7,206 research outputs found
Fracture behaviour of single crystal silicon microstructures
The fracture behaviour of single crystal silicon (SCSi) microstructures is analysed based on microme-chanical torsional and tensile experiments. The uniaxial testpieces are characterised by the presence of sharp not-ches at the gauge length extremities. The critical loading conditions are reproduced in a finite element model in order to identify the analogies of the failure conditions in tension and torsion. The stress field in the vicinity of the notch tip (were cracks originate) is analyzed, and fracture mechanics parameters are determined. In the finite element model a crack, reproducing the failure process observed in the experiments, is included. The crack area is incrementally increased and the energy release rate for the critical loading conditions in tension and torsion is calculated. Based on these results a failure criterion is formulated along with a procedure for the mechanical integrity analysis of SCSi microstructures of arbitrary shape and loading condition
Two-zero Majorana textures in the light of the Planck results
The recent results of the Planck experiment put a stringent constraint on the
sum of the light neutrino masses, m1+m2+m3 < 0.23 eV (95 % CL). On the other
hand, two-zero Majorana mass matrix textures predict strong correlations among
the atmospheric angle and the sum of the masses. We use the Planck result to
show that, for the normal hierarchy case, the texture with vanishing (2,2) and
(3,3) elements is ruled out at a high confidence level; in addition, we
emphasize that a future measurement of the octant of the atmospheric mixing
angle (or the one sigma determination of it based on recent fit to neutrino
data) will put severe constraint on the possible structure of the Majorana mass
matrix. The implication of the above mentioned correlations for neutrinoless
double beta-decay are also discussed, for both normal and inverted orderings.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
Performance of a large limited streamer tube cell in drift mode
The performance of a large (3x3 ) streamer tube cell in drift mode is
shown. The detector space resolution has been studied using cosmic muons
crossing an high precision silicon telescope. The experimental results are
compared with a GARFIELD simulation.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures. Accepted by Nucl. Instr. and Methods
The certification of anti-myeloperoxidase immunoglobulin G in human serum ERM® - DA476/IFCC
This report describes the production and certification of ERM-DA476/IFCC, a new serum protein reference material intended for the standardisation of measurements of anti-myeloperoxidase immunoglobulin G (anti-MPO IgG) antibodies. The material was produced according to ISO Guide 34:2009. The raw material used to prepare ERM-DA476/IFCC was a plasmapheresis material containing a high concentration of anti-MPO IgG. After a thorough commutability study lyophilised serum was selected as the format for the candidate reference material. Serum processing was performed based on the procedure used for the reference material ERM-DA470k/IFCC. The plasma was converted into serum which was then delipidated. After the addition of preservatives the processed serum was diluted with plasmapheresis solution containing albumin, prior to the transfer of 1 mL aliquots to glass vials. The serum was then lyophilised and the vials closed with rubber stoppers and screw caps under nitrogen atmosphere prior to storage at -70 °C. The between unit-homogeneity was quantified and stability during dispatch and storage were assessed in accordance with ISO Guide 35:2006. The material was characterised by an inter-laboratory comparison exercise performed by laboratories of demonstrated competence and with adherence to ISO/IEC 17025 , using a purified anti-MPO IgG preparation as calibrant. This was achieved using a value transfer protocol previously used in the characterisation of ERM-DA470k/IFCC. Technically invalid results were removed. However no other outliers were eliminated on statistical grounds only. Uncertainties of the certified values were calculated in accordance to the Guide to the Expression of Uncertainty in Measurement (GUM) and include uncertainties relating to possible lack of homogeneity, instability and characterisation. The material is intended for the calibration of methods and quality control. As any reference material, it can also be used for control charts or validation studies. The CRM is available in glass vials containing the lyophilised residue of 1 g serum. The minimum amount of reconstituted sample to be used is 10 μL. The CRM was accepted as European Reference Material (ERM®) after peer evaluation by the partners of the European Reference Materials consortium
High sensitivity double beta decay study of 116-Cd and 100-Mo with the BOREXINO Counting Test Facility (CAMEO project)
The unique features (super-low background and large sensitive volume) of the
CTF and BOREXINO set ups are used in the CAMEO project for a high sensitivity
study of 100-Mo and 116-Cd neutrinoless double beta decay. Pilot measurements
with 116-Cd and Monte Carlo simulations show that the sensitivity of the CAMEO
experiment (in terms of the half-life limit for neutrinoless double beta decay)
is (3-5) 10^24 yr with a 1 kg source of 100-Mo (116-Cd, 82-Se, and 150-Nd) and
about 10^26 yr with 65 kg of enriched 116-CdWO_4 crystals placed in the liquid
scintillator of the CTF. The last value corresponds to a limit on the neutrino
mass of less than 0.06 eV. Similarly with 1000 kg of 116-CdWO_4 crystals
located in the BOREXINO apparatus the neutrino mass limit can be pushed down to
m_nu<0.02 eV.Comment: 29 pages, LaTex, 9 eps figure
A WebGIS tool for the dissemination of earthquake data
In 2004 a new seismic hazard map of Italy (MPS Working Group, 2004) has been released by a task force that produced an
amount of new or updated data, such as a new version of the earthquake catalogue (CPTI04; CPTI Working Group, 2004)
and an updated seismogenic zonation. A set of WebGIS tools has been designed for the data dissemination to the
scientific community and the general public.
The design of the WebGIS tools focused first on the consultation of the DBM04 macroseismic database (DBM Working
Group, 2005), which contains the macroseismic intensity data-points (IDP) of the earthquakes listed in the CPTI04
catalogue.
The WebGIS tool design and development process had to fulfill: 1) simplicity, 2) responsiveness and 3) readiness for
future extensions.
The specific requirements for the macroseismic database consultation interface were:
- data access by place and by earthquake;
- IDP maps with queryable points;
- data download in both tabular and map format;
- easily upgradable content;
- quick and user friendly interface
- …
