71,809 research outputs found
Helium Leak Measurements Using CO2 as a Carrier
Detection delay defects are omitted by using helium mass spectrometer leak detector combined with several known procedures. Technique combines carbon dioxide purging, cryogenic separating helium accumulation, and use of carbon dioxide as carrier gas
Controlled ecological life support system - biological problems
The general processes and controls associated with two distinct experimental paradigms are examined. Specific areas for research related to biotic production (food production) and biotic decomposition (waste management) are explored. The workshop discussions were directed toward Elemental cycles and the biological factors that affect the transformations of nutrients into food, of food material into waste, and of waste into nutrients were discussed. To focus on biological issues, the discussion assumed that (1) food production would be by biological means (thus excluding chemical synthesis), (2) energy would not be a limiting factor, and (3) engineering capacity for composition and leak rate would be adequate
Atmosphere Behavior in Gas-Closed Mouse-Algal Systems: An Experimental and Modelling Study
A dual approach of mathematical modelling and laboratory experimentation aimed at examining the gas exchange characteristics of artificial animal/plant systems closed to the ambient atmosphere was initiated. The development of control techniques and management strategies for maintaining the atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide and oxygen at physiological levels is examined. A mathematical model simulating the atmospheric behavior in these systems was developed and an experimental gas closed system was constructed. These systems are described and preliminary results are presented
Search For A Permanent Electric Dipole Moment Using Atomic Indium
We propose indium (In) as a possible candidate for observing the permanent
electric dipole moment (EDM) arising from the violations of parity (P) and
time-reversal (T) symmetries. This atom has been laser cooled and therefore the
measurement of its EDM has the potential of improving on the current best EDM
limit for a paramagnetic atom which comes from thallium. We report the results
of our calculations of the EDM enhancement factor due to the electron EDM and
the ratio of the atomic EDM to the electron-nucleus scalar-pseudoscalar (S-PS)
interaction coupling constant in In in the framework of the relativistic
coupled cluster theory. It might be possible to get new limits for the electron
EDM and the S-PS CP violating coupling constant by combining the results of our
calculations with the measured value of the EDM of In when it is available.
These limits could have important implications for the standard model (SM) of
particle physics.Comment: 5 pages, 1 fig, Rapid Communicatio
The Escape of Ionizing Photons from the Galaxy
The Magellanic Stream and several high velocity clouds have now been detected
in optical line emission. The observed emission measures and kinematics are
most plausibly explained by photoionization due to hot, young stars in the
Galactic disk. The highly favorable orientation of the Stream allows an
unambiguous determination of the fraction of ionizing photons, F_esc, which
escape the disk. We have modelled the production and transport of ionizing
photons through an opaque interstellar medium. Normalization to the Stream
detections requires F_esc = 6%, in reasonable agreement with the flux required
to ionize the Reynolds layer. Neither shock heating nor emission within a hot
Galactic corona can be important in producing the observed H-alpha emission. If
such a large escape fraction is typical of L_* galaxies, star-forming systems
dominate the extragalactic ionizing background. Within the context of this
model, both the three-dimensional orientation of the Stream and the distances
to high-velocity clouds can be determined by sensitive H-alpha observations.Comment: 4 pages; LaTeX2e, emulateapj.sty, apjfonts.sty; 4 encapsulated PS
figures. For correct labels, may need to print Fig. 3 separately due to psfig
limitation. Astrophysical Journal (Letters), accepte
Service Performance Indicators for Infrastructure Investment
Infrastructure systems serving modern economies are highly complex, highly interconnected, and often highly
interactive. The result is increased complexity in investment decision-making, and increased challenges in prioritising
that investment. However, this prioritisation is vital to developing a long-term, sound, robust and achievable pipeline
of national infrastructure.
One key to effective, objective and prudent investment prioritisation is understanding the real performance of
infrastructure. Many metrics are employed to this end, and many are imposed by governments or regulators, but
often these metrics relate only to inputs or outputs in a production process. Whilst these metrics may be useful for
delivery agencies, they largely fail to address the real expectations or requirements of infrastructure users — quality of
service, safety, reliability, and resilience.
What is required is a set of metrics which address not outputs but outcomes — that is, how well does the
infrastructure network meet service needs? This paper reports on a study undertaken at a national level, to identify
service needs across a range of infrastructure sectors, to assess service performance metrics in use, and to show
how they or other suitable metrics can be used to prioritise investment decisions across sectors and jurisdictions
Resolving the Structure of Cold Dark Matter Halos
We examine the effects of mass resolution and force softening on the density
profiles of cold dark matter halos that form within cosmological N-body
simulations. As we increase the mass and force resolution, we resolve
progenitor halos that collapse at higher redshifts and have very high
densities. At our highest resolution we have nearly 3 million particles within
the virial radius, several orders of magnitude more than previously used and we
can resolve more than one thousand surviving dark matter halos within this
single virialised system. The halo profiles become steeper in the central
regions and we may not have achieved convergence to a unique slope within the
inner 10% of the virialised region. Results from two very high resolution halo
simulations yield steep inner density profiles, . The
abundance and properties of arcs formed within this potential will be different
from calculations based on lower resolution simulations. The kinematics of
disks within such a steep potential may prove problematic for the CDM model
when compared with the observed properties of halos on galactic scales.Comment: Final version, to be published in the ApJLetter
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