5,374 research outputs found
The flow of gases and vapours through porous media
Experiments heve been carried out on the flow of different gases and vapours through an unconsolidated porous medium consisting of analcite of uniform particle size (50mu diameter). Since analcite crystals are almost spherical, necessary simplifying assumptions could be made. Rates of flow were measured near room temperature both for the inert gases and hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen which are little adsorbed by analcite at this temperature, and for sulphur dioxide, ammonia, and carbon tetrachloride vapours which are considerably adsorbed. measurements were made both in the Khudsen (low pressure) and Poiseuille (medium pressure) regions of flow, and data were obtained which support Adzumia's theoretical treatment for the region where they overlap. A new treatment of the transient state of flow is presented. Emphasis is laid upon the importance of the "time-lag" obtained when the flow in the steady state is extrapolated back to the time axis. Experimental results indicate the validity of the relationship, derived theoretically by Barrer, between the time-lag and the diffusion coefficient. Using this relationship, the average radius of the pores in the medium was estimated from the time-lag. Although this was somewhat smaller than the pore-radius calculated from the steady state of flow, good agreement was found between the values obtained using different gases. For the vapours, it was found that the relationships broke down, both for the steady and transient states of flow.The theoretical equations require modification if the molecules of the vapour adsorbed on the surface of the analcite remain there for an appreciable time, or if they are mobile on the surface. It has been shown that the data obtained enable the average lifetime of the molecules on the surface to be calculated, and from measurements at different temperatures, the heat of adsorption has been deduced.<p
Study of helium transfer technology for STICCR: Fluid management
The Space Infrared Telescope Facility (SIRTF) is a long life cryogenically cooled space based telescope for infrared astronomy from 2 to 700 microns currently under study and planned for launch in the mid 90's. SIRTF will operate as a multi-user facility, initially carrying 3 instruments at the focal plane. It will be cooled to below 2 K by superfluid liquid helium to achieve radiometric sensitivity limited only by the statistical fluctuations in the natural infrared background radiation over most of its spectral range. The lifetime of the mission will be limited by the lifetime of the liquid helium supply, and is currently baselined to be 2 years. Candidates are reviewed for a liquid management device to be used in the resupply of liquid helium, and for the selection of an appropriate candidate
Orientation and symmetries of Alexandrov spaces with applications in positive curvature
We develop two new tools for use in Alexandrov geometry: a theory of ramified
orientable double covers and a particularly useful version of the Slice Theorem
for actions of compact Lie groups. These tools are applied to the
classification of compact, positively curved Alexandrov spaces with maximal
symmetry rank.Comment: 34 pages. Simplified proofs throughout and a new proof of the Slice
Theorem, correcting omissions in the previous versio
The effect of farming system on dairy cow cleanliness in the UK and implications to udder health
The cleanliness of dairy cows was assessed using a 20 point hygiene score system at different times in the year on 14 organic and 14 conventional farms in the UK. Overall, cows were dirtier during winter housing compared to summer grazing. Farming system had no effect on cow cleanliness when cows were at grass, but when housed in the winter, organic cows were more likely to be cleaner. There was a link between cow hygiene scores and milk hygiene, with herds having lower bulk tank somatic cell counts (BTSCC) tending to have cleaner cows. This relationship was strongest for the organic herds. There was no significant link between hygiene score and Bactoscan (BS) count or mastitis incidence
Singlet-Triplet Physics and Shell Filling in Carbon Nanotube Double Quantum Dots
An artifcial two-atomic molecule, also called a double quantum dot (DQD), is
an ideal system for exploring few electron physics. Spin-entanglement between
just two electrons can be explored in such systems where singlet and triplet
states are accessible. These two spin-states can be regarded as the two states
in a quantum two-state system, a so-called singlet-triplet qubit. A very
attractive material for realizing spin based qubits is the carbon nanotube
(CNT), because it is expected to have a very long spin coherence time. Here we
show the existence of a gate-tunable singlet-triplet qubit in a CNT DQD. We
show that the CNT DQD has clear shell structures of both four and eight
electrons, with the singlet-triplet qubit present in the four-electron shells.
We furthermore observe inelastic cotunneling via the singlet and triplet
states, which we use to probe the splitting between singlet and triplet, in
good agreement with theory.Comment: Supplement available at:
http://www.fys.ku.dk/~hij/public/singlet-triple_supp.pd
Global periodicity conditions for maps and recurrences via Normal Forms
We face the problem of characterizing the periodic cases in parametric
families of (real or complex) rational diffeomorphisms having a fixed point.
Our approach relies on the Normal Form Theory, to obtain necessary conditions
for the existence of a formal linearization of the map, and on the introduction
of a suitable rational parametrization of the parameters of the family. Using
these tools we can find a finite set of values p for which the map can be
p-periodic, reducing the problem of finding the parameters for which the
periodic cases appear to simple computations. We apply our results to several
two and three dimensional classes of polynomial or rational maps. In particular
we find the global periodic cases for several Lyness type recurrences.Comment: 25 page
Preterm labour - is bacterial vaginosis involved?
Objective. To assess the efficacy of treatment of bacterial vaginosis (BV) using metronidazole to reduce preterm labour in primiravidae and multigravidae with previous midtrimester abortion or preterm labour.Design. Randomised controlled trial.Setting. Tertiary academic hospital.Method. Two different groups of patients were screened for BV at the first antenatal visit, namely primigravidae and high-risk multigravidae who had had a previous midtrimester abortion or preterm delivery. Patients where BV was diagnosed clinically or on Gram's stain of a smear taken from the posterior vaginal fornix, received either 400 mg metronidazole, or 100 mg vitamin C orally twice daily for 2 days. The Gram's stain was repeated after 4 weeks. If BV W?S found again, treatment with the same drug was repeated.Outcome measures. Preterm delivery, birth weight and perinatal deaths.Results. One thousand and five patients entered the study, but 40 were excluded for various reasons and 10 were lost to follow-up. There were 464 primigravidae, of whom 150 (32%) had BV. Except for the 5-minute Apgar score, no significant differences were found between primigravidae negative for BV and those who received either metronidazole or vitamin C. There were 491 high-risk multigravidae, of whom 127 (26%) had BV. The mean gestational age in the BVnegative group was 37 weeks, in contrast to 37.4 weeks in the vitamin C group and 35.6 weeks in the metronidazole group. Birth weights in these three groups were 2 752 g, 2 759 g and 2 475 g respectively, significantly less (P == 0.0109) in the metronidazole group in comparison with the BV-negative group. Delivery before 37 weeks occurred in 29% of high-risk multigravidae with no BV but in 24% of those who took vitamin C and in 43% who took metronidazole. Differences were significant between the BV-negative and metronidazole groups (P = 0.0231) and also between the metrol'.idazole and vitamin C groups (P = 0.0274). Delivery before 28 weeks occurred in 4% of the high-risk multigravidae with no UV but in 10% of those with BV who took metronidazole. The difference was significant (P =0.0430). Analysis for maximum likelihood estimates for preterm labour identified only previous preterm labour or midtrimester abortion as risk factors.Conclusion. Metronidazole does not seem to reduce the prevalence of preterm labour when given for BV before 26 weeks' gestation
Discovery of a Hard X-Ray Source, SAX J0635+0533, in the Error Box of the Gamma-Ray Source 2EG 0635+0521
We have discovered an x-ray source, SAX J0635+0533, with a hard spectrum
within the error box of the GeV gamma-ray source in Monoceros, 2EG J0635+0521.
The unabsorbed x-ray flux is 1.2*10^-11 erg cm^-2 s^-1 in the 2-10 keV band.
The x-ray spectrum is consistent with a simple powerlaw model with absorption.
The photon index is 1.50 +/- 0.08 and we detect emission out to 40 keV. Optical
observations identify a counterpart with a V-magnitude of 12.8. The counterpart
has broad emission lines and the colors of an early B type star. If the
identification of the x-ray/optical source with the gamma-ray source is
correct, then the source would be a gamma-ray emitting x-ray binary.Comment: Accepted to the Astrophysical Journal, 8 page
Domain wall dynamics in expanding spaces
We study the effects on the dynamics of kinks due to expansions and
contractions of the space. We show that the propagation velocity of the kink
can be adiabatically tuned through slow expansions/contractions, while its
width is given as a function of the velocity. We also analyze the case of fast
expansions/contractions, where we are no longer on the adiabatic regime. In
this case the kink moves more slowly after an expansion-contraction cycle as a
consequence of loss of energy through radiation. All these effects are
numerically studied in the nonlinear Klein-Gordon equations (both for the
sine-Gordon and for the phi^4 potential), and they are also studied within the
framework of the collective coordinate evolution equations for the width and
the center of mass of the kink. These collective coordinate evolution equations
are obtained with a procedure that allows us to consider even the case of large
expansions/contractions.Comment: LaTeX, 18 pages, 2 figures, improved version to appear in Phys Rev
Inverse determination of constitutive equations and cutting force modelling for complex tools using oxley's predictive machining theory
In analysis of machining processes, finite element analysis is widely used to predict forces, stress distributions, temperatures and chip formation. However, constitutive models are not always available and simulation of cutting processes with complex tool geometries can lead to extensive computation time. This article presents an approach to determine constitutive parameters of the Johnson-Cook's flow stress model by inverse modelling as well as a methodology to predict process forces and temperatures for complex three-dimensional tools using Oxley's machining theory. In the first part of this study, an analytically based computer code combined with a particle swarm optimization (PSO) algorithm is used to identify constitutive models for 70MnVS4 and an aluminium-alloyed ultra-high-carbon steel (UHC-steel) from orthogonal milling experiments. In the second part, Oxley's predictive machining theory is coupled with a multi-dexel based material removal model. Contact zone information (width of cut, undeformed chip thickness, rake angle and cutting speed) are calculated for incremental segments on the cutting edge and used as input parameters for force and temperature calculations. Subsequently, process forces are predicted for machining using the inverse determined constitutive models and compared to actual force measurements. The suggested methodology has advantages regarding the computation time compared to finite element analyses.BMBF/02PN205
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