4,357 research outputs found
Three-dimensional cell to tissue assembly process
The present invention relates a 3-dimensional cell to tissue and maintenance process, more particularly to methods of culturing cells in a culture environment, either in space or in a gravity field, with minimum fluid shear stress, freedom for 3-dimensional spatial orientation of the suspended particles and localization of particles with differing or similar sedimentation properties in a similar spatial region
The Thermodynamics of Kaluza-Klein Black Hole/Bubble Chains
A Killing bubble is a minimal surface that arises as the fixed surface of a
spacelike Killing field. We compute the bubble contributions to the Smarr
relations and the mass and tension first laws for spacetimes containing both
black holes and Killing bubbles. The resulting relations display an interesting
interchange symmetry between the properties of black hole horizons and those of
KK bubbles. This interchange symmetry reflects the underlying relation between
static bubbles and black holes under double analytic continuation of the time
and Kaluza-Klein directions. The thermodynamics of bubbles involve a
geometrical quantity that we call the bubble surface gravity, which we show has
several properties in common with the black hole surface gravity.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figur
Fluxoid formation: size effects and non-equilibrium universality
Simple causal arguments put forward by Kibble and Zurek suggest that the
scaling behaviour of condensed matter at continuous transitions is related to
the familiar universality classes of the systems at quasi-equilibrium. Although
proposed 25 years ago or more, it is only in the last few years that it has
been possible to devise experiments from which scaling exponents can be
determined and in which this scenario can be tested. In previous work, an
unusually high Kibble-Zurek scaling exponent was reported for spontaneous
fluxoid production in a single isolated superconducting Nb loop, albeit with
low density. Using analytic approximations backed up by Langevin simulations,
we argue that densities as small as these are too low to be attributable to
scaling, and are conditioned by the small size of the loop. We also reflect on
the physical differences between slow quenches and small rings, and derive some
criteria for these differences, noting that recent work on slow quenches does
not adequately explain the anomalous behaviour seen here.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, presentation given at CMMP 201
Discovery of a Wide Substellar Companion to a Nearby Low-Mass Star
We report the discovery of a wide (135+/-25 AU), unusually blue L5 companion
2MASS J17114559+4028578 to the nearby M4.5 dwarf G 203-50 as a result of a
targeted search for common proper motion pairs in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
and the Two Micron All Sky Survey. Adaptive Optics imaging with Subaru
indicates that neither component is a nearly equal mass binary with separation
> 0.18", and places limits on the existence of additional faint companions. An
examination of TiO and CaH features in the primary's spectrum is consistent
with solar metallicity and provides no evidence that G 203-50 is metal poor. We
estimate an age for the primary of 1-5 Gyr based on activity. Assuming
coevality of the companion, its age, gravity and metallicity can be constrained
from properties of the primary, making it a suitable benchmark object for the
calibration of evolutionary models and for determining the atmospheric
properties of peculiar blue L dwarfs. The low total mass (M_tot=0.21+/-0.03
M_sun), intermediate mass ratio (q=0.45+/-0.14), and wide separation of this
system demonstrate that the star formation process is capable of forming wide,
weakly bound binary systems with low mass and BD components. Based on the
sensitivity of our search we find that no more than 2.2% of early-to-mid M
dwarfs (9.0 0.06 M_sun.Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Discovery of circularly polarised radio emission from SS 433
We report the discovery of circularly polarised radio emission from the
radio-jet X-ray binary SS 433 with the Australia Telescope Compact Array. The
flux density spectrum of the circular polarization, clearly detected at four
frequencies between 1 - 9 GHz, has a spectral index of (-0.9 +/- 0.1). Multiple
components in the source and a lack of very high spatial resolution do not
allow a unique determination of the origin of the circular polarization, nor of
the spectrum of fractional polarization. However, we argue that the emission is
likely to arise in the inner regions of the binary, possibly via
propagation-induced conversion of linear to circular polarization, and the
fractional circular polarization of these regions may be as high as 10%.
Observations such as these have the potential to investigate the composition,
whether pairs or baryonic, of the ejecta from X-ray binaries.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Muon-Spin Rotation Measurements of an Unusual Vortex-Glass Phase in the Layered Superconductor Bi2.15Sr1.85CaCu2O8+δ
Muon-spin rotation measurements, performed on the mixed state of the classic anisotropic superconductor Bi2.15Sr1.85CaCu2O8+δ, obtain quantities directly related to two- and three-body correlations of vortices in space. A novel phase diagram emerges from such local probe measurements of the bulk, revealing an unusual glassy state at intermediate fields which appears to freeze continuously from the equilibrium vortex liquid but differs both from the lattice and the conventional high-field vortex glass state in its structure.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Test and Analysis Correlation for a Y-Joint Specimen for a Composite Cryotank
The Composite Cryotank Technology Demonstration (CCTD) project under NASA's Game Changing Development Program (GCDP) developed space technologies using advanced composite materials. Under CCTD, NASA funded the Boeing Company to design and test a number of element-level joint specimens as a precursor to a 2.4-m diameter composite cryotank. Preliminary analyses indicated that the y-joint in the cryotank had low margins of safety; hence the y-joint was considered to be a critical design region. The y-joint design includes a softening strip wedge to reduce localized shear stresses at the skirt/dome interface. In this paper, NASA-developed analytical models will be correlated with the experimental results of a series of positive-peel y-joint specimens from Boeing tests. Initial analytical models over-predicted the experimental strain gage readings in the far-field region by approximately 10%. The over-prediction was attributed to uncertainty in the elastic properties of the laminate and a mismatch between the thermal expansion of the strain gages and the laminate. The elastic properties of the analytical model were adjusted to account for the strain gage differences. The experimental strain gages also indicated a large non-linear effect in the softening strip region that was not predicted by the analytical model. This non-linear effect was attributed to delamination initiating in the softening strip region at below 20% of the failure load for the specimen. Because the specimen was contained in a thermally insulated box during cryogenic testing to failure, delamination initiation and progression was not visualized during the test. Several possible failure initiation locations were investigated, and a most likely failure scenario was determined that correlated well with the experimental data. The most likely failure scenario corresponded to damage initiating in the softening strip and delamination extending to the grips at final failure
Open problems in artificial life
This article lists fourteen open problems in artificial life, each of which is a grand challenge requiring a major advance on a fundamental issue for its solution. Each problem is briefly explained, and, where deemed helpful, some promising paths to its solution are indicated
Direct Imaging and Spectroscopy of a Planetary Mass Candidate Companion to a Young Solar Analog
We present Gemini near-infrared adaptive optics imaging and spectroscopy of a
planetary mass candidate companion to 1RXS J160929.1-210524, a roughly
solar-mass member of the 5 Myr-old Upper Scorpius association. The object,
separated by 2.22" or 330 AU at ~150 pc, has infrared colors and spectra
suggesting a temperature of 1800(-100/+200) K, and spectral type of L4(-2/+1).
The H- and K-band spectra provide clear evidence of low surface gravity, and
thus youth. Based on the widely used DUSTY models, we infer a mass of
8(-2/+4)Mjupiter. If gravitationally bound, this would be the lowest mass
companion imaged around a normal star thus far, and its existence at such a
large separation would pose a serious challenge to theories of star and planet
formation.Comment: Revised accepted version, ApJL, in pres
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