1,483 research outputs found
Analysis and preliminary design of optical sensors for propulsion control
A fiber-optic sensor concept screening study was performed. Twenty sensor subsystems were identified and evaluated. Two concepts selected for further study were the Fabry-Perot fiber-optic temperature sensor and the pulse-width-modulated phosphorescent temperature sensor. Various designs suitable for a Fabry-Perot temperature sensor to be used as a remote fiber-optic transducer were investigated. As a result, a particular design was selected and constructed. Tests on this device show that spectral peaks are produced from visible white light, and the change in wavelength of the spectral peaks produced by a change in temperature is consistent with theory and is 36 nm/C for the first order peak. A literature search to determine a suitable phosphor for implementing the pulse-width-modulated fiber optic temperature sensor was conducted. This search indicated that such a device could be made to function for temperatures up to approximately 200 C. Materials like ZnCdS and ZnSe activated with copper will be particularly applicable to temperature sensing in the cryogenic to room temperature region. While this sensing concept is probably not applicable to jet engines, the simplicity and potential reliability make the concept highly desirable for other applications
Pseudogap phase formation in the crossover from Bose-Einstein condensation to BCS superconductivity in low dimensional systems
A phase diagram for a 2D metal with variable carrier density has been studied
using the modulus-phase representation for the order parameter in a fully
microscopic treatment. This amounts to splitting the degrees of freedom into
neutral fermion and charged boson degrees of freedom. Although true long range
order is forbidden in two dimensions, long range order for the neutral fermions
is possible since this does not violate any continuous symmetry. The phase
fluctuations associated with the charged degrees of freedom destroy long range
order in the full system as expected. The presence of the neutral order
parameter gives rise to new features in the superconducting condensate
formation in low dimensional systems. The resulting phase diagram contains a
new phase which lies above the superconducting (here
Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless) phase and below the normal (Fermi-liquid)
phase. We identify this phase with the pseudogap phase observed in underdoped
high- superconducting compounds above their critical temperature. We
also find that the phase diagram persists even in the presence of weak
3-dimensionalisation.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX; invited paper presented at New^3SC-1, Baton Rouge,
USA, 1998. To be published in Int.J.Mod.Phys.
Table 4. Marking codes Type number
1. Product profile 1.1 General description Bidirectional ElectroStatic Discharge (ESD) protection diodes in a very small SOD323 (SC-76) SMD plastic package designed to protect one signal line from the damage caused by ESD and other transients
Polaron and bipolaron dispersion curves in one dimension for intermediate coupling
Bipolaron energies are calculated as a function of wave vector by a
variational method of Gurari appropriate for weak or intermediate coupling
strengths, for a model with electron-phonon interactions independent of phonon
wave vectors and a short-ranged Coulomb repulsion. It is assumed that the bare
electrons have a constant effective mass. A two-parameter trial function is
taken for the relative motion of the two electrons in the bipolaron. Energies
of bipolarons are compared with those of two single polarons as a function of
wave vector for various parameter values. Results for effective masses at the
zone center are also obtained. Comparison is made with data of other authors
for bipolarons in the Hubbard-Holstein model, which differs mainly from the
present model in that it has a tight-binding band structure for the bare
electrons.Comment: 11 pages including six figures. Physical Review B, to be publishe
Phase Fluctuations and Pseudogap Properties: Influence of Nonmagnetic Impurities
The presence of nonmagnetic impurities in a 2D ``bad metal'' depresses the
superconducting Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless transition temperature, while
leaving the pairing energy scale unchanged. Thus the region of the pseudogap
non-superconducting phase, where the modulus of the order parameter is non-zero
but its phase is random, and which opens at the pairing temperature is
substantially bigger than for the clean system. This supports the premise that
fluctuations in the phase of the order parameter can in principle describe the
pseudogap phenomena in high- materials over a rather wide range of
temperatures and carrier densities. The temperature dependence of the bare
superfluid density is also discussed.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX, 1 EPS figure; final version to appear in
Low.Temp.Phy
Finite Temperature Time-Dependent Effective Theory for the Phase Field in two-dimensional d-wave Neutral Superconductor
We derive finite temperature time-dependent effective actions for the phase
of the pairing field, which are appropriate for a 2D electron system with both
non-retarded d- and s-wave attraction. As for s-wave pairing the d-wave
effective action contains terms with Landau damping, but their structure
appears to be different from the s-wave case due to the fact that the Landau
damping is determined by the quasiparticle group velocity v_{g}, which for
d-wave pairing does not have the same direction as the non-interacting Fermi
velocity v_{F}. We show that for d-wave pairing the Landau term has a linear
low temperature dependence and in contrast to the s-wave case are important for
all finite temperatures. A possible experimental observation of the phase
excitations is discussed.Comment: 23 pages, RevTeX4, 10 EPS figures; final version to appear in PR
U and Th content in the Central Apennines continental crust: a contribution to the determination of the geo-neutrinos flux at LNGS
The regional contribution to the geo-neutrino signal at Gran Sasso National
Laboratory (LNGS) was determined based on a detailed geological, geochemical
and geophysical study of the region. U and Th abundances of more than 50
samples representative of the main lithotypes belonging to the Mesozoic and
Cenozoic sedimentary cover were analyzed. Sedimentary rocks were grouped into
four main "Reservoirs" based on similar paleogeographic conditions and
mineralogy. Basement rocks do not outcrop in the area. Thus U and Th in the
Upper and Lower Crust of Valsugana and Ivrea-Verbano areas were analyzed. Based
on geological and geophysical properties, relative abundances of the various
reservoirs were calculated and used to obtain the weighted U and Th abundances
for each of the three geological layers (Sedimentary Cover, Upper and Lower
Crust). Using the available seismic profile as well as the stratigraphic
records from a number of exploration wells, a 3D modelling was developed over
an area of 2^{\circ}x2^{\circ} down to the Moho depth, for a total volume of
about 1.2x10^6 km^3. This model allowed us to determine the volume of the
various geological layers and eventually integrate the Th and U contents of the
whole crust beneath LNGS. On this base the local contribution to the
geo-neutrino flux (S) was calculated and added to the contribution given by the
rest of the world, yielding a Refined Reference Model prediction for the
geo-neutrino signal in the Borexino detector at LNGS: S(U) = (28.7 \pm 3.9) TNU
and S(Th) = (7.5 \pm 1.0) TNU. An excess over the total flux of about 4 TNU was
previously obtained by Mantovani et al. (2004) who calculated, based on general
worldwide assumptions, a signal of 40.5 TNU. The considerable thickness of the
sedimentary rocks, almost predominantly represented by U- and Th- poor
carbonatic rocks in the area near LNGS, is responsible for this difference.Comment: 45 pages, 5 figures, 12 tables; accepted for publication in GC
Promotion of access to essential medicines for Non-Communicable Diseases: Practical implications of the UN Political Declaration
Access to medicines and vaccines to prevent and treat non-communicable diseases (NCDs) is unacceptably low worldwide. In the 2011 UN political declaration on the prevention and control of NCDs, heads of government made several commitments related to access to essential medicines, technologies, and vaccines for such diseases. 30 years of experience with policies for essential medicines and 10 years of scaling up of HIV treatment have provided the knowledge needed to address barriers to long-term effective treatment and prevention of NCDs. More medicines can be acquired within existing budgets with efficient selection, procurement, and use of generic medicines. Furthermore, low-income and middle-income countries need to increase mobilisation of domestic resources to cater for the many patients with NCDs who do not have access to treatment. Existing initiatives for HIV treatment offer useful lessons that can enhance access to pharmaceutical management of NCDs and improve adherence to long-term treatment of chronic illness; policy makers should also address unacceptable inequities in access to controlled opioid analgesics. In addition to off-patent medicines, governments can promote access to new and future on-patent medicinal products through coherent and equitable health and trade policies, particularly those for intellectual property. Frequent conflicts of interest need to be identified and managed, and indicators and targets for access to NCD medicines should be used to monitor progress. Only with these approaches can a difference be made to the lives of hundreds of millions of current and future patients with NCDs
Geochemical Processes and Controls Affecting Water Quality of the Karst Area of Big Creek near Mt. Judea, Arkansas
Karst regions typically are considered to be vulnerable with respect to various land-use activities, owing to the intimate association of surface and groundwater and lack of contaminant attenuation provided by most karst aquifers. Inasmuch as the soluble rocks of the karst landscape can be dissolved to create large, rapid-flow zones that compete successfully with surface streams, groundwater and subsurface flow represent a much larger component of the hydrologic budget in karst regions than in areas where non-soluble rocks predominate. Karst areas typically are distinguished by being unique, but some general approaches can be applied to characterize the hydrology of the area. These approaches include an evaluation of the degree of karstification, the hydrologic attributes of the groundwater flow system, the baseline water quality, the time-of-travel through the karst flow system, and the general flux moving through the system. The nature of potential contaminants and their total mass and range of concentrations are critical to understanding the potential environmental risk. This study describes the characterization of the baseline water quality of the shallow karst Boone aquifer and surface streams and springs to determine major processes and controls affecting water quality in the region, and to assess 2 years of waste spreading. Parameters evaluated include major constituents, contaminants and their breakdown products from the industrial operation of a concentrated animal-feeding operation (CAFO) on Big Creek, the indicator pathogen, E. coli, dissolved oxygen, selected trace metals, and other ancillary water-quality attributes that are directly observable in the environment. Determination of pre-CAFO water quality was accomplished by sampling approximately 40 sites that included wells, springs, and streams
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