3,153 research outputs found
Employing pre-stress to generate finite cloaks for antiplane elastic waves
It is shown that nonlinear elastic pre-stress of neo-Hookean hyperelastic
materials can be used as a mechanism to generate finite cloaks and thus render
objects near-invisible to incoming antiplane elastic waves. This approach
appears to negate the requirement for special cloaking metamaterials with
inhomogeneous and anisotropic material properties in this case. These
properties are induced naturally by virtue of the pre-stress. This appears to
provide a mechanism for broadband cloaking since dispersive effects due to
metamaterial microstructure will not arise.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Stabilized lanthanum sulphur compounds
Lanthanum sulfide is maintained in the stable cubic phase form over a temperature range of from 500 C to 1500 C by adding to it small amounts of calcium, barium, or strontium. This compound is an excellent thermoelectric material
Dark spot, Spiral waves and the SW Sex behaviour: it is all about UX Ursae Majoris
We present an analysis of time-resolved, medium resolution optical
spectroscopic observations of UX UMa in the blue (3920-5250 A) and red
(6100-7200 A) wavelength ranges, that were obtained in April 1999 and March
2008 respectively. The observed characteristics of our spectra indicate that UX
UMa has been in different states during those observations. The blue spectra
are very complex. They are dominated by strong and broad single-peaked emission
lines of hydrogen. The high-excitation lines of HeII 4686 and the Bowen blend
are quite strong as well. All the lines consist of a mixture of absorption and
emission components. Using Doppler tomography we have identified four distinct
components of the system: the accretion disc, the secondary star, the bright
spot from the gas stream/disc impact region, and the unique compact area of
absorption in the accretion disc seen as a dark spot in the lower-left quadrant
of the tomograms. In the red wavelength range, both the hydrogen (H_alpha) and
neutral helium (HeI 6678 and HeI 7065) lines were observed in emission and both
exhibited double-peaked profiles. Doppler tomography of these lines reveals
spiral structure in the accretion disc, but in contrast to the blue wavelength
range, there is no evidence for either the dark spot or the gas stream/disc
impact region emission, while the emission from the secondary star is weak.
During the observations in 1999, UX UMa showed many of the defining properties
of the SW Sex stars. However, all these features almost completely disappeared
in 2008. We have also estimated the radial velocity semi-amplitudes K_1 and K_2
and evaluated the system parameters of UX UMa. These estimates are inconsistent
with previous values derived by means of analysis of WD eclipse features in the
light curve in the different wavelength ranges.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, Accepted for publication by MNRA
Ferroelectric characterization and growth optimization of thermally evaporated vinylidene fluoride thin films
Organic thin films have numerous advantages over inorganics in device processing and price. The large polarization of the organic ferroelectric oligomer vinylidene fluoride (VDF) could prove useful for both device applications and the investigation of fundamental physical phenomena. A VDF oligomer thin film vacuum deposition process, such as thermal evaporation, preserves film and interface cleanliness, but is challenging, with successful deposition occurring only within a narrow parameter space. We report on the optimal deposition parameters for VDF oligomer thin films, refining the parameter space for successful deposition, resulting in a high yield of robust ferroelectric films. In particular, we investigate the influence of deposition parameters on surface roughness, and the role that roughness plays in sample yield. The reliable production of ferroelectric films allowed us to perform detailed measurements of previously unreported properties, including the Curie temperature, the temperature and thickness dependence of the coercive field, the melting temperature, and the index of refraction. The ability to successfully grow robust, switchable, well-characterized films makes VDF oligomer a viable candidate in the field of organic ferroelectrics
Deep optical observations of the gamma-ray pulsar PSR J0007+7303 in the CTA 1 supernova remnant
The Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) discovered the time signature of a
radio-silent pulsar coincident with RX J0007.0+7302, a plerion-like X-ray
source at the centre of the CTA 1 supernova remnant. The inferred timing
parameters of the gamma-ray pulsar PSR J0007+7303 (P=315.8 ms; dot{P}\sim3.6
10^{-13} s s^{-1}) point to a Vela-like neutron star, with an age comparable to
that of CTA 1. The PSR J0007+7303 low distance (\sim 1.4 kpc), interstellar
absorption (A_V\sim 1.6), and relatively high energy loss rate (dot{E} \sim4.5
10^{35} erg s^{-1}), make it a suitable candidate for an optical follow-up.
Here, we present deep optical observations of PSR J0007+7303. The pulsar is not
detected in the Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC) images down to a limit of r'\sim
27.6 (3 sigma), the deepest ever obtained for this pulsar, while William
Herschel Telescope (WHT) images yield a limit of V \sim 26.9. Our r'-band limit
corresponds to an optical emission efficiency \eta_{opt}= L_{opt}/dot{E} < 9.4
10^{-8}. This limit is more constraining than those derived for other Vela-like
pulsars, but is still above the measured optical efficiency of the Vela pulsar.
We compared the optical upper limits with the extrapolation of the XMM-Newton
X-ray spectrum and found that the optical emission is compatible with the
extrapolation of the X-ray power-law component, at variance with what is
observed, e.g. in the Vela pulsar.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication on MNRA
Expression in the human brain of retinoic acid induced 1, a protein associated with neurobehavioural disorders
Acknowledgements Funding was provided by the Wellcome Trust and Tenovus Scotland. Prof Fragoso is the recipient of a Post Doctoral Science without Borders grant from the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq, 37450/2012- 7). We also thank Aberdeen Proteomics for assistance with the western blots as well as the Microscopy and Histology Core Facility at the University of Aberdeen for confocal microscopy.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Optical Observations of PSR J0205+6449 - the next optical pulsar?
PSR J0205+6449 is a young ({\approx} 5400 years), Crab-like pulsar detected
in radio and at X and {\gamma}-ray energies and has the third largest spin-down
flux among known rotation powered pulsars. It also powers a bright synchrotron
nebula detected in the optical and X-rays. At a distance of {\approx} 3.2 kpc
and with an extinction comparable to the Crab, PSR J0205+6449 is an obvious
target for optical observations. We observed PSR J0205+6449 with several
optical facilities, including 8m class ground-based telescopes, such as the
Gemini and the Gran Telescopio Canarias. We detected a point source, at a
significance of 5.5{\sigma}, of magnitude i {\approx} 25.5, at the centre of
the optical synchrotron nebula, coincident with the very accurate Chandra and
radio positions of the pulsar. Thus, we discovered a candidate optical
counterpart to PSR J0205+6449. The pulsar candidate counterpart is also
detected in the g ({\approx}27.4) band and weakly in the r ({\approx}26.2)
band. Its optical spectrum is fit by a power law with photon index {\Gamma}0 =
1.9{\pm}0.5, proving that the optical emission if of non-thermal origin, is as
expected for a young pulsar. The optical photon index is similar to the X-ray
one ({\Gamma}X = 1.77{\pm}0.03), although the optical fluxes are below the
extrapolation of the X-ray power spectrum. This would indicate the presence of
a double spectral break between the X-ray and optical energy range, at variance
with what is observed for the Crab and Vela pulsars, but similar to the Large
Magellanic Cloud pulsar PSR B0540-69.Comment: 13 Pages, 4 Tables, 7 Figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA
An evaluation of the Goddard Space Flight Center Library
The character and degree of coincidence between the current and future missions, programs, and projects of the Goddard Space Flight Center and the current and future collection, services, and facilities of its library were determined from structured interviews and discussions with various classes of facility personnel. In addition to the tabulation and interpretation of the data from the structured interview survey, five types of statistical analyses were performed to corroborate (or contradict) the survey results and to produce useful information not readily attainable through survey material. Conclusions reached regarding compatability between needs and holdings, services and buildings, library hours of operation, methods of early detection and anticipation of changing holdings requirements, and the impact of near future programs are presented along with a list of statistics needing collection, organization, and interpretation on a continuing or longitudinal basis
First impressions and perceived roles: Palestinian perceptions on foreign aid
This paper summarizes some results of a wider research on foreign aid that was conducted in the West Bank and Gaza Strip in 2010. It seeks to describe the impressions and feelings of Palestinian aid beneficiaries as well as the roles and functions they attached to foreign aid. To capture and measure local perceptions on Western assistance a series of individual in depth interviews and few focus group interviews were conducted in the Palestinian territories. The interview transcripts were processed by content analysis. As research results show — from the perspective of aid beneficiaries — foreign aid is more related to human dignity than to any economic development. All this implies that frustration with the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict inevitably embraces the donor policies and practices too
Observations of three young gamma-ray pulsars with the Gran Telescopio Canarias
We report the analysis of the first deep optical observations of three
isolated -ray pulsars detected by the {\em Fermi Gamma-ray Space
Telescope}: the radio-loud PSR\, J0248+6021 and PSR\, J0631+1036, and the
radio-quiet PSR\, J0633+0632. The latter has also been detected in the X rays.
The pulsars are very similar in their spin-down age (40--60 kyrs),
spin-down energy ( erg s), and dipolar surface
magnetic field (-- G). These pulsars are promising
targets for multi-wavelength observations, since they have been already
detected in rays and in radio or X-rays. None of them has been
detected yet in the optical band. We observed the three pulsar fields in 2014
with the Spanish 10.4m Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC). We could not find any
candidate optical counterpart to the three pulsars close to their most recent
radio or {\em Chandra} positions down to limits of ,
, for PSR\, J0248+6021, J0631+1036, and J0633+0632,
respectively. From the inferred optical upper limits and estimated distance and
interstellar extinction, we derived limits on the pulsar optical luminosity. We
also searched for the X-ray counterpart to PSR\, J0248+6021 with \chan\ but we
did not detect the pulsar down to a 3 flux limit of
erg cm s (0.3--10 keV). For all these pulsars, we compared the
optical flux upper limits with the extrapolations in the optical domain of the
-ray spectra and compared their multi-wavelength properties with those
of other -ray pulsars of comparable age.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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