13,331 research outputs found
Ginzburg-landau-type multiphase field model for competing fcc and bcc nucleation
The official published version of the Article can be accesed from the link below - Copyright @ 2011 APSWe address crystal nucleation and fcc-bcc phase selection in alloys using a multiphase field model that relies on Ginzburg-Landau free energies of the liquid-fcc, liquid-bcc, and fcc-bcc subsystems, and determine the properties of the nuclei as a function of composition, temperature, and structure. With a realistic choice for the free energy of the fcc-bcc interface, the model predicts well the fcc-bcc phase-selection boundary in the Fe-Ni system.This work has been supported by the Hungarian
Academy of Sciences under contract OTKA-K-62588, and by the ESA under PECS Contract No. 98059. Work by JRM has been sponsored by the Materials Sciences and Engineering Division, Office of Basic Energy Sci-
ences, U.S. Department of Energy
Children's basic memory processes, stress and maltreatment
Building upon methods and research utilized with normative populations, we examine extant assumptions regarding the effects of child maltreatment on memory. The effects of stress on basic memory processes is examined, and potential neurobiological changes relevant to memory development are examined. The impact of maltreatment-related sequelae (including dissociation and depression) on basic memory processes as well as false memories and suggestibility are also outlined. Although there is a clear need for additional research, the investigations that do exist reveal that maltreated children's basic memory processes are not reliably different from that of other, nonmaltreated children
MANAGING THE INCONCEIVABLE: PARTICIPATORY ASSESSMENTS OF IMPACTS AND RESPONSES TO EXTREME CLIMATE CHANGE
A comprehensive understanding of the implications of extreme climate change requires an in-depth exploration of the perceptions and reactions of the affected stakeholder groups and the lay public. The project on “Atlantic sea level rise: Adaptation to imaginable worst-case climate change” (Atlantis) has studied one such case, the collapse of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet and a subsequent 5-6 meter sea-level rise. Possible methods are presented for assessing the societal consequences of impacts and adaptation options in selected European regions by involving representatives of pertinent stakeholders. Results of a comprehensive review of participatory integrated assessment methods with a view to their applicability in climate impact studies are summarized including Simulation-Gaming techniques, the Policy Exercise method, and the Focus Group technique. Succinct presentations of these three methods are provided together with short summaries of relevant earlier applications to gain insights into the possible design options. Building on these insights, four basic versions of design procedures suitable for use in the Atlantis project are presented. They draw on design elements of several methods and combine them to fit the characteristics and fulfill the needs of addressing the problem of extreme sea-level rise. The selected participatory techniques and the procedure designs might well be useful in other studies assessing climate change impacts and exploring adaptation options.sea level rise, West Antarctic ice sheet, climate change
Belleville spring assembly with elastic guides
Belleville spring assembly with elastic guides having low hysteresi
Effect of Chloride Ion Content in Unsymmetrical Dimethylhydrazine Propellant on Fracture Properties of Structural Alloys
No abstract availabl
Microstructure of co-evaporated CoCr films with perpendicular anisotropy
Coevaporation of Co and Cr is applied to achieve good magnetic characteristics of media deposited at low temperature. The opposed oblique incidence vapor flux induces a columnar alignment parallel to the evaporation plane. Further, a process-induced segregation is present which introduces separated Co-rich and Cr-rich regions. A selective etching process is carried out to find proof of this. With increasing process temperature, nonelongated columns develop. The columnar axes are inclined towards the Co source at a smaller angle than the angle of incidence. The texture axes are also inclined, as are the anisotropy axes. The process-induced segregation results in an enhanced coercivity and saturation magnetization. A small in-plane anisotropy coincides with the direction of columnar alignment. At a higher process temperature, the column, texture, and anisotropy axis tilting decrease
Survival analysis of the optical brightness of GRB host galaxies
We studied the unbiased optical brightness distribution which was calculated
from the survival analysis of host galaxies and its relationship with the Swift
GRB data of the host galaxies observed by the Keck telescopes. Based on the
sample obtained from merging the Swift GRB table and the Keck optical data we
also studied the dependence of this distribution on the data of the GRBs.
Finally, we compared the HGs distribution with standard galaxies distribution
which is in the DEEP2 galaxies catalog.Comment: Swift: 10 Years of Discovery. Conference paper. 2-5 December 2014. La
Sapienza University, Rome, Ital
Spin squeezing and entanglement for arbitrary spin
A complete set of generalized spin-squeezing inequalities is derived for an
ensemble of particles with an arbitrary spin. Our conditions are formulated
with the first and second moments of the collective angular momentum
coordinates. A method for mapping the spin-squeezing inequalities for spin-1/2
particles to entanglement conditions for spin-j particles is also presented. We
apply our mapping to obtain a generalization of the original spin-squeezing
inequality to higher spins. We show that, for large particle numbers, a
spin-squeezing parameter for entanglement detection based on one of our
inequalities is strictly stronger than the original spin-squeezing parameter
defined in [A. Sorensen et al., Nature 409, 63 (2001)]. We present a coordinate
system independent form of our inequalities that contains, besides the
correlation and covariance tensors of the collective angular momentum
operators, the nematic tensor appearing in the theory of spin nematics.
Finally, we discuss how to measure the quantities appearing in our inequalities
in experiments.Comment: 18 pages including 3 figures, revtex4; v2: references added, typos
corrected; v3: typos corrected, published versio
Spin squeezing inequalities for arbitrary spin
We determine the complete set of generalized spin squeezing inequalities,
given in terms of the collective angular momentum components, for particles
with an arbitrary spin. They can be used for the experimental detection of
entanglement in an ensemble in which the particles cannot be individually
addressed. We also present a large set of criteria involving collective
observables different from the angular momentum coordinates. We show that some
of the inequalities can be used to detect k-particle entanglement and bound
entanglement.Comment: 4 pages + 2 page supplement, no figures, revtex4; v2: more detailed
explanation, some proofs were moved to the Appendix, published versio
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