15,436 research outputs found
Supersoft elasticity in polydomain nematic elastomers
We consider the equilibrium stress-strain behavior of polydomain liquid crystal elastomers (PLCEs). We show that there is a fundamental difference between PLCEs cross-linked in the high temperature isotropic and low temperature aligned states. PLCEs cross-linked in the isotropic state then cooled to an aligned state will exhibit extremely soft elasticity (confirmed by recent experiments) and ordered director patterns characteristic of textured deformations. PLCEs cross-linked in the aligned state will be mechanically much harder and characterized by disclination textures
Elasticity of Polydomain Liquid Crystal Elastomers
We model polydomain liquid-crystal elastomers by extending the neo-classical
soft and semi-soft free energies used successfully to describe monodomain
samples. We show that there is a significant difference between polydomains
cross-linked in homogeneous high symmetry states then cooled to low symmetry
polydomain states and those cross-linked directly in the low symmetry
polydomain state. For example, elastomers cross-linked in the isotropic state
then cooled to a nematic polydomain will, in the ideal limit, be perfectly
soft, and with the introduction of non-ideality, will deform at very low stress
until they are macroscopically aligned. The director patterns observed in them
will be disordered, characteristic of combinations of random deformations, and
not disclination patterns. We expect these samples to exhibit elasticity
significantly softer than monodomain samples. Polydomains cross-linked in the
nematic polydomain state will be mechanically harder and contain characteristic
schlieren director patterns. The models we use for polydomain elastomers are
spatially heterogeneous, so rather than solving them exactly we elucidate this
behavior by bounding the energies using Taylor-like (compatible test strain
fields) and Sachs (constant stress) limits extended to non-linear elasticity.
Good agreement is found with experiments that reveal the supersoft response of
some polydomains. We also analyze smectic polydomain elastomers and propose
that polydomain SmC* elastomers cross-linked in the SmA monodomain state are
promising candidates for low field electrical actuation.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figure
Molecular films associated with LDEF
The molecular films deposited on the surface of the Long Duration Exposure Facility (LDEF) originated from the paints and room-temperature-vulcanized (RTV) silicone materials intentionally used on the satellite and not from residual contaminants. The high silicone content of most of the films and the uniformity of the films indicates a homogenization process in the molecular deposition and suggests a chemically most favored composition for the final film. The deposition on interior surfaces and vents indicated multiple bounce trajectories or repeated deposition-reemission cycles. Exterior surface deposits indicated a significant return flux. Ultraviolet light exposure was required to fix the deposited film as is indicated by the distribution of the films on interior surfaces and the thickness of films at the vent locations. Thermal conditions at the time of exposure to ultraviolet light seems to be an important factor in the thickness of the deposit. Sunrise facing (ram direction) surfaces always had the thicker film. These were the coldest surfaces at the time of their exposure to ultraviolet light. The films have a layered structure suggesting cyclic deposition. As many as 34 distinct layers were seen in the films. The cyclic nature of the deposition and the chemical uniformity of the film one layer to the next suggest an early deposition of the films though there is evidence for the deposition of molecular films throughout the nearly six year exposure of the satellite. A final 'spray' of an organic material associated with water soluble salts occurred very late in the mission. This may have been the result of one of the shuttle dump activities
Defining Technology for Learning: Cognitive and Physical Tools of Inquiry
This essay explores definitions of technology and educational technology. The authors argue the following points: 1. Educational stakeholders, and the public at large, use the term technology as though it has a universally agreed upon definition. It does not, and how technology is defined matters. 2. For technology in schools to support student learning, it must to be defined in a way that describes technology as a tool for problem-solving. 3. Integration of technology, particularly when paired with teacher-centered practices, has the potential of reinforcing and heightening the negative consequences of a conception of learning that positions students as recipients of knowledge instead constructors of knowledge. Essay concludes with a call for leaders in the field of educational technology to provide guidance by adopting a definition that encapsulates the third point above
Continuous distributions of D3-branes and gauged supergravity
States on the Coulomb branch of N=4 super-Yang-Mills theory are studied from
the point of view of gauged supergravity in five dimensions. These
supersymmetric solutions provide examples of consistent truncation from type
IIB supergravity in ten dimensions. A mass gap for states created by local
operators and perfect screening for external quarks arise in the supergravity
approximation. We offer an interpretation of these surprising features in terms
of ensembles of brane distributions.Comment: 19 pages, two figures, latex. v2: reference added, small corrections.
v3: corrected unbounded spectrum erro
Phase transitions of nematic rubbers
Single crystal nematic elastomers undergo a transition from a strongly
ordered phase N to an "isotropic" phase I. We show that: (a) samples produced
under tension by the Finkelmann procedure are intrinsically anisotropic and
should show a small (temperature dependent) birefringence in the high
temperature I phase. (b) for the I->Ntransition via cooling there is a spinodal
limit but for the N->I transition via heating there is no soft mode at the
standard spinodal temperature. (c) the N->I transition is reminiscent of a
martensitic transformation: nucleation of the I phase should occur in the form
of platelets, making a well defined angle with the director.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures (To appear in Europhys. Lett.
Renormalization Group Flows from Holography--Supersymmetry and a c-Theorem
We obtain first order equations that determine a supersymmetric kink solution
in five-dimensional N=8 gauged supergravity. The kink interpolates between an
exterior anti-de Sitter region with maximal supersymmetry and an interior
anti-de Sitter region with one quarter of the maximal supersymmetry. One eighth
of supersymmetry is preserved by the kink as a whole. We interpret it as
describing the renormalization group flow in N=4 super-Yang-Mills theory broken
to an N=1 theory by the addition of a mass term for one of the three adjoint
chiral superfields. A detailed correspondence is obtained between fields of
bulk supergravity in the interior anti-de Sitter region and composite operators
of the infrared field theory. We also point out that the truncation used to
find the reduced symmetry critical point can be extended to obtain a new N=4
gauged supergravity theory holographically dual to a sector of N=2 gauge
theories based on quiver diagrams.
We consider more general kink geometries and construct a c-function that is
positive and monotonic if a weak energy condition holds in the bulk gravity
theory. For even-dimensional boundaries, the c-function coincides with the
trace anomaly coefficients of the holographically related field theory in
limits where conformal invariance is recovered.Comment: 56 pages, three figures, harvmac. v2: improved referencing, corrected
discussion of energy conditions. v3: one more reference fixe
Chinese Gardens: Solutions for Urban Nature Deficit
Research shows that time spent in nature is good for human health and well-being. However, as the world’s population becomes more concentrated in urban areas regular time in nature, especially extended time, is becoming more difficult to have. On the other hand, Chinese gardens can provide one solution to this problem because they have a unique way of providing a naturalistic space within a small area. Despite this fact, there aren’t many Chinese style gardens outside of China. Therefore, the objective of this thesis was to identify possible barriers to using Chinese garden design principles and construction techniques, then address them with a number of solutions.
As part of this effort the best literature was consulted including books and journal articles on Chinese garden design, history, and related fields. The information from literature was then compared to both Western practices and current development processes for Chinese gardens in the West to identify possible barriers. Many of the barriers were found to be related to cost, cultural differences, materials, laws and regulations, and education.
To address these barriers the literature was consulted, and a number of solutions sprung from the history of Chinese gardens as well as current literature. Overall, however, solutions for overcoming barriers to the use of Chinese garden design principles were found to be centered in foundational design objectives and principles. These objectives and principles were found to allow the flexibility needed for Chinese gardens to adapt to local circumstances and conditions. In the end following these ideas and principles will allow professionals to create gardens that are anywhere along a spectrum from fully Chinese in character to fully local in character
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