11,977 research outputs found
Eddy current generation enhancement using ferrite for electromagnetic acoustic transduction
Eddy currents are generated in an electrically conducting surface as a step in electromagnetic acoustic transduction (EAT). In eddy current testing, wire coils are often wound onto a ferrite core to increase the generated eddy current. With EAT, increased coil inductance is unacceptable as it leads to a reduction in the amplitude of a given frequency of eddy current from a limited voltage source, particularly where the current arises from capacitor discharge. The authors present a method for EAT where ferrite is used to increase the eddy current amplitude without significantly increasing coil inductance or changing the frequency content of the eddy current
Cultural methods of detection for microorganisms: recent advances and successes
Most microbiological methods require culture to allow organisms to recover or to selectively increase, and target organisms are identified by growth on specific agar media. Many cultural methods take several days to complete and even then the results require confirmation. Alternative techniques include the use of chromogenic and fluorogenic substances to identify bacteria as they are growing, selective capture using antibodies after short periods of growth, molecular techniques, and direct staining with or without flow cytometry for enumeration and identification. Future microbiologists may not use culture but depend on the use of specific probes and sophisticated detection systems
Gauged Q ball in a piecewise parabolic potential
Q ball solutions are considered within the theory of a complex scalar field
with a gauged
U(1) symmetry and a parabolic-type potential. In the thin-walled limit, we
show explicitly that there is a maximum size for these objects because of the
repulsive Coulomb force. The size of Q ball will increase with the decrease of
local minimum of the potential. And when the two minima degenerate, the energy
stored within the surface of the Q ball becomes significant.
Furthermore, we find an analytic expression for gauged Q ball, which is
beyond the conventional thin-walled limit.Comment: 1 figure
Signal enhancement of the in-plane and out-of-plane Rayleigh wave components
Several groups have reported an enhancement of the ultrasonic Rayleigh wave when scanning close to a surface-breaking defect in a metal sample. This enhancement may be explained as an interference effect where the waves passing directly between source and receiver interfere with those waves reflected back from the defect. We present finite element models of the predicted enhancement when approaching a defect, along with experiments performed using electromagnetic acoustic transducers sensitive to either in-plane or out-of-plane motion. A larger enhancement of the in-plane motion than the out-of-plane motion is observed and can be explained by considering ultrasonic reflections and mode conversion at the defect
Quantum dense coding in multiparticle entangled states via local measurements
In this paper, we study quantum dense coding between two arbitrarily fixed
particles in a (N+2)-particle maximally-entangled states through introducing an
auxiliary qubit and carrying out local measurements. It is shown that the
transmitted classical information amount through such an entangled quantum
channel usually is less than two classical bits. However, the information
amount may reach two classical bits of information, and the classical
information capacity is independent of the number of the entangled particles in
the initial entangled state under certain conditions. The results offer deeper
insights to quantum dense coding via quantum channels of multi-particle
entangled states.Comment: 3 pages, no figur
Dimensional crossover of thermal conductance in graphene nanoribbons: A first-principles approach
First-principles density-functional calculations are performed to investigate
the thermal transport properties in graphene nanoribbons (GNRs). The
dimensional crossover of thermal conductance from one to two dimensions (2D) is
clearly demonstrated with increasing ribbon width. The thermal conductance of
GNRs in a few nanometer width already exhibits an approximate low-temperature
dependence of , like that of 2D graphene sheet which is attributed to
the quadratic nature of dispersion relation for the out-of-plane acoustic
phonon modes. Using a zone-folding method, we heuristically derive the
dimensional crossover of thermal conductance with the increase of ribbon width.
Combining our calculations with the experimental phonon mean-free path, some
typical values of thermal conductivity at room temperature are estimated for
GNRs and for 2D graphene sheet, respectively. Our findings clarify the issue of
low-temperature dependence of thermal transport in GNRs and suggest a
calibration range of thermal conductivity for experimental measurements in
graphene-based materials.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure
Persistent spin current in a spin-orbit coupling/normal hybrid ring
We investigate the equilibrium property of a mesoscopic ring with spin orbit
(SO) interaction. It is well known that for a normal mesoscopic ring threaded
by a magnetic flux, the electron acquires a Berry phase that induces the
persistent (charge) current. Similarly, the spin of electron acquires a spin
Berry phase traversing the ring with SO interaction. It is this spin Berry
phase that induces a persistent spin current. To demonstrate its existence, we
calculate the persistent spin current without accompanying charge current in
the normal region in a hybrid mesoscopic ring. We point out that this
persistent spin current describes the real spin motion and can be observed
experimentally.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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