6,709 research outputs found
A mosaic infrared sensor for space astronomy, phase 3
Short wavelength (1 to 3 micron) HgCdTe mosaic detector arrays for space astronomy purposes were fabricated and studied. Honeywell will test and analyze these arrays at moderate temperatures (300-130K). Low temperature testing will be performed at the University of Hawaii. Short wavelength mosaic arrays were fabricated on three wafers and one array from each wafer was tested and analyzed. The p-type base carrier concentration on these wafers was an order of magnitude lower than typically used so far on this program (10 to the 14/cc as compared to 10 to the 15/cc). Tunneling currents are expected to decrease with this decrease in carrier concentration, resulting in improved performance at very low temperatures. The risk with such a low carrier concentration is that fixed charge in the surface passivating layer must be carefully controlled to prevent surface inversion layers
Nuclear Dynamics at the Balance Energy
We study the mass dependence of various quantities (like the average and
maximum density, collision rate, participant-spectator matter, temperature as
well as time zones for higher density) by simulating the reactions at the
energy of vanishing flow. This study is carried out within the framework of
Quantum Molecular Dynamics model. Our findings clearly indicate an existence of
a power law in all the above quantities calculated at the balance energy. The
only significant mass dependence was obtained for the temperature reached in
the central sphere. All other quantities are rather either insensitive or
depend weakly on the system size at balance energy. The time zone for higher
density as well as the time of maximal density and collision rate follow a
power law inverse to the energy of vanishing flow.Comment: 9 figures, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Effect of silica colloids on the rheology of viscoelastic gels formed by the surfactant cetyl trimethylammonium tosylate
The effects of the addition of sub-micrometer sized colloidal silica spheres
on the linear and nonlinear rheology of semi-dilute solutions of a viscoelastic
gel are studied. For a 1.4 wt.% solution of the surfactant CTAT, a peak in the
zero shear rate viscosity is observed at approximately equal
weight percents of silica and CTAT. This peak shifts to lower silica
concentrations on increasing either the CTAT concentration or the surface
charge on silica and disappears when the CTAT concentration is increased to
2.6wt%. The increases in and the high frequency plateau modulus
G on the introduction of SiO are explained by considering the
increasingly entangled wormlike micelles that are formed due to the enhanced
screening of the electrostatic interactions. The observed decrease in the
values of G and at higher concentrations of silica
particles is explained in terms of the formation of surfactant bilayers due to
the adsorption of the positively charged cetyl trimethylammonium to the
negatively charged silica.Comment: 28 pages, includes 8 eps and 2 png figures; accepted for publication
in Jl. Colloid Interface Sc
Nonequilibrium Fluctuation Relation for Sheared Micellar Gel in a Jammed State
We show that the shear rate at a fixed shear stress in a micellar gel in a
jammed state exhibits large fluctuations, showing positive and negative values,
with the mean shear rate being positive. The resulting probability distribution
functions (PDF's) of the global power flux to the system vary from Gaussian to
non-Gaussian, depending on the driving stress and in all cases show similar
symmetry properties as predicted by Gallavotti-Cohen steady state fluctuation
relation. The fluctuation relation allows us to determine an effective
temperature related to the structural constraints of the jammed state. We have
measured the stress dependence of the effective temperature. Further,
experiments reveal that the effective temperature and the standard deviation of
the shear rate fluctuations increase with the decrease of the system size.Comment: 5 pages 3 figure
Dynamical Behaviour in the Nonlinear Rheology of Surfactant Solutions
Several surfactant molecules self-assemble in solution to form long, flexible
wormlike micelles which get entangled with each other, leading to viscoelastic
gel phases. We discuss our recent work on the rheology of such a gel formed in
the dilute aqueous solutions of a surfactant CTAT. In the linear rheology
regime, the storage modulus and loss modulus
have been measured over a wide frequency range. In
the nonlinear regime, the shear stress shows a plateau as a function
of the shear rate above a certain cutoff shear rate
. Under controlled shear rate conditions in the plateau regime,
the shear stress and the first normal stress difference show oscillatory
time-dependence. The analysis of the measured time series of shear stress and
normal stress has been done using several methods incorporating state space
reconstruction by embedding of time delay vectors.The analysis shows the
existence of a finite correlation dimension and a positive Lyapunov exponent,
unambiguously implying that the dynamics of the observed mechanical instability
can be described by that of a dynamical system with a strange attractor of
dimension varying from 2.4 to 2.9.Comment: 12 pages, includes 7 eps figure
Tunable Brownian Vortex at the Interface
A general kind of Brownian vortexes are demonstrated by applying an external
nonconservative force field to a colloidal particle bound by a conservative
optical trapping force at a liquid-air interface. As the liquid medium is
translated at a constant velocity with the bead trapped at the interface, the
drag force near the surface provide enough rotational component to bias the
particle's thermal fluctuations in a circulatory motion. The interplay between
the thermal fluctuations and the advection of the bead in constituting the
vortex motions is studied, inferring that the angular velocity of the
circulatory motion offers a comparative measure of the interface fluctuations.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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