AN ELECTRONIC RATCHET

1954 ◽  
Vol 32 (5) ◽  
pp. 356-358
Author(s):  
H. J. Moody ◽  
G. J. B. Crawford

An instrument is described which produces two positive voltage spikes, whose time separation is automatically and systematically increased for each initiating trigger.

1976 ◽  
Vol 230 (1) ◽  
pp. 239-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
JF Boudry ◽  
LC Stoner ◽  
MB Burg

In order to determine the effect of acid lumen pH on renal tubular potassium transport, cortical collecting tubules were dissected from rabbit kidneys and perfused in vitro. When the pH of the perfusate was lowered from 7.4 to 6.8, potassium secretion into the tubule lumen decreased by an average of 47%. The transepithelial voltage increased from a mean value of -32 mV (lumen negative) at pH 7.4 to -51 mV at PH 6.8. Net sodium absorption from the tubule lumen was essentially unchanged (5% mean decrease). Transepithelial voltage and potassium secretion returned to control values when the pH of the perfusate was raised to 7.4. Alterations in pH of the bath had no comparable effect on the transepithelial voltage, whether the bath pH was increased or decreased. We conclude that a decrease in the pH of the tubule fluid of itself inhibits active potassium secretion in this tubule segment, providing an additional explanation for the decrease in potassium excretion found in acidosis. The negative voltage (presumably caused by sodium absorption out of the lumen) is increased under these conditions, possibly because of reduction of a smaller counterbalancing positive voltage caused by potassium secretion into the lumen.


The wave form of all atmospherics received at night from sources within 2000 km. can be accurately described as a ground pulse followed by a series of sky pulses produced by successive reflexions between the ionosphere and the earth, thirty such reflexions being frequently recorded. The time separation between the peaks of these pulses is determined by the distance travelled and the height of the layer. The primary pulse emitted by the source is usually a single complete oscillation of period ranging from 50 to 400//sec. A t distances greater than 500 km. the ground pulse and the first sky pulse merge owing to the shortness of the time interval between them . Differences of amplitude, form and phase between pulses can arise from differences in angle of emission from the parent lightning channel. The height of the reflecting layer can be determined within ± 1 km. It ranged from 85-5 to 90-5 km. during two winter months, with a mean of 88-0 km. The distances of the sources as found by analysis of the pulse series were corroborated by independent location with cathode-ray direction-finders. The reflexion coefficient of the layer for the pulses of longer period exceeded 0-80. The velocity of the ground pulse where it can be tested is within 0.7 % of that of light.


Author(s):  
Yu. O. Kulanchikov ◽  
P. S. Vergeles ◽  
E. B. Yakimov

The effect of electron irradiation with energy of 2.5 keV on the MOS structure Al/SiO2/Si capacitance-voltage (C-V) characteristics have been studied. At chosen beam energy the electron penetration depth is lower than the dielectric thickness that allows to reveal the contribution of excess carrier transport to the trap formation on the SiO2/Si interface. It was established that the electron beam irradiation leads to a significant change in the C-V characteristics slope, i.e. to to the trap formation at the interface. A study of effect of bias applied to the investigated structure before and during the electron beam irradiation was carried out. It was established that while the bias applied before irradiation practically did not affect the C-V characteristics of the investigated MOS structure, the positive voltage applied to metallization during irradiation produced a pronounced effect on the C-V curve changes. At the same time the C-V characteristics after irradiation with zero and negative voltage were very similar. The investigation of stability of changes produced by the electron beam irradiation showed that the C-V curves are slowly restored even at room temperature. An applied negative bias was found to slow down the charge relaxation process.


1966 ◽  
Vol 6 (45) ◽  
pp. 439-442 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Schwerdtfeger

The time separation between related extremes in the values of surface temperature and growth rate of a floating ice cover are shown to depend on the mean ice temperature and thickness. A quantity termed the lag coefficient is introduced for which observations from Churchill, Hudson Bay, and Davis, Antarctica, suggest a dependence on temperature but not on geography.


Author(s):  
Stefan Suhr

AbstractThis article complements the Lorentzian Aubry–Mather Theory in Suhr (Geom Dedicata 160:91–117, 2012; J Fixed Point Theory Appl 21:71, 2019) by giving optimal multiplicity results for the number of maximal invariant measures. As an application the optimal Lipschitz continuity of the time separation on the Abelian cover is established.


Author(s):  
Ai-Hou Wang ◽  
Ji-Hau Jan ◽  
Joseph Jy-Haw Yu ◽  
Luke Long-Kuang Lin ◽  
Liang-Shi Ko
Keyword(s):  

1965 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 142-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Max E. McClellan ◽  
Arnold M. Small

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