3,902 research outputs found
Amplitude equations for coupled electrostatic waves in the limit of weak instability
We consider the simplest instabilities involving multiple unstable
electrostatic plasma waves corresponding to four-dimensional systems of mode
amplitude equations. In each case the coupled amplitude equations are derived
up to third order terms. The nonlinear coefficients are singular in the limit
in which the linear growth rates vanish together. These singularities are
analyzed using techniques developed in previous studies of a single unstable
wave. In addition to the singularities familiar from the one mode problem,
there are new singularities in coefficients coupling the modes. The new
singularities are most severe when the two waves have the same linear phase
velocity and satisfy the spatial resonance condition . As a result
the short wave mode saturates at a dramatically smaller amplitude than that
predicted for the weak growth rate regime on the basis of single mode theory.
In contrast the long wave mode retains the single mode scaling. If these
resonance conditions are not satisfied both modes retain their single mode
scaling and saturate at comparable amplitudes.Comment: 34 pages (Latex), no figure
FUNNet:a novel biologically-inspired routing algorithm based on fungi
Future data communication networks show three emerging trends: increasing size of networks, increasing traffic volumes and dynamic network topologies. Efficient network management solutions are required that are scalable, can cope with large, and increasing, traffic volumes and provide decentralised and adaptive routing strategies that cope with the dynamics of the network topology. Routing strategies are an important aspect of network management as they have a significant influence on the overall network performance. This paper introduces the preliminary studies for FUNNet, a new routing algorithm inspired by the kingdom of Fungi. Fungi form robust, resilient and responsive networks and these networks change topology as a consequence of changes in local conditions. Fungi are capable of expanding in size as they self-regulate and optimise the balance between exploration and exploitation which is dependent on the transport of the internal resource, i.e. ‘traffic’, within the network. FUNNet exploits the biological processes that are responsible for simulating fungal networks in a bio-inspired routing protocol. The initial results are positive and suggest that fungal metaphors can improve network management, although further evaluation of more complex scenarios is required
Universal trapping scaling on the unstable manifold for a collisionless electrostatic mode
An amplitude equation for an unstable mode in a collisionless plasma is
derived from the dynamics on the two-dimensional unstable manifold of the
equilibrium. The mode amplitude decouples from the phase due to the
spatial homogeneity of the equilibrium, and the resulting one-dimensional
dynamics is analyzed using an expansion in . As the linear growth rate
vanishes, the expansion coefficients diverge; a rescaling
of the mode amplitude absorbs these
singularities and reveals that the mode electric field exhibits trapping
scaling as . The dynamics for
depends only on the phase where is the derivative of the dielectric as
.Comment: 11 pages (Latex/RevTex), 2 figures available in hard copy from the
Author ([email protected]); paper accepted by Physical Review
Letter
Scaling and singularities in the entrainment of globally-coupled oscillators
The onset of collective behavior in a population of globally coupled
oscillators with randomly distributed frequencies is studied for phase
dynamical models with arbitrary coupling. The population is described by a
Fokker-Planck equation for the distribution of phases which includes the
diffusive effect of noise in the oscillator frequencies. The bifurcation from
the phase-incoherent state is analyzed using amplitude equations for the
unstable modes with particular attention to the dependence of the nonlinearly
saturated mode on the linear growth rate . In general
we find where is the
diffusion coefficient and is the mode number of the unstable mode. The
unusual factor arises from a singularity in the cubic term of
the amplitude equation.Comment: 11 pages (Revtex); paper submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Exploring nutrition knowledge and the demographic variation in knowledge levels in an Australian community sample
Nonlinear saturation of electrostatic waves: mobile ions modify trapping scaling
The amplitude equation for an unstable electrostatic wave in a multi-species
Vlasov plasma has been derived. The dynamics of the mode amplitude is
studied using an expansion in ; in particular, in the limit
, the singularities in the expansion coefficients are
analyzed to predict the asymptotic dependence of the electric field on the
linear growth rate . Generically , as
, but in the limit of infinite ion mass or for
instabilities in reflection-symmetric systems due to real eigenvalues the more
familiar trapping scaling is predicted.Comment: 13 pages (Latex/RevTex), 4 postscript encapsulated figures which are
included using the utility "uufiles". They should be automatically included
with the text when it is downloaded. Figures also available in hard copy from
the authors ([email protected]
Retrieval of Precise Radial Velocities from Near-Infrared High Resolution Spectra of Low Mass Stars
Given that low-mass stars have intrinsically low luminosities at optical
wavelengths and a propensity for stellar activity, it is advantageous for
radial velocity (RV) surveys of these objects to use near-infrared (NIR)
wavelengths. In this work we describe and test a novel RV extraction pipeline
dedicated to retrieving RVs from low mass stars using NIR spectra taken by the
CSHELL spectrograph at the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility, where a methane
isotopologue gas cell is used for wavelength calibration. The pipeline
minimizes the residuals between the observations and a spectral model composed
of templates for the target star, the gas cell, and atmospheric telluric
absorption; models of the line spread function, continuum curvature, and
sinusoidal fringing; and a parameterization of the wavelength solution. The
stellar template is derived iteratively from the science observations
themselves without a need for separate observations dedicated to retrieving it.
Despite limitations from CSHELL's narrow wavelength range and instrumental
systematics, we are able to (1) obtain an RV precision of 35 m/s for the RV
standard star GJ 15 A over a time baseline of 817 days, reaching the photon
noise limit for our attained SNR, (2) achieve ~3 m/s RV precision for the M
giant SV Peg over a baseline of several days and confirm its long-term RV trend
due to stellar pulsations, as well as obtain nightly noise floors of ~2 - 6
m/s, and (3) show that our data are consistent with the known masses, periods,
and orbital eccentricities of the two most massive planets orbiting GJ 876.
Future applications of our pipeline to RV surveys using the next generation of
NIR spectrographs, such as iSHELL, will enable the potential detection of
Super-Earths and Mini-Neptunes in the habitable zones of M dwarfs.Comment: 64 pages, 28 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication in PAS
An Approach Using PSA Levels of 1.5 ng/mL as the Cutoff for Prostate Cancer Screening in Primary Care.
Football: a counterpoint to the procession of pain on the Western Front, 1914-1918?
In this article, three artworks of the First World War containing images of recreational football are analysed. These three images, In the Wings of the Theatre of War, Artillery Men at Football and Gassed, span the war from its beginning to its conclusion and are discussed in relationship to the development of recreational football in the front-line area, the evolving policies of censorship and propaganda and in consideration of the national mood in Britain. The paper shows how football went from being a spontaneous and improvised pastime in the early stages of the war to a well organized entertainment by war’s end. The images demonstrate how the war was portrayed as a temporary affair by a confident nation in 1914 to a more resigned acceptance of a semi-permanent event to be endured by 1918; however, all three artworks show that the sporting spirit, and hence the fighting spirit, of the British soldier was intact
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