3,112 research outputs found
Effect of Hydrodynamic Force on Microcantilever Vibrations: Applications to Liquid-Phase Chemical Sensing
At the microscale, cantilever vibrations depend not only on the microstructure’s properties and geometry but also on the properties of the surrounding medium. In fact, when a microcantilever vibrates in a fluid, the fluid offers resistance to the motion of the beam. The study of the influence of the hydrodynamic force on the microcantilever’s vibrational spectrum can be used to either (1) optimize the use of microcantilevers for chemical detection in liquid media or (2) extract the mechanical properties of the fluid. The classical method for application (1) in gas is to operate the microcantilever in the dynamic transverse bending mode for chemical detection. However, the performance of microcantilevers excited in this standard out-of-plane dynamic mode drastically decreases in viscous liquid media. When immersed in liquids, in order to limit the decrease of both the resonant frequency and the quality factor, and improve sensitivity in sensing applications, alternative vibration modes that primarily shear the fluid (rather than involving motion normal to the fluid/beam interface) have been studied and tested: these include in-plane vibration modes (lateral bending mode and elongation mode). For application (2), the classical method to measure the rheological properties of fluids is to use a rheometer. However, such systems require sampling (no in-situ measurements) and a relatively large sample volume (a few milliliters). Moreover, the frequency range is limited to low frequencies (less than 200Hz). To overcome the limitations of this classical method, an alternative method based on the use of silicon microcantilevers is presented. The method, which is based on the use of analytical equations for the hydrodynamic force, permits the measurement of the complex shear modulus of viscoelastic fluids over a wide frequency range
Changes and distribution of economic surplus
Economic surplus is the growth of good and services after the increase of factor of productions, labor and capital, is paid. It measures the technical advances in economy and is stated in percent of value added. It is shared out between different components: hourly wage, income of capital unit, taxes on production and transfers abroad. Since 1978, the surplus is 1.6% a year on average with a mean slightly more important during the eighties (2.2%) than during the nineties (0.9%). This decrease can be viewed as a reduction in technical advances. A large part can be explained by the economic conditions at the beginning of nineties. Surplus is actually very sensitive to the fluctuations of activity. Over the two decades, most of the surplus has been given to wage. The income of capital unit has been steady on average with large fluctuations. The changes in terms of trade and taxes on internal demand take a part of surplus. Since 1999, surplus given to the factors of production has been reduced by more than one percent. At the first semester of 2000, surplus includes the effects of workweek reduction. Hourly productivity of labor and surplus increases. This change goes with an increase of hourly wages.economic surplus, factor costs, terms of trade
Oscillations in the expression of a self-repressed gene induced by a slow transcriptional dynamics
We revisit the dynamics of a gene repressed by its own protein in the case
where the transcription rate does not adapt instantaneously to protein
concentration but is a dynamical variable. We derive analytical criteria for
the appearance of sustained oscillations and find that they require degradation
mechanisms much less nonlinear than for infinitely fast regulation.
Deterministic predictions are also compared with stochastic simulations of this
minimal genetic oscillator
Oscillations in the expression of a self-repressed gene induced by a slow transcriptional dynamics
We revisit the dynamics of a gene repressed by its own protein in the case
where the transcription rate does not adapt instantaneously to protein
concentration but is a dynamical variable. We derive analytical criteria for
the appearance of sustained oscillations and find that they require degradation
mechanisms much less nonlinear than for infinitely fast regulation.
Deterministic predictions are also compared with stochastic simulations of this
minimal genetic oscillator
Film dynamics and lubricant depletion by droplets moving on lubricated surfaces
Lubricated surfaces have shown promise in numerous applications where
impinging foreign droplets must be removed easily; however, before they can be
widely adopted, the problem of lubricant depletion, which eventually leads to
decreased performance, must be solved. Despite recent progress, a quantitative
mechanistic explanation for lubricant depletion is still lacking. Here, we
first explained the shape of a droplet on a lubricated surface by balancing the
Laplace pressures across interfaces. We then showed that the lubricant film
thicknesses beneath, behind, and wrapping around a moving droplet change
dynamically with droplet's speed---analogous to the classical
Landau-Levich-Derjaguin problem. The interconnected lubricant dynamics results
in the growth of the wetting ridge around the droplet, which is the dominant
source of lubricant depletion. We then developed an analytic expression for the
maximum amount of lubricant that can be depleted by a single droplet.
Counter-intuitively, faster moving droplets subjected to higher driving forces
deplete less lubricant than their slower moving counterparts. The insights
developed in this work will inform future work and the design of longer-lasting
lubricated surfaces
SUMER: Solar Ultraviolet Measurements of Emitted Radiation
The SUMER (solar ultraviolet measurements of emitted radiation) experiment is described. It will study flows, turbulent motions, waves, temperatures and densities of the plasma in the upper atmosphere of the Sun. Structures and events associated with solar magnetic activity will be observed on various spatial and temporal scales. This will contribute to the understanding of coronal heating processes and the solar wind expansion. The instrument will take images of the Sun in EUV (extreme ultra violet) light with high resolution in space, wavelength and time. The spatial resolution and spectral resolving power of the instrument are described. Spectral shifts can be determined with subpixel accuracy. The wavelength range extends from 500 to 1600 angstroms. The integration time can be as short as one second. Line profiles, shifts and broadenings are studied. Ratios of temperature and density sensitive EUV emission lines are established
Short-range repulsion and isospin dependence in the KN system
The short-range properties of the KN interaction are studied within the
meson-exchange model of the Juelich group. Specifically, dynamical explanations
for the phenomenological short-range repulsion, required in this model for
achieving agreement with the empirical KN data, are explored. Evidence is found
that contributions from the exchange of a heavy scalar-isovector meson
(a_0(980)) as well as from genuine quark-gluon exchange processes are needed.
Taking both mechanisms into account a satisfactory description of the KN phase
shifts can be obtained without resorting to phenomenological pieces.Comment: 26 pages, 5 figure
Magnetic properties of Gd_xY_{1-x}Fe_2Zn_{20}: dilute, large, moments in a nearly ferromagnetic Fermi liquid
Single crystals of the dilute, rare earth bearing, pseudo-ternary series,
Gd_xY_{1-x}Fe_2Zn_{20} were grown out of Zn-rich solution. Measurements of
magnetization, resistivity and heat capacity on Gd_xY_{1-x}Fe_2Zn_{20} samples
reveal ferromagnetic order of Gd^{3+} local moments across virtually the whole
series (). The magnetic properties of this series, including the
ferromagnetic ordering, the reduced saturated moments at base temperature, the
deviation of the susceptibilities from Curie-Weiss law and the anomalies in the
resistivity, are understood within the frame work of dilute,
moments (Gd^{3+}) embedded in a nearly ferromagnetic Fermi liquid
(YFe_2Zn_{20}). The s-d model is employed to further explain the variation of
with x as well as the temperature dependences of of the
susceptibilities
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