Search results for "Orders of Magnitude"

showing 10 items of 188 documents

Determination of thermometric parameters from the conductance curve of the normal metal based tunnel junction array

1997

Abstract We propose a method for extracting thermometric parameters from the measured conductance curve, against bias voltage, of a tunnel junction array. Instead of fitting the whole theoretical conductance curve to the experiment, we perform several polynomial fits to selected bias regions. The advantages of this method is that polynomial fits are linear in their fitting parameters whereas the theoretical form for the conductance is inherently nonlinear. This way the proposed method is about three orders of magnitude faster than the nonlinear fit. Optimizing this polynomial fit procedure is discussed.

Polynomial regressionMathematical optimizationPolynomialNonlinear systemHardware and ArchitectureTunnel junctionOrders of magnitude (temperature)Mathematical analysisGeneral Physics and AstronomyConductanceBiasingMathematicsComputer Physics Communications
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Polymer Solidification under Pressure and High Cooling Rates

2000

Abstract Polymer solidification under processing conditions is a complex phenomenon in which the kinetics of flow, high thermal gradients and high pressures determine the product morphology. The study of polymer structure formed under pressure has been mainly made using conventional techniques such as dilatometry and differential scanning calorimetry under isothermal conditions or non isothermal conditions but at cooling rates several orders of magnitude lower than those experienced in industrial processes. A new equipment has been recently developed and improved to study the crystallization of polypropylene when subjected to pressure and cooled rapidly. An experimental apparatus essentiall…

Polypropylenechemistry.chemical_classificationSettore ING-IND/24 - Principi Di Ingegneria ChimicaMaterials sciencePolymers and PlasticsOrders of magnitude (temperature)General Chemical EngineeringAnalytical chemistryPolymerIndentation hardnessIndustrial and Manufacturing EngineeringIsothermal processlaw.inventionchemistry.chemical_compoundDifferential scanning calorimetrychemistryOptical microscopelawPolymer solidificationMaterials ChemistryComposite materialCrystallization
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Standard Model CP-violation and Baryon asymmetry

1993

Simply based on CP arguments, we argue against a Standard Model explanation of the baryon asymmetry of the universe in the presence of a first order phase transition. A CP-asymmetry is found in the reflection coefficients of quarks hitting the phase boundary created during the electroweak transition. The problem is analyzed both in an academic zero temperature case and in the realistic finite temperature one. The building blocks are similar in both cases: Kobayashi-Maskawa CP-violation, CP-even phases in the reflection coefficients of quarks, and physical transitions due to fermion self-energies. In both cases an effect is present at order $\alpha_W^2$ in rate. A standard GIM behaviour is f…

QuarkPhysicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsPhase transitionParticle physicsElectroweak interactionHigh Energy Physics::PhenomenologyGeneral Physics and AstronomyFísicaFOS: Physical sciencesAstronomy and AstrophysicsFermionStandard ModelHigh Energy Physics - PhenomenologyBaryon asymmetryHigh Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph)Orders of magnitude (time)CP violationHigh Energy Physics::ExperimentParticle Physics - Phenomenology
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Rotational quenching of monodeuterated water by hydrogen molecules

2011

Cross sections and rate coefficients for low lying rotational transitions in HDO induced by para and ortho-H(2) collisions are presented for the first time. Calculations have been performed at the close-coupling and coupled-states levels with the deuterated variant of the H(2)O-H(2) interaction potential of Valiron et al. [J. Chem. Phys., 2008, 129, 134306]. Rate coefficients are presented for temperatures between 5 and 100 K and are compared to the corresponding rates for H(2)O and D(2)O. Significant differences caused by the isotopic substitution, in particular the C(2v) symmetry breaking, are observed. Finally, our rates are found to be significantly larger (by up to three orders of magn…

Quenching (fluorescence)HydrogenChemistryAbundance (chemistry)Analytical chemistryGeneral Physics and AstronomyRotational transitionchemistry.chemical_elementInteraction potentialDeuteriumOrders of magnitude (time)Computational chemistrySymmetry breakingPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryAstrophysics::Galaxy AstrophysicsPhysical Chemistry Chemical Physics
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Peak shape for a quadrupole mass spectrometer: comparison of computer simulation and experiment

2000

Abstract Computer simulations of ion trajectories have been used to evaluate the performance of a quadrupole mass spectrometer. Consideration has been given to realistic fields modeled on a commercial system as well as experimental distributions with respect to ion entry position, axial and radial velocity and relative phase of the quadrupole field. Determination of the mass filter acceptance-area as a function of the mass setting yields mass peak shapes with a dynamic range of more than seven orders of magnitude and thus provides estimates for abundance sensitivity. Results from these simulations are found to give excellent agreement with experimental measurements for different elements in…

Range (particle radiation)ChemistryDynamic rangeMonte Carlo methodCondensed Matter PhysicsIonRadial velocityOrders of magnitude (time)SubstructurePhysical and Theoretical ChemistryAtomic physicsInstrumentationQuadrupole mass analyzerSpectroscopyInternational Journal of Mass Spectrometry
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SELF SIMILARITY IN SWELLING SYSTEMS: FRACTAL PROPERTIES OF PEAT

1994

Sphagnum peat gives an example of a swelling system with a self-similar structure in sufficiently wide range of scales. The surface fractal dimension, dfs, has been calculated by means of thermodynamic method on the basis of water adsorption and capillary equilibrium measurements. This method makes possible the exploration of the self-similarity in the scale range over at least 4 decimal orders of magnitude from 1 nm to 10 μm. In a sample explored, two ranges of fractality have been observed: dfs ≈ 2.55 in the range 1.5–80 nm and dfs ≈ 2.42 in the range 0.25–9 µm.

Range (particle radiation)Materials scienceSelf-similarityCapillary actionApplied MathematicsThermodynamicsFractal dimensionFractalAdsorptionModeling and SimulationmedicineOrders of magnitude (data)Geometry and TopologySwellingmedicine.symptomFractals
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Chapter 7 HITRAP: A Facility at GSI for Highly Charged Ions

2008

Abstract An overview and status report of the new trapping facility for highly charged ions at the Gesellschaft fur Schwerionenforschung is presented. The construction of this facility started in 2005 and is expected to be completed in 2008. Once operational, highly charged ions will be loaded from the experimental storage ring ESR into the HITRAP facility, where they are decelerated and cooled. The kinetic energy of the initially fast ions is reduced by more than fourteen orders of magnitude and their thermal energy is cooled to cryogenic temperatures. The cold ions are then delivered to a broad range of atomic physics experiments.

Range (particle radiation)business.industryOrders of magnitude (temperature)ChemistryTrappingStatus reportKinetic energyIonNuclear physicsPhysics::Atomic PhysicsAtomic physicsbusinessThermal energyStorage ring
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HIERARCHICAL MELTING OF ONE-DIMENSIONAL INCOMMENSURATE STRUCTURES

2016

We study the low—temperature properties of quasi one—dimensional, incommensurate structures which are described by a Frenkel—Kontorova—like model. A new type of renormalization method will be presented, which is determined by the continued fraction expansion of the incommensurability ratio ζ. (This method yields a hierarchy of renormalized Hamiltonians ϰ(n,p) describing the thermal behavior for temperatures T = O(T(n,p)), where T(n,p) follows from the continued fraction expansion of ζ. By means of this method the low—temperature specific heat c(T) and the static structure factor S(q) are calculated for fixed ζ. c(T) possesses a hierarchy of Schottky anomalies related to the rational approxi…

RenormalizationPhysicsCondensed matter physicsHierarchy (mathematics)ThermalOrders of magnitude (speed)Sensitivity (control systems)Type (model theory)Continued fractionStructure factor
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The relaxation dynamics of a simple glass former confined in a pore

2000

We use molecular dynamics computer simulations to investigate the relaxation dynamics of a binary Lennard-Jones liquid confined in a narrow pore. We find that the average dynamics is strongly influenced by the confinement in that time correlation functions are much more stretched than in the bulk. By investigating the dynamics of the particles as a function of their distance from the wall, we can show that this stretching is due to a strong dependence of the relaxation time on this distance, i.e. that the dynamics is spatially very heterogeneous. In particular we find that the typical relaxation time of the particles close to the wall is orders of magnitude larger than the one of particles …

SIMPLE (dark matter experiment)Materials scienceStatistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Relaxation (NMR)Dynamics (mechanics)General Physics and AstronomyFOS: Physical sciencesFunction (mathematics)Disordered Systems and Neural Networks (cond-mat.dis-nn)Condensed Matter - Disordered Systems and Neural NetworksTime correlationMolecular dynamicsOrders of magnitude (time)Chemical physicsCondensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics
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Microstructural modifications resulting from the dehydration of gypsum

2001

Various faces of dehydrated gypsum-cleaved blocks and single crystals have been investigated using optical microscopy, SEM, and TEM. The orientation of the cracks with respect to the initial gypsum structure and the Miller indices of all possible crack planes have been determined. These crack planes have been found to be few and to correspond to planes of high atomic density in the initial and final structures, therefore characterised by a low surface tension. These observations allow us to propose cracking criteria based on general concepts of crystal growth. The cracks' dimensions measured on different faces of the pseudomorph are distributed over several orders of magnitude and seems to …

Scanning electron microscopeChemistryOrders of magnitude (temperature)MineralogyCrystal growthGeneral ChemistryCondensed Matter PhysicsMicrostructurelaw.inventionSurface tensionCrackingOptical microscopelawmental disordersGeneral Materials ScienceComposite materialPseudomorphSolid State Ionics
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