7,063 research outputs found
Proton electron elastic scattering and the proton charge radius
It is suggested that proton elastic scattering on atomic electrons allows a
precise measurement of the proton charge radius. Very small values of
transferred momenta (up to four order of magnitude smaller than the ones
presently available) can be reached with high probability.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Elastic deformation due to tangential capillary forces \ud
A sessile liquid drop can deform the substrate on which it rests if the solid is sufficiently “soft.” In this paper we compute the detailed spatial structure of the capillary forces exerted by the drop on the solid substrate using a model based on Density Functional Theory. We show that, in addition to the normal forces, the drop exerts a previously unaccounted tangential force. The resultant effect on the solid is a pulling force near the contact line directed towards the interior of the drop, i.e., not along the interface. The resulting elastic deformations of the solid are worked out and illustrate the importance of the tangential force
Contact angles on a soft solid: from Young's law to Neumann's law
The contact angle that a liquid drop makes on a soft substrate does not obey
the classical Young's relation, since the solid is deformed elastically by the
action of the capillary forces. The finite elasticity of the solid also renders
the contact angles different from that predicted by Neumann's law, which
applies when the drop is floating on another liquid. Here we derive an
elasto-capillary model for contact angles on a soft solid, by coupling a
mean-field model for the molecular interactions to elasticity. We demonstrate
that the limit of vanishing elastic modulus yields Neumann's law or a slight
variation thereof, depending on the force transmission in the solid surface
layer. The change in contact angle from the rigid limit (Young) to the soft
limit (Neumann) appears when the length scale defined by the ratio of surface
tension to elastic modulus reaches a few molecular sizes
The Meissner effect in a strongly underdoped cuprate above its critical temperature
The Meissner effect and the associated perfect "bulk" diamagnetism together
with zero resistance and gap opening are characteristic features of the
superconducting state. In the pseudogap state of cuprates unusual diamagnetic
signals as well as anomalous proximity effects have been detected but a
Meissner effect has never been observed. Here we have probed the local
diamagnetic response in the normal state of an underdoped La1.94Sr0.06CuO4
layer (up to 46 nm thick, critical temperature Tc' < 5 K) which was brought
into close contact with two nearly optimally doped La1.84Sr0.16CuO4 layers (Tc
\approx 32 K). We show that the entire 'barrier' layer of thickness much larger
than the typical c axis coherence lengths of cuprates exhibits a Meissner
effect at temperatures well above Tc' but below Tc. The temperature dependence
of the effective penetration depth and superfluid density in different layers
indicates that superfluidity with long-range phase coherence is induced in the
underdoped layer by the proximity to optimally doped layers; however, this
induced order is very sensitive to thermal excitation.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures + Erratu
A computational analysis of lower bounds for big bucket production planning problems
In this paper, we analyze a variety of approaches to obtain lower bounds for multi-level production planning problems with big bucket capacities, i.e., problems in which multiple items compete for the same resources. We give an extensive survey of both known and new methods, and also establish relationships between some of these methods that, to our knowledge, have not been presented before. As will be highlighted, understanding the substructures of difficult problems provide crucial insights on why these problems are hard to solve, and this is addressed by a thorough analysis in the paper. We conclude with computational results on a variety of widely used test sets, and a discussion of future research
On the distribution of high-frequency stock market traded volume: a dynamical scenario
This manuscript reports a stochastic dynamical scenario whose associated
stationary probability density function is exactly a previously proposed one to
adjust high-frequency traded volume distributions. This dynamical conjecture,
physically connected to superstatiscs, which is intimately related with the
current nonextensive statistical mechanics framework, is based on the idea of
local fluctuations in the mean traded volume associated to financial markets
agents herding behaviour. The corroboration of this mesoscopic model is done by
modelising NASDAQ 1 and 2 minute stock market traded volume
In-cloud processes of methacrolein under simulated conditions – Part 3: Hygroscopic and volatility properties of the formed secondary organic aerosol
The hygroscopic and volatility properties of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) produced from the nebulization of solutions after aqueous phase photooxidation of methacrolein was experimentally studied in a laboratory, using a Volatility-Hygroscopicity Tandem DMA (VHTDMA). The obtained SOA were 80% 100&deg;C-volatile after 5 h of reaction and only 20% 100&deg;C-volatile after 22 h of reaction. The Hygroscopic Growth Factor (HGF) of the SOA produced from the nebulization of solutions after aqueous-phase photooxidation of methacrolein is 1.34–1.43, which is significantly higher than the HGF of SOA formed by gas-phase photooxidation of terpenes, usually found almost hydrophobic. These hygroscopic properties were confirmed for SOA formed by the nebulization of the same solutions where NaCl was added. The hygroscopic properties of the cloud droplet residuals decrease with the reaction time, in parallel with the formation of more refractory compounds. This decrease was mainly attributed to the 250&deg;C-refractive fraction (presumably representative of the highest molecular weight compounds), which evolved from moderately hygroscopic (HGF of 1.52) to less hygroscopic (HGF of 1.36). Oligomerization is suggested as a process responsible for the decrease of both volatility and hygroscopicity with time. The NaCl seeded experiments enabled us to show that 19&plusmn;4 mg L<sup>&minus;1</sup> of SOA was produced after 9.5 h of reaction and 41&plusmn;9 mg L<sup>&minus;1</sup> after 22 h of in-cloud reaction. Because more and more SOA is formed as the reaction time increases, our results show that the reaction products formed during the aqueous-phase OH-oxidation of methacrolein may play a major role in the properties of residual particles upon the droplet's evaporation. Therefore, the specific physical properties of SOA produced during cloud processes should be taken into account for a global estimation of SOA and their atmospheric impacts
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