5,041 research outputs found
Dynamic delamination crack propagation in a graphite/epoxy laminate
Dynamic delamination crack propagation in a (90/0) 5s Graphite/Epoxy laminate with an embedded interfacial crack was investigated experimentally using high speed photography. The dynamic motion was produced by impacting the beamlike laminate specimen with a silicon rubber ball. The threshold impact velocities required to initiate dynamic crack propagation in laminates with varying initial crack positions were determined. The crack propagation speeds were estimated from the photographs. Results show that the through the thickness position of the embedded crack can significantly affect the dominant mechanism and the threshold impact velocity for the onset of crack movement. If the initial delamination is placed near the top of bottom surface of the laminate, local buckling of the delaminated plies may cause instability of the crack. If the initial delamination lies on the midplane, local buckling does not occur and the initiation of crack propagation appears to be dominated by Mode II fracture. The crack propagation and arrest observed was seen to be affected by wave motion within the delamination region
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FT-IR microanalysis of mineral separates from primitive meteorites: techniques, problems and solutions
From the Introduction: We compared several methods of infrared micro spectroscopy using an FT-IR microscope and workbench. This is part of a project to assemble a database of infrared and optical spectra from mineral separates from meteorites, for comparison with astronomical data. Since we usually have to work with small amounts of material (original grain sizes often <50 m), special sample preparation and analytical procedures
have to be applied
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FT-IR micro-spectroscopy of fine-grained planetary materials: further results
We present data from FT-IR microspectroscopy of olivines in a thin section of the LL3.6 ordinary chondrite Parnallee. Results are discussed and compared with other methods of FT-IR microspectroscopy
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Spectroscopy of Stardust from 200nm to 16µM (with a gap in the middle)
UV/Vis and IR spectroscopy are complementary, non-destructive techniques that can be used to identify the presence of a range of organic and inorganic, hydrated and anhydrous minerals within micron-sized grains. We look forward to applying these techniques to the Stardust materials
C IV and Si IV in IUE spectra of normal B8-A0 stars: UV identified Be/Ae stars
Archival IUE high dispersion spectra of 42 B6-A2 stars within 200 pc were surveyed. Five of the program stars show significant C IV and Si IV absorption. All of the stars with detected C IV have v sin i less than or = 190 km/sec. Sharp absorption cores are present in Si II lambda 1533 in 3 of the objects, indicating that these are previously unrecognized shell stars. Three of the stars have variable or asymmetric C IV profiles which are consistent with the C IV and Si IV being produced in stellar winds. One star has C IV in the form of a shortward-shifted discrete absorption component, similar to those observed in Be stars. The data are compared with similar data for Be and B shell stars
The structure of borders in a small world
Geographic borders are not only essential for the effective functioning of
government, the distribution of administrative responsibilities and the
allocation of public resources, they also influence the interregional flow of
information, cross-border trade operations, the diffusion of innovation and
technology, and the spatial spread of infectious diseases. However, as growing
interactions and mobility across long distances, cultural, and political
borders continue to amplify the small world effect and effectively decrease the
relative importance of local interactions, it is difficult to assess the
location and structure of effective borders that may play the most significant
role in mobility-driven processes. The paradigm of spatially coherent
communities may no longer be a plausible one, and it is unclear what structures
emerge from the interplay of interactions and activities across spatial scales.
Here we analyse a multi-scale proxy network for human mobility that
incorporates travel across a few to a few thousand kilometres. We determine an
effective system of geographically continuous borders implicitly encoded in
multi-scale mobility patterns. We find that effective large scale boundaries
define spatially coherent subdivisions and only partially coincide with
administrative borders. We find that spatial coherence is partially lost if
only long range traffic is taken into account and show that prevalent models
for multi-scale mobility networks cannot account for the observed patterns.
These results will allow for new types of quantitative, comparative analyses of
multi-scale interaction networks in general and may provide insight into a
multitude of spatiotemporal phenomena generated by human activity.Comment: 9 page
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