171 research outputs found
Air flow conditions in workspace of mulcher
ArticleCurrently, there has been a great effort on increasing the efficiency of agricultural
machinery. The energy demands of mulching with the
vertical
axis of rotation
depends
on the
amount
of pr
ocessed material per unit of time, its properties and efficiency of material processing.
Another
important
factor that is affecting the overall energy demands is the energy losses, which
can be even higher than energy, required
for
the processing of materi
al.
The efficiency
of the
material processing and the energy losses
are influenced
to a large extent by the air flow inside
the mulcher workspace, which
is created
by the movement of working tools. The air flow ensures
the repeated contact of the processed
material with the working tools, affects the energy losses
and the quality of work. The contribution deals with the air flow conditions inside the workspace
of mulcher with the
vertical
axis of rotation. The velocity of the
air flow
was measured
my
means
of LDA (Laser Doppler Anemometry) method in three planes above the surface (180, 100 and
20
mm
) and
in
two directions (peripheral and radial). The laboratory model of one mulcher rotor
from mulcher MZ 6000 made by BEDNAR Ltd. company
was used
for the measu
rement. From
the
results
it is evident that the maximum values of peripheral velocity of the air flow reach
approx. 50% of the velocity of the tools. In the radial
plane
an air vortex is created between 20
and 100
mm
planes above the surface around the tip
of the blade
Semiconductor Bloch equation analysis of optical Stark and Bloch-Siegert shifts in monolayers WSe and MoS
We report on the theoretical and experimental investigation of
valley-selective optical Stark and Bloch-Siegert shifts of exciton resonances
in monolayers WSe and MoS induced by strong circularly polarized
nonresonant optical fields. We predict and observe transient shifts of both 1sA
and 1sB exciton transitions in the linear interaction regime. The theoretical
description is based on semiconductor Bloch equations. The solutions of the
equations are obtained with a modified perturbation technique, which takes into
account many-body Coulomb interaction effects. These solutions allow to explain
the polarization dependence of the shifts and calculate their values
analytically. We found experimentally the limits of the applicability of the
theoretical description by observing the transient exciton spectra change due
to many-body effects at high field amplitudes of the driving wave.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, this manuscript is related to the "Giant
valley-selective Stark and Bloch-Siegert shifts of exciton resonances in
WSe and MoS monolayers" manuscrip
Giant valley-selective Stark and Bloch-Siegert shifts of exciton resonances in WSe and MoS monolayers
In this letter we demonstrate that the valley degeneracy of exciton states in
monolayers of WSe and MoS can be lifted by the interaction with strong
circularly-polarized infrared pulses with durations of only few periods of the
electric field whose photon energy is much lower than the energy of the
excitonic transition. The observed valley-sensitive blue shifts of excitonic
absorption lines are consequences of optical Stark and Bloch-Siegert shifts
acting exclusively on the opposite valleys of the monolayer. We measured the
transient valley-selective changes of sample reflectivity for 1sA as well as
for 1sB exciton transitions corresponding to the two most intensive resonances
in the studied materials. For the studied phenomena we developed a theoretical
description based on semiconductor Bloch equations, which goes beyond the
simple two-level model used in previous investigations. The theoretical
approach takes into account Coulomb many-body effects in the monolayer and
provides a unified description of both types of shifts. The detected
room-temperature excitonic energy shifts of up to 30\,meV pave the way for
practical applications of these effects.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, the manuscript is related to the "Semiconductor
Bloch equation analysis of optical Stark and Bloch-Siegert shifts in
monolayers WSe and MoS" manuscrip
Systematic study of Mn-doping trends in optical properties of (Ga,Mn)As
We report on a systematic study of optical properties of (Ga,Mn)As epilayers
spanning the wide range of accessible substitutional Mn_Ga dopings. The growth
and post-growth annealing procedures were optimized for each nominal Mn doping
in order to obtain films which are as close as possible to uniform
uncompensated (Ga,Mn)As mixed crystals. We observe a broad maximum in the
mid-infrared absorption spectra whose position exhibits a prevailing blue-shift
for increasing Mn-doping. In the visible range, a peak in the magnetic circular
dichroism blue shifts with increasing Mn-doping. These observed trends confirm
that disorder-broadened valence band states provide a better one-particle
representation for the electronic structure of high-doped (Ga,Mn)As with
metallic conduction than an energy spectrum assuming the Fermi level pinned in
a narrow impurity band.Comment: 22 pages, 14 figure
Markers of thrombogenesis are activated in unmedicated patients with acute psychosis: a matched case control study
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Antipsychotic treatment has been repeatedly found to be associated with an increased risk for venous thromboembolism in schizophrenia. The extent to which the propensity for venous thromboembolism is linked to antipsychotic medication alone or psychosis itself is unclear. The objective of this study was to determine whether markers of thrombogenesis are increased in psychotic patients who have not yet been treated with antipsychotic medication.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We investigated the plasma levels of markers indicating activation of coagulation (D-dimers and Factor VIII) and platelets (soluble P-selectin, sP-selectin) in an antipsychotic-naive group of fourteen men and eleven women with acute psychosis (age 29.1 ± 8.3 years, body mass index 23.6 ± 4.7), and twenty-five healthy volunteers were matched for age, gender and body mass index.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>D-dimers (median 0.38 versus 0.19 mg/l, mean 1.12 ± 2.38 versus 0.28 ± 0.3 mg/l; P = 0.003) and sP-selectin (median 204.1 versus 112.4 ng/ml, mean 209.9 ± 124 versus 124.1 ± 32; P = 0.0005) plasma levels were significantly increased in the group of patients with acute psychosis as compared with healthy volunteers. We found a trend (median 148% versus 110%, mean 160 ± 72.5 versus 123 ± 62.5; P = 0.062) of increased plasma levels of factor VIII in psychotic patients as compared with healthy volunteers.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The results suggest that at least a part of venous thromboembolic events in patients with acute psychosis may be induced by pathogenic mechanisms related to psychosis rather than by antipsychotic treatment. Finding an exact cause for venous thromboembolism in psychotic patients is necessary for its effective treatment and prevention.</p
Experimental observation of the optical spin transfer torque
The spin transfer torque is a phenomenon in which angular momentum of a spin
polarized electrical current entering a ferromagnet is transferred to the
magnetization. The effect has opened a new research field of electrically
driven magnetization dynamics in magnetic nanostructures and plays an important
role in the development of a new generation of memory devices and tunable
oscillators. Optical excitations of magnetic systems by laser pulses have been
a separate research field whose aim is to explore magnetization dynamics at
short time scales and enable ultrafast spintronic devices. We report the
experimental observation of the optical spin transfer torque, predicted
theoretically several years ago building the bridge between these two fields of
spintronics research. In a pump-and-probe optical experiment we measure
coherent spin precession in a (Ga,Mn)As ferromagnetic semiconductor excited by
circularly polarized laser pulses. During the pump pulse, the spin angular
momentum of photo-carriers generated by the absorbed light is transferred to
the collective magnetization of the ferromagnet. We interpret the observed
optical spin transfer torque and the magnetization precession it triggers on a
quantitative microscopic level. Bringing the spin transfer physics into optics
introduces a fundamentally distinct mechanism from the previously reported
thermal and non-thermal laser excitations of magnets. Bringing optics into the
field of spin transfer torques decreases by several orders of magnitude the
timescales at which these phenomena are explored and utilized.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
On non-local variational problems with lack of compactness related to non-linear optics
We give a simple proof of existence of solutions of the dispersion manage-
ment and diffraction management equations for zero average dispersion,
respectively diffraction. These solutions are found as maximizers of non-linear
and non-local vari- ational problems which are invariant under a large
non-compact group. Our proof of existence of maximizer is rather direct and
avoids the use of Lions' concentration compactness argument or Ekeland's
variational principle.Comment: 30 page
Use of Ultra High Performance Liquid Chromatography-Tandem Mass Spectrometry to Demonstrate Decreased Serum Statin Levels after Extracorporeal LDL-Cholesterol Elimination
Background. Using our statin analysis method, it was possible to uncover a significant drop in statin levels (atorvastatin, simvastatin, and metabolites) after extracorporeal LDL-cholesterol elimination (EE) in severe familial hypercholesterolemia (FH). The purpose of this work was to identify the mechanism underlying this drop and its clinical significance as well as to propose measures to optimize a pharmacotherapeutical regimen that can prevent the loss of statins. Methods. Ultra High Performance Liquid Chromatography (UHPLC) connected to the triple quadrupole MS/MS system was used. Patients. A group of long-term treated patients (3–12 years of treatment) with severe FH (12 patients) and treated regularly by LDL-apheresis (immunoadsorption) or haemorheopheresis (cascade filtration) were included in this study. Results. After EE, the level of statins and their metabolites decreased (atorvastatin before/after LDL-apheresis: 8.83/3.46 nmol/l; before/after haemorheopheresis: 37.02/18.94 nmol/l). A specific loss was found (concentration of atorvastatin for LDL-apheresis/haemorheopheresis: 0.28/3.04 nmol/l in washing fluids; 11.07 nmol/l in filters). To prevent substantial loss of statin concentrations, a pharmacotherapeutic regimen with a longer time interval between the dose of statins and EE is recommended (15 hours). Conclusions. A specific loss of statins was found in adsorbent columns and filters. The decrease can be prevented by the suggested dosage scheme
Towards a unified theory of Sobolev inequalities
We discuss our work on pointwise inequalities for the gradient which are
connected with the isoperimetric profile associated to a given geometry. We
show how they can be used to unify certain aspects of the theory of Sobolev
inequalities. In particular, we discuss our recent papers on fractional order
inequalities, Coulhon type inequalities, transference and dimensionless
inequalities and our forthcoming work on sharp higher order Sobolev
inequalities that can be obtained by iteration.Comment: 39 pages, made some changes to section 1
Experimental observation of the optical spin-orbit torque
Spin polarized carriers electrically injected into a magnet from an external
polarizer can exert a spin transfer torque (STT) on the magnetization. The phe-
nomenon belongs to the area of spintronics research focusing on manipulating
magnetic moments by electric fields and is the basis of the emerging
technologies for scalable magnetoresistive random access memories. In our
previous work we have reported experimental observation of the optical
counterpart of STT in which a circularly polarized pump laser pulse acts as the
external polarizer, allowing to study and utilize the phenomenon on several
orders of magnitude shorter timescales than in the electric current induced
STT. Recently it has been theoretically proposed and experimentally
demonstrated that in the absence of an external polarizer, carriers in a magnet
under applied electric field can develop a non-equilibrium spin polarization
due to the relativistic spin-orbit coupling, resulting in a current induced
spin-orbit torque (SOT) acting on the magnetization. In this paper we report
the observation of the optical counterpart of SOT. At picosecond time-scales,
we detect excitations of magnetization of a ferromagnetic semiconductor
(Ga,Mn)As which are independent of the polarization of the pump laser pulses
and are induced by non-equilibrium spin-orbit coupled photo-holes.Comment: 4 figure, supplementary information. arXiv admin note: text overlap
with arXiv:1101.104
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