3,637 research outputs found
Effects of carbon fibers on consumer products
The potential effects of carbon fibers on consumer products such as dishwashers, microwave ovens, and smoke detectors were investigated. The investigation was divided into two categories to determine the potential faults and hazards that could occur if fibers should enter the electrical circuits of the selected appliances. The categories were a fault analysis and a hazard analysis. Hazards considered were fire, flood, physical harm, explosion, and electrical shock. Electrical shock was found to be a possible occurrence related to carbon fibers. Faults were considered to be any effect on the performance of an appliance which would result in complaint or require service action
Quantum thermometry using the ac Stark shift within the Rabi model
This work was supported by the EPSRC, the National Research Foundation and Ministry of Education, Singapore, and the Royal Society.A quantum two-level system coupled to a harmonic oscillator represents a ubiquitous physical system. New experiments in circuit QED and nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS) achieve unprecedented coupling strength at large detuning between qubit and oscillator, thus requiring a theoretical treatment beyond the Jaynes-Cummings model. Here we present a new method for describing the qubit dynamics in this regime, based on an oscillator correlation function expansion of a non-Markovian master equation in the polaron frame. Our technique yields a new numerical method as well as a succinct approximate expression for the qubit dynamics. These expressions are valid in the experimentally interesting regime of strong coupling at low temperature. We obtain a new expression for the ac Stark shift and show that this enables practical and precise qubit thermometry of an oscillator.Peer reviewe
Polarization--universal rejection filtering by ambichiral structures made of indefinite dielectric--magnetic materials
An ambichiral structure comprising sheets of an anisotropic dielectric
material rejects normally incident plane waves of one circular polarization
(CP) state but not of the other CP state, in its fundamental Bragg regime.
However, if the same structure is made of an dielectric--magnetic material with
indefinite permittivity and permeability dyadics, it may function as a
polarization--universal rejection filter because two of the four planewave
components of the electromagnetic field phasors in each sheet are of the
positive--phase--velocity type and two are of the negative--phase--velocity
type.Comment: Cleaned citations in the tex
Modeling physical and chemical climate of the northeastern United States for a geographic information system
A model of physical and chemical climate was developed for New York and New England that can be used in a GIs for integration with ecosystem models. The variables included are monthly average maximum and minimum daily temperatures, precipitation, humidity, and solar radiation, as well as annual atmospheric deposition of sulfur and nitrogen. Equations generated from regional data bases were combined with a digital elevation model of the region to generate digital coverages of each variable
Equilibrium fluctuation theorems compatible with anomalous response
Previously, we have derived a generalization of the canonical fluctuation
relation between heat capacity and energy fluctuations , which is able to describe the existence of macrostates with negative
heat capacities . In this work, we extend our previous results for an
equilibrium situation with several control parameters to account for the
existence of states with anomalous values in other response functions. Our
analysis leads to the derivation of three different equilibrium fluctuation
theorems: the \textit{fundamental and the complementary fluctuation theorems},
which represent the generalization of two fluctuation identities already
obtained in previous works, and the \textit{associated fluctuation theorem}, a
result that has no counterpart in the framework of Boltzmann-Gibbs
distributions. These results are applied to study the anomalous susceptibility
of a ferromagnetic system, in particular, the case of 2D Ising model.Comment: Extended version of the paper published in JSTA
Solving the brachistochrone and other variational problems with soap films
We show a method to solve the problem of the brachistochrone as well as other
variational problems with the help of the soap films that are formed between
two suitable surfaces. We also show the interesting connection between some
variational problems of dynamics, statics, optics, and elasticity.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures. This article, except for a small correction,
has been submitted to the American Journal of Physic
Supercooled vortex liquid and quantitative theory of melting of the flux line lattice in type II superconductors
A metastable homogeneous state exists down to zero temperature in systems of
repelling objects. Zero ''fluctuation temperature'' liquid state therefore
serves as a (pseudo) ''fixed point'' controlling the properties of vortex
liquid below and even around melting point. There exists Madelung constant for
the liquid in the limit of zero temperature which is higher than that of the
solid by an amount approximately equal to the latent heat of melting. This
picture is supported by an exactly solvable large Ginzburg - Landau model
in magnetic field. Based on this understanding we apply Borel - Pade
resummation technique to develop a theory of the vortex liquid in type II
superconductors. Applicability of the effective lowest Landau level model is
discussed and corrections due to higher levels is calculated. Combined with
previous quantitative description of the vortex solid the melting line is
located. Magnetization, entropy and specific heat jumps along it are
calculated. The magnetization of liquid is larger than that of solid by irrespective of the melting temperature. We compare the result with
experiments on high cuprates , , low material and with Monte Carlo simulations.Comment: 28 pages and 4 figures. Enlarged version of paper cond-mat/0107281
with many new content
Using mean field theory to determine the structure of uniform fluids
The structure of a uniform simple liquid is related to that of a reference
fluid with purely repulsive intermolecular forces in a self-consistently
determined external reference field (ERF) phi_ R. The ERF can be separated into
a harshly repulsive part phi_ R0 generated by the repulsive core of a reference
particle fixed at the origin and a more slowly varying part phi_ R1 arising
from a mean field treatment of the attractive forces. We use a generalized
linear response method to calculate the reference fluid structure, first
determining the response to the smoother part phi_ R1 of the ERF alone,
followed by the response to the harshly repulsive part. Both steps can be
carried out very accurately, as confirmed by MD simulations, and good agreement
with the structure of the full LJ fluid is found.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
On the global hydration kinetics of tricalcium silicate cement
We reconsider a number of measurements for the overall hydration kinetics of
tricalcium silicate pastes having an initial water to cement weight ratio close
to 0.5. We find that the time dependent ratio of hydrated and unhydrated silica
mole numbers can be well characterized by two power-laws in time, . For early times we find an `accelerated' hydration
() and for later times a `deaccelerated' behavior (). The crossover time is estimated as . We
interpret these results in terms of a global second order rate equation
indicating that (a) hydrates catalyse the hydration process for , (b)
they inhibit further hydration for and (c) the value of the
associated second order rate constant is of magnitude 6x10^{-7} - 7x10^{-6}
liter mol^{-1} s^{-1}. We argue, by considering the hydration process actually
being furnished as a diffusion limited precipitation that the exponents and directly indicate a preferentially `plate' like hydrate
microstructure. This is essentially in agreement with experimental observations
of cellular hydrate microstructures for this class of materials.Comment: RevTeX macros, 6 pages, 4 postscript figure
An assessment of validity and responsiveness of generic measures of health-related quality of life in hearing impairment
This article is made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund. This article is distributed under the terms of the
Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution,
and reproduction in any medium, provided the original
author(s) and the source are credited.Purpose: This review examines psychometric performance of three widely used generic preference-based measures, that is, EuroQol 5 dimensions (EQ-5D), Health Utility Index 3 (HUI3) and Short-form 6 dimensions (SF-6D) in patients with hearing impairments.
Methods: A systematic search was undertaken to identify studies of patients with hearing impairments where health state utility values were measured and reported. Data were extracted and analysed to assess the reliability, validity (known group differences and convergent validity) and responsiveness of the measures across hearing impairments.
Results: Fourteen studies (18 papers) were included in the review. HUI3 was the most commonly used utility measures in hearing impairment. In all six studies, the HUI3 detected difference between groups defined by the severity of impairment, and four out of five studies detected statistically significant changes as a result of intervention. The only study available suggested that EQ-5D only had weak ability to discriminate difference between severity groups, and in four out of five studies, EQ-5D failed to detected changes. Only one study involved the SF-6D; thus, the information is too limited to conclude on its performance. Also evidence for the reliability of these measures was not found.
Conclusion: Overall, the validity and responsiveness of the HUI3 in hearing impairment was good. The responsiveness of EQ-5D was relatively poor and weak validity was suggested by limited evidence. The evidence on SF-6D was too limited to make any judgment. More head-to-head comparisons of these and other preference measures of health are required.Medical Research Counci
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