05586nam 2200721 450 991045280210332120200903223051.0981-4417-70-X(CKB)2550000001126127(EBL)1441470(OCoLC)860388431(SSID)ssj0000952429(PQKBManifestationID)12469554(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000952429(PQKBWorkID)10902675(PQKB)11600897(MiAaPQ)EBC1441470(WSP)00008575(Au-PeEL)EBL1441470(CaPaEBR)ebr10775227(CaONFJC)MIL526793(EXLCZ)99255000000112612720131019d2013 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrWet granular matter a truly complex fluid /Stephan HerminghausSingapore :World Scientific,2013.©20131 online resource (330 p.)Series in soft condensed matter,1793-737X ;Vol. 6Description based upon print version of record.981-4417-69-6 1-299-95542-8 Includes bibliographical references and index.Foreword; Preface; Contents; 1. Introduction; 1.1 The significance of wet granular matter; 1.2 Energy scales; 1.3 Typical questions to be asked; 1.4 How we shall proceed; 2. Grains and Granular Fluids; 2.1 Grains; 2.1.1 Kinetic theory; 2.1.2 Dissipative collisions; 2.1.3 Grain shape; 2.1.4 Grain size; 2.1.5 Some phenomenological aspects of dry granulates; 2.2 Granular fluids; 2.2.1 Buoyant clouds; 2.2.2 Filling an earthquake fissure; 2.2.3 Granular flow with gaseous carrier; 2.2.4 Granular flow with liquid carrier; 2.2.5 Dilatancy; 2.3 Conclusions; Further reading; 3. Wetting3.1 Planar substrates3.1.1 Van der Waals forces; 3.1.2 Adsorption isotherms; 3.1.3 The contact angle; 3.1.4 The effective interface potential; 3.1.5 The interface displacement model; 3.1.6 Curved interfaces and the Laplace pressure; 3.1.7 The contact angle away from coexistence; 3.2 Rough substrates; 3.2.1 Presentation of the problem; 3.2.2 Descriptors for roughness; 3.2.3 The wetting phase diagram; 3.2.4 Adsorption isotherms on a rough substrate; 3.2.5 Contact angle hysteresis; 3.3 Conclusions; Further reading; 4. Capillary Forces; 4.1 Capillary bridge between at walls4.1.1 Extremal surfaces4.1.2 Attractive force of a toroidal bridge; 4.2 Capillary bridge between spherical bodies; 4.2.1 Formation of the capillary bridge; 4.2.2 Capillary bridge force; 4.2.3 The interaction potential between wet grains; 4.2.4 The hysteretic nature of the capillary bridge force; 4.3 Capillary bridge between irregular grains; 4.3.1 Effects of grain shape; 4.3.2 Effects of grain surface roughness; 4.3.3 Small scale capillary bridges; 4.4 Force networks; 4.4.1 Frustrated wet force networks; 4.4.2 Self-assembled granular walkers: ratcheting; 4.5 Conclusions; Further reading5. Wet Granular Gases5.1 Dynamical aspects of capillary bridges; 5.1.1 Short time dynamics of a capillary bridge; 5.1.2 The effective restitution coefficient; 5.2 Free cooling and clustering; 5.2.1 Granular temperature during free cooling; 5.2.2 Morphology of the emerging clusters; 5.2.3 A formal distinction between dry and wet cooling; 5.3 Liquid-gas coexistence; 5.3.1 Equation of state of wet granular gases; 5.3.2 Experimental verification of the critical point; 5.3.3 Non-equilibrium phase separation; 5.3.4 Universal aspects of the phase diagram5.3.5 The interplay of dissipation mechanisms5.3.6 Interfaces and interfacial tensions; 5.3.7 Binodals and spinodals, wet and dry; 5.4 Collective phenomena far from thermal equilibrium; 5.4.1 Surface tension revisited; 5.4.2 Chaoticity of the wet granular gas; 5.4.3 Capillary bridges as active networks; 5.5 Conclusions; Further reading; 6. Wet Granular Piles; 6.1 Geometrical aspects of granular piles; 6.1.1 Random piles of equal spheres; 6.1.2 Effects of grain size: poly-dispersity; 6.1.3 Effects of grain shape; 6.2 Regimes of wetness; 6.2.1 The humidity regime; 6.2.2 The pendular regime6.2.3 The funicular regimeThis is a monograph written for the young and advanced researcher entering the field of wet granular matter, and is keen to understand the basic physical principles governing this state of soft matter. It treats wet granulates as an instance of a ternary system, consisting of the grains, a primary, and a secondary fluid. After addressing wetting phenomena in general and outlining the basic facts on dry granular systems, a chapter on basic mechanisms and their effects is dedicated to every region of the ternary phase diagram. Effects of grain shape and roughness are considered as well. Rather tSeries in soft condensed matter ;v. 6.Soft condensed matterWettingGranular materialsPermeabilityGranular materialsMechanical propertiesElectronic books.Soft condensed matter.Wetting.Granular materialsPermeability.Granular materialsMechanical properties.530.4/13Herminghaus S(Stephan)963312MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910452802103321Wet granular matter2184217UNINA03894nam 2200637 450 99620397950331620230617040419.01-281-31837-X97866113183760-470-68012-1(CKB)1000000000406031(EBL)351016(OCoLC)437214021(SSID)ssj0000123688(PQKBManifestationID)12002275(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000123688(PQKBWorkID)10014344(PQKB)10392106(MiAaPQ)EBC351016(MiAaPQ)EBC4956654(Au-PeEL)EBL4956654(CaONFJC)MIL131837(OCoLC)1027197658(EXLCZ)99100000000040603120160819e20052000 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrClinical radiology of the horse /Janet A. Butler [and four others]2nd ed.Oxford, England :Blackwell Science,2005.©20001 online resource (626 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-470-69039-9 0-632-05268-6 Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.""Clinical Radiology of the Horse""; ""Contents""; ""PREFACE""; ""1 GENERAL PRINCIPLES""; ""Introduction""; ""Principles of radiology""; ""Principles of radiographic interpretation""; ""Radiological appearance of physiological changes and some common pathological lesions""; ""2 FOOT, PASTERN AND FETLOCK""; ""Distal phalanx (pedal bone)""; ""Hoof""; ""Navicular bone""; ""Proximal and middle phalanges""; ""Metacarpophalangeal (fetlock) joint""; ""3 THE METACARPUS AND METATARSUS""; ""4 THE CARPUS""; ""5 THE SHOULDER, HUMERUS AND ELBOW""; ""Scapulohumeral (shoulder) joint and humerus""""Humeroradial, humeroulnar and radioulnar (elbow) joints and radius""""6 THE TARSUS""; ""7 THE STIFLE AND TIBIA""; ""Stifle""; ""Tibia""; ""8 THE HEAD""; ""Cranium""; ""Frontal and maxillary sinuses and maxilla""; ""Teeth and mandible""; ""Pharynx, larynx and Eustachian tube diverticulum""; ""9 THE SPINE""; ""Cervical spine""; ""Thoracolumbar spine""; ""Sacrum and coccygeal vertebrae""; ""10 THE PELVIS AND FEMUR""; ""Pelvis""; ""Femur""; ""11 THE THORAX""; ""12 THE ALIMENTARY AND URINARY SYSTEMS""; ""Oesophagus""; ""Abdomen and gastrointestinal tract""; ""Urinary system""""13 MISCELLANEOUS TECHNIQUES""""Arthrography""; ""Tendonography""; ""Angiography""; ""Myelography""; ""Pneumocystography""; ""Intravenous pyelography""; ""Other techniques""; ""Polaroid radiographs""; ""APPENDIX A: FUSION TIMES OF PHYSES AND SUTURE LINES""; ""APPENDIX B: EXPOSURE GUIDE AND IMAGE QUALITY""; ""APPENDIX C: GLOSSARY""; ""INDEX""The first edition of this comprehensive guide to the techniques used to obtain radiographs of the horse and to radiographic interpretation was first published in 1993. This second edition has been significantly enlarged to include new information and many additional illustrations. With over 480 superb annotated radiographs and more than 100 interpretive line diagrams, it combines the best features of a high quality atlas with those of a detailed textbook. Details of the normal radiographic anatomy of the immature and mature horse, with normal variations, incidental findings and significant abnHorsesAnatomyAtlasesVeterinary radiographyAtlasesHorsesAnatomyVeterinary radiography636.1/0891Butler Janet A.MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK996203979503316Clinical radiology of the horse851173UNISA