2,498 research outputs found
Development of an orbit determination program to regress for lunar potential constants
Orbit calculation program modified to provide corrected state vectors for lunar potential constants in moon centered coordinate syste
Influence of the electron-phonon interfacial conductance on the thermal transport at metal/dielectric interfaces
Thermal boundary conductance at a metal-dieletric interface is a quantity of
prime importance for heat management at the nanoscale. While the boundary
conductance is usually ascribed to the coupling between metal phonons and
dielectric phonons, in this work we examine the influence of a direct coupling
between the metal electrons and the dielectric phonons. The effect of electron-
phonon processes is generally believed to be resistive, and tends to decrease
the overall thermal boundary conductance as compared to the phonon-phonon
conductance {\sigma}p . Here, we find that the effect of a direct coupling
{\sigma}e is to enhance the effective thermal conductance, between the metal
and the dielectric. Resistive effects turn out to be important only for thin
films of metals having a low electron-phonon coupling strength. Two approaches
are explored to reach these conclusions. First, we present an analytical
solution of the two-temperature model to compute the effective conductance
which account for all the relevant energy channels, as a function of {\sigma}e
, {\sigma}p and the electron-phonon coupling factor G. Second, we use numerical
resolution to examine the influence of {\sigma}e on two realistic cases: gold
film on silicon or silica substrates. We point out the implications for the
interpretation of time-resolved thermoreflectance experiments
The development of an advanced system to cool a man in a pressure suit
Conductive cooling system for cooling man in pressurized space sui
Protection of Grapevine Pruning Wounds against Eutypa lata by Biological and Chemical Methods
Eutypa dieback, caused by the fungus Eutypa lata, is a serious disease of grapevines that infects mainly through pruningwounds. The aim of this study was to evaluate the in vitro efficacy of fungicides from various chemical groups againstE. lata, as well as the in vivo efficacy of the most effective fungicides and selected bacterial and fungal antagonists ofE. lata, in grapevine pruning wound protection trials. In vitro studies revealed that flusilazole, tebuconazole, benomyl,fenarimol and myclobutanil were the most effective fungicides to inhibit mycelial growth of E. lata. Two field trialswere conducted, one subjected to artificial inoculation and the second to natural infection only. In the first, benomyl,flusilazole and commercially available Trichoderma harzianum-containing products and an experimental Bacillussubtilis strain were applied to fresh pruning wounds. Two Cabernet Sauvignon vineyards were pruned in August2001 and 2002 and immediately treated and inoculated with a spore suspension of E. lata one day later. Isolationswere made from the treated pruning wounds after 12 months to assess the effectiveness of the treatments. Thefungicides benomyl and flusilazole were the most effective treatments, although the Trichoderma treatments T77 andTrichoseal spray caused a significant reduction in E. lata infection. In a second trial, pruning wounds of CabernetSauvignon, Sauvignon blanc, Red Globe and Bonheur were treated with the Trichoderma products Vinevax (=Trichoseal spray) and Eco77 (= T77) in August 2005 and 2006, subjected to natural infection only and evaluatedafter seven months. Vinevax and Eco77 not only reduced E. lata, but they also reduced the incidence of othergrapevine trunk disease pathogens
On the conditional distribution of the mean of the two closest among a set of three observations
Chemical analyses of raw materials are often repeated in duplicate or
triplicate. The assay values obtained are then combined using a predetermined
formula to obtain an estimate of the true value of the material of interest.
When duplicate observations are obtained, their average typically serves as an
estimate of the true value. On the other hand, the "best of three" method
involves taking three measurements and using the average of the two closest
ones as estimate of the true value.
In this paper, we consider another method which potentially involves three
measurements. Initially two measurements are obtained and if their difference
is sufficiently small, their average is taken as estimate of the true value.
However, if the difference is too large then a third independent measurement is
obtained. The estimator is then defined as the average between the third
observation and the one among the first two which is closest to it.
Our focus in the paper is the conditional distribution of the estimate in
cases where the initial difference is too large. We find that the conditional
distributions are markedly different under the assumption of a normal
distribution and a Laplace distribution.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
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