We discuss the
complications that arise from the different possible production mechanisms of
the decaying particle. Examples involving heavy neutralino decays in
supersymmetric theories and heavy Majorana neutrino decays in Type-I seesaw
models are examined.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures. Clarifying comments and one reference added,
matches published versio
How low can SUSY go? Matching, monojets and compressed spectra
If supersymmetry (SUSY) has a compressed spectrum then the current mass
limits from the LHC can be drastically reduced. We consider a possible 'worst
case' scenario where the gluino and/or squarks are degenerate with the lightest
SUSY particle (LSP). The most sensitive searches for these compressed spectra
are via the final state LSPs recoiling against initial state radiation (ISR).
Therefore it is vital that the ISR is understood and possible uncertainties in
the predictions are evaluated. We use both MLM (with Pythia 6) and CKKW- L
(with Pythia 8) matching and vary matching scales and parton shower properties
to accurately determine the theoretical uncertainties in the kinematic
distributions. All current LHC SUSY and monojet analyses are employed and we
find the most constraining limits come from the CMS Razor and CMS monojet
searches. For a scenario of squarks degenerate with the LSP and decoupled
gluinos we find GeV. For gluinos degenerate with the LSP
and decoupled squarks, GeV. For equal mass squarks and
gluinos degenerate with the LSP, GeV.Comment: References added, version submitted to ep
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