1,207 research outputs found
Heated bimetal strip prevents damage of bearings by vibration
Strip of bimetal is shaped as split ring; when properly fabricated from thin sheet, width of strip increases when it is heated. When width of strip increases, outer races are forced apart, thus pressing balls tightly against inner races. Strip applies axial load to bearing, amount of load being function of temperature to which strip is heated
Electrostatically controlled heat shutter
A heat transfer assembly for conducting thermal energy is described. The assembly includes a hermetically sealed container enclosing a quantity of inert gas such as nitrogen. Two opposed walls of the container have high thermal conducting characteristics while the connecting walls have low thermal conducting characteristics. Electrodes are positioned adjacent to the high thermal conducing walls and biased relative to the conducting walls to a corona potential for creating an ionic gas wind which must contact the conducting walls to be neutralized. The contact of the gas molecules permits the maximum thermal energy transfer between the walls. Baffles can be positioned adjacent to the electrodes to regulate gas flow between the high thermal conducting surfaces
Using CMOS Sensors in a Cellphone for Gamma Detection and Classification
The CMOS camera found in many cellphones is sensitive to ionized electrons.
Gamma rays penetrate into the phone and produce ionized electrons that are then
detected by the camera. Thermal noise and other noise needs to be removed on
the phone, which requires an algorithm that has relatively low memory and
computational requirements. The continuous high-delta algorithm described fits
those requirements. Only a small fraction of the energy of even the electron is
deposited in the camera sensor, so direct methods of measuring the energy
cannot be used. The fraction of groups of lit up pixels that are lines is
correlated with the energy of the gamma rays. This correlation under certain
conditions allows limited low resolution energy resolution to be performed
Valence and magnetic instabilities in Sm compounds at high pressures
We report on the study of the response to high pressures of the electronic
and magnetic properties of several Sm-based compounds, which span at ambient
pressure the whole range of stable charge states between the divalent and the
trivalent. Our nuclear forward scattering of synchrotron radiation and specific
heat investigations show that in both golden SmS and SmB6 the pressure-induced
insulator to metal transitions (at 2 and about 4-7 GPa, respectively) are
associated with the onset of long-range magnetic order, stable up to at least
19 and 26 GPa, respectively. This long-range magnetic order, which is
characteristic of Sm(3+), appears already for a Sm valence near 2.7. Contrary
to these compounds, metallic Sm, which is trivalent at ambient pressure,
undergoes a series of pressure-induced structural phase transitions which are
associated with a progressive decrease of the ordered 4f moment.Comment: 15 pages (including 7 figures) submitted to J. Phys.: Condens. Matte
Valence and magnetic ordering in intermediate valence compounds : TmSe versus SmB6
The intermediate valent systems TmSe and SmB6 have been investigated up to 16
and 18 GPa by ac microcalorimetry with a pressure (p) tuning realized in situ
at low temperature. For TmSe, the transition from an antiferromagnetic
insulator for p<3 GPa to an antiferromagnetic metal at higher pressure has been
confirmed. A drastic change in the p variation of the Neel temperature (Tn) is
observed at 3 GPa. In the metallic phase (p>3 GPa), Tn is found to increase
linearly with p. A similar linear p increase of Tn is observed for the
quasitrivalent compound TmS which is at ambiant pressure equivalent to TmSe at
p=7 GPa. In the case of SmB6 long range magnetism has been detected above p=8
GPa, i.e. at a pressure slightly higher than the pressure of the insulator to
metal transition. However a homogeneous magnetic phase occurs only above 10
GPa. The magnetic and electronic properties are related to the renormalization
of the 4f wavefunction either to the divalent or the trivalent configurations.
As observed in SmS, long range magnetism in SmB6 occurs already far below the
pressure where a trivalent Sm3+ state will be reached. It seems possible, to
describe roughly the physical properties of the intermediate valence
equilibrium by assuming formulas for the Kondo lattice temperature depending on
the valence configuration. Comparison is also made with the appearance of long
range magnetism in cerium and ytterbium heavy fermion compounds.Comment: 22 pages including figure
Monitoring Handbook 6: Analyzing and interpreting monitoring data
The basic purpose of data analysis is to identify patterns of change in your indicator over time, and to evaluate these changes. Without doing some kind of analysis, it will be difficult for you to know the effect your project is actually having. The data analysis techniques presented in this handbook are not difficult. Most of them can be easily done using little more than a calculator and scratch paper. If necessary, there are resources listed in the handbook for additional assistance analyzing your data
Field Reentrance of the Hidden Order State of URu2Si2 under Pressure
Combination of neutron scattering and thermal expansion measurements under
pressure shows that the so-called hidden order phase of URu2Si2 reenters in
magnetic field when antiferromagnetism (AF) collapses at H_AF (T). Macroscopic
pressure studies of the HO-AF boundaries were realized at different pressures
via thermal expansion measurements under magnetic field using a strain gauge.
Microscopic proof at a given pressure is the reappearance of the resonance at
Q_0=(1,0,0) under field which is correlated with the collapse of the AF Bragg
reflections at Q_0.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Transcriptomic analysis of field-droughted sorghum from seedling to maturity reveals biotic and metabolic responses.
Drought is the most important environmental stress limiting crop yields. The C4 cereal sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench] is a critical food, forage, and emerging bioenergy crop that is notably drought-tolerant. We conducted a large-scale field experiment, imposing preflowering and postflowering drought stress on 2 genotypes of sorghum across a tightly resolved time series, from plant emergence to postanthesis, resulting in a dataset of nearly 400 transcriptomes. We observed a fast and global transcriptomic response in leaf and root tissues with clear temporal patterns, including modulation of well-known drought pathways. We also identified genotypic differences in core photosynthesis and reactive oxygen species scavenging pathways, highlighting possible mechanisms of drought tolerance and of the delayed senescence, characteristic of the stay-green phenotype. Finally, we discovered a large-scale depletion in the expression of genes critical to arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis, with a corresponding drop in AM fungal mass in the plants' roots
Precise study of the resonance at Q0=(1,0,0) in URu2Si2
New inelastic neutron scattering experiments have been performed on URu2Si2
with special focus on the response at Q0=(1,0,0), which is a clear signature of
the hidden order (HO) phase of the compound. With polarized inelastic neutron
experiments, it is clearly shown that below the HO temperature (T0 = 17.8 K) a
collective excitation (the magnetic resonance at E0 \approx 1.7 meV) as well as
a magnetic continuum co-exist. Careful measurements of the temperature
dependence of the resonance lead to the observation that its position shifts
abruptly in temperature with an activation law governed by the partial gap
opening and that its integrated intensity has a BCS-type temperature
dependence. Discussion with respect to recent theoretical development is made
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