203 research outputs found

    The magnetic properties of isolated ferromagnetic atoms

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    In order to obtain a better knowledge of the elementary atomic magnet, its behavior when surrounded by non-magnetic atoms rather than by other magnetic ones has been studied. For this purpose alloys of 90% and 95% platinum with the remainder cobalt and nickel, respectively, have been investigated. Only the cobalt alloys were found magnetic. The magnetic moment per cobalt atom being greater than for pure cobalt, the platinum may contribute to the magnetism. Variation of magnetization with temperature and the Curie points have been measured, the latter falling rapidly as the cobalt content decreased. Various hysteresis loops, showing the relation between the magnetization and applied magnetic force have also been obtained, the hysteresis being less for the 10% Co alloy, after annealing. In the harddrawn state, however, the hysteresis and Curie points are considerably higher. The results are shown to be in agreement with Heisenberg's theory of ferromagnetism

    The magnetic properties of certain Pt-Co and Pd-Co alloys

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    If ferromagnetism is due to interaction between the electrons of neighboring ferromagnetic atoms, the effect on the magnetic properties of gradually separating these atoms is of interest. For this reason alloys of the Pt-Co and Pd-Co series were investigated. As the alloys were solid solutions, for small cobalt content the cobalt atoms could be regarded as partly isolated by the non-ferromagnetic atoms. The magnetic properties of these alloys showed a lowering of the Curie point and a decrease in the remanent magnetization and coercive force with decrease in the percentage of cobalt in accord with theory. An observed increase in the magnetization per cobalt atom is discussed along with recent theories of ferromagnetism

    Three Papers from the Annual Meeting Held on October 26 and 27, 1961 in Williamsburg, Virginia

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    Legal History -- Unhappy Hybrid by William F. Swindler Not in the Law Alone by James A. Servies Williamsburg -- A 20-Minute History by Dudley W. Woodbridg

    Summer Longings

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    https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mmb-me/1254/thumbnail.jp

    Multistatic Radar: System Requirements and Experimental Validation

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    Multistatic radar provides many advantages over conventional monostatic radar, such as enhanced information on target signatures and improvements in detection which are due to the multiple perspectives and differences in the properties of clutter. Furthermore, the fact that receive-only multistatic nodes are passive may be an advantage in military applications. In order to quantify potential performance benefits of these advantages a comprehensive understanding of target and clutter behaviour in multistatic scenarios is necessary. However, such information is currently limited because bistatic and multistatic measurements are difficult to make, their results depend on many variables such as multistatic geometry, frequency, polarization, and many others, and results from previous measurements are likely to be classified for military targets. Multistatic measurements of targets and clutter have been performed over the past few years by the NetRAD system developed at the University College London and the University of Cape Town. A new system, NeXtRAD, is now being developed in order to investigate some of the many aspects of multistatic radar. This paper discusses the results obtained with the previous system and the lessons learnt from its use. These points are then discussed in the context of the new radar, defining key important factors that have to be considered when developing a new multistatic radar system

    Physical activity and left-ventricular trabeculation in the UK Biobank community-based cohort study

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    Objective: Vigorous physical activity (PA) in highly trained athletes has been associated with heightened left ventricular (LV) trabeculation extent. It has therefore been hypothesised that LV trabeculation extent may participate in exercise-induced physiological cardiac remodelling. Our cross-sectional observational study aimed to ascertain whether there is a ‘dose–response’ relationship between PA and LV trabeculation extent and whether this could be identified at opposite PA extremes. Methods: In a cohort of 1030 individuals from the community-based UK Biobank study (male/female ratio: 0.84, mean age: 61 years), PA was measured via total metabolic equivalent of task (MET) min/week and 7-day average acceleration, and trabeculation extent via maximal non-compaction/compaction ratio (NC/C) in long-axis images of cardiovascular magnetic resonance studies. The relationship between PA and NC/C was assessed by multivariate regression (adjusting for potential confounders) as well as between demographic, anthropometric and LV phenotypic parameters and NC/C. Results: There was no significant linear relationship between PA and NC/C (full adjustment, total MET-min/week: ß=−0.0008, 95% CI −0.039 to –0.037, p=0.97; 7-day average acceleration: ß=−0.047, 95% CI −0.110 to –0.115, p=0.13, per IQR increment in PA), or between extreme PA quintiles (full adjustment, total MET-min/week: ß=−0.026, 95% CI −0.146 to –0.094, p=0.67; 7-day average acceleration: ß=−0.129, 95% CI −0.299 to –0.040, p=0.49), across all adjustment levels. A negative relationship was identified between left ventricular ejection fraction and NC/C, significantly modified by PA (ß difference=−0.006, p=0.03). Conclusions: In a community-based general population cohort, there was no relationship at, or between, extremes, between PA and NC/C, suggesting that at typical general population PA levels, trabeculation extent is not influenced by PA changes.British Heart Foundation (BHF) (PG/14/89/31194)National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Barts Biomedical Research Centre’SmartHeart’ Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council programme grant (EP/P001009/1

    Simultaneous data collection of small maritime targets using multistatic radar and forward scatter radar

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    Radar detection of small maritime targets is of great interest in the context of coastal and port security for prevention of activities such as smuggling and piracy. Multistatic radar and forward scatter radar offer detection advantages compared with conventional monostatic systems, such as advantageous multi-perspective target view for the former and target radar cross-section enhancement for the latter. In this study, experimental results are presented to characterise simultaneous measurements investigating the detection of a small inflatable boat by a multistatic radar and a forward scatter radar. These results are believed to be the first example of simultaneous experimental comparison of such systems

    Europe's lost forests: a pollen-based synthesis for the last 11,000 years

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    8000 years ago, prior to Neolithic agriculture, Europe was mostly a wooded continent. Since then, its forest cover has been progressively fragmented, so that today it covers less than half of Europe’s land area, in many cases having been cleared to make way for fields and pasture-land. Establishing the origin of Europe’s current, more open land-cover mosaic requires a long-term perspective, for which pollen analysis offers a key tool. In this study we utilise and compare three numerical approaches to transforming pollen data into past forest cover, drawing on >1000 14C-dated site records. All reconstructions highlight the different histories of the mixed temperate and the northern boreal forests, with the former declining progressively since ~6000 years ago, linked to forest clearance for agriculture in later prehistory (especially in northwest Europe) and early historic times (e.g. in north central Europe). In contrast, extensive human impact on the needle-leaf forests of northern Europe only becomes detectable in the last two millennia and has left a larger area of forest in place. Forest loss has been a dominant feature of Europe’s landscape ecology in the second half of the current interglacial, with consequences for carbon cycling, ecosystem functioning and biodiversity

    Migration Patterns, Use of Stopover Areas, and Austral Summer Movements of Swainson\u27s Hawks

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    From 1995 to 1998, we tracked movements of adult Swainson’s Hawks (Buteo swainsoni), using satellite telemetry to characterize migration, important stopover areas, and movements in the austral summer. We tagged 46 hawks from July to September on their nesting grounds in seven U.S. states and two Canadian provinces. Swainson’s Hawks followed three basic routes south on a broad front, converged along the east coast of central Mexico, and followed a concentrated corridor to a communal area in central Argentina for the austral summer. North of 20°N, southward and northward tracks differed little for individuals from east of the continental divide but differed greatly (up to 1700 km) for individuals from west of the continental divide. Hawks left the breeding grounds mid-August to mid-October; departure dates did not differ by location, year, or sex. Southbound migration lasted 42 to 98 days, northbound migration 51 to 82 days. Southbound, 36% of the Swainson’s Hawks departed the nesting grounds nearly 3 weeks earlier than the other radio-marked hawks and made stopovers 9.0–26.0 days long in seven separate areas, mainly in the southern Great Plains, southern Arizona and New Mexico, and northcentral Mexico. The birds stayed in their nonbreeding range for 76 to 128 days. All used a core area in central Argentina within 23% of the 738 800-km2 austral summer range, where they frequently moved long distances (up to 1600 km). Conservation of Swainson’s Hawks must be an international effort that considers habitats used during nesting and non-nesting seasons, including migration stopovers
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