110,031 research outputs found
The stability of new transparent polymeric materials: The epoxy trimethoxyboroxine system. Part 1: The preparation, characterization and curing of epoxy resins and their copolymers
The effects of resin composition, curing conditions fillers, and flame retardant additives on the flammability of diglycidyl ether of bisphenol-A (DGEBA) as measured by the oxygen index is examined. The oxygen index of DGEBA cured with various curing agents was between 0.198 to 0.238. Fillers and flame retardant additives can increase the oxygen index dependent on the material and the amount used. Changes in the basic cured resin properties can be anticipated with the addition of noncompatible additives. High flame resistant epoxy resins with good stability and mechanical properties are investigated
c(2x2) Interface Alloys in Co/Cu Multilayers - Influence on Interlayer Exchange Coupling and GMR
The influence of a c(2x2) ordered interface alloy of 3d transition metals at
the ferromagnet/nonmagnet interface on interlayer exchange coupling (IXC), the
formation of quantum well states (QWS) and the phenomenon of Giant
MagnetoResistance is investigated. We obtained a strong dependence of IXC on
interface alloy formation. The GMR ratio is also strongly influenced. We found
that Fe, Ni and Cu alloys at the interface enhance the GMR ratio for in-plane
geometry by nearly a factor of 2.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, subm. to PR
Modeling for Active Control of Combustion and Thermally Driven Oscillations
Organized oscillations excited and sustained by high densities of energy release in combustion chambers have long caused serious problems in development of propulsion systems. The amplitudes often become sufficiently large to cause unacceptable structural vibrations. Because the oscillations are self-excited, they reach limiting amplitudes (limit cycles) only because of the action of nonlinear processes. Traditionally, satisfactory behavior
has been achieved through a combination of trial-and-error
design and testing, with control always involving passive means: geometrical modifications, changes of propellant composition, or devices to enhance dissipation of acoustic energy. Active control has been applied only to small-scale laboratory devices, but the limited success suggests the possibility of serious applications to full-scale propulsion systems. Realization of that potential rests on further experimental work, combined with deeper understanding of the mechanisms causing the oscillations and of the physical behavior of the systems. Effective design of active control systems will require faithful modeling of the relevant processes over broad frequency ranges covering the spectra of natural modes. This paper will cover the general character of the linear and nonlinear behavior of combustion systems, with special attention to acoustics and the mechanisms of excitation.
The discussion is intended to supplement the paper by Doyle et al. concerned primarily with controls issues and the observed behavior of simple laboratory devices
Three-region inequalities for the second order elliptic equation with discontinuous coefficients and size estimate
In this paper, we would like to derive a quantitative uniqueness estimate,
the three-region inequality, for the second order elliptic equation with jump
discontinuous coefficients. The derivation of the inequality relies on the
Carleman estimate proved in our previous work. We then apply the three-region
inequality to study the size estimate problem with one boundary measurement.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figur
The Giant Flare of December 27, 2004 from SGR 1806-20
The giant flare of December 27, 2004 from SGR 1806-20 represents one of the
most extraordinary events captured in over three decades of monitoring the
gamma-ray sky. One measure of the intensity of the main peak is its effect on
X- and gamma-ray instruments. RHESSI, an instrument designed to study the
brightest solar flares, was completely saturated for ~0.5 s following the start
of the main peak. A fortuitous alignment of SGR 1806-20 near the Sun at the
time of the giant flare, however, allowed RHESSI a unique view of the giant
flare event, including the precursor, the main peak decay, and the pulsed tail.
Since RHESSI was saturated during the main peak, we augment these observations
with Wind and RHESSI particle detector data in order to reconstruct the main
peak as well. Here we present detailed spectral analysis and evolution of the
giant flare. We report the novel detection of a relatively soft fast peak just
milliseconds before the main peak, whose timescale and sizescale indicate a
magnetospheric origin. We present the novel detection of emission extending up
to 17 MeV immediately following the main peak, perhaps revealing a
highly-extended corona driven by the hyper-Eddington luminosities. The spectral
evolution and pulse evolution during the tail are presented, demonstrating
significant magnetospheric twist and evolution during this phase. Blackbody
radii are derived for every stage of the flare, which show remarkable agreement
despite the range of luminosities and temperatures covered. Finally, we place
significant upper limits on afterglow emission in the hundreds of seconds
following the giant flare.Comment: 32 pages, 14 figures, submitted to Ap
Finite-Volume Two-Pion Amplitudes in the I=0 Channel
We perform a calculation in one-loop chiral perturbation theory of the
two-pion matrix elements and correlation functions of an I=0 scalar operator,
in finite and infinite volumes for both full and quenched QCD. We show that
major difficulties arise in the quenched theory due to the lack of unitarity.
Similar problems are expected for quenched lattice calculations of amplitudes with . Our results raise the important question
of whether it is consistent to study amplitudes beyond leading
order in chiral perturbation theory in quenched or partially quenched QCD.Comment: Version to appear on Phys. Lett. B, with only very minor and
stylistic change
Vacuum polarization for neutral particles in 2+1 dimensions
In 2+1 dimensions there exists a duality between a charged Dirac particle
coupled minimally to a background vector potential and a neutral one coupled
nonminimally to a background electromagnetic field strength. A constant uniform
background electric current induces in the vacuum of the neutral particle a
fermion current which is proportional to the background one. A background
electromagnetic plane wave induces no current in the vacuum. For constant but
nonuniform background electric charge, known results for charged particles can
be translated to give the induced fermion number. Some new examples with
infinite background electric charge are presented. The induced spin and total
angular momentum are also discussed.Comment: REVTeX, 7 pages, no figur
Deep-inelastic scattering and the operator product expansion in lattice QCD
We discuss the determination of deep-inelastic hadron structure in lattice
QCD. By using a fictitious heavy quark, direct calculations of the Compton
scattering tensor can be performed in Euclidean space that allow the extraction
of the moments of structure functions. This overcomes issues of operator mixing
and renormalisation that have so far prohibited lattice computations of higher
moments. This approach is especially suitable for the study of the twist-two
contributions to isovector quark distributions, which is practical with current
computing resources. While we focus on the isovector unpolarised distribution,
our method is equally applicable to other quark distributions and to
generalised parton distributions. By looking at matrix elements such as
(where and are vector
and axial-vector heavy-light currents) within the same formalism, moments of
meson distribution amplitudes can also be extracted.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, version accepted for publicatio
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