4,742 research outputs found
Scaling properties of energy spreading in nonlinear Hamiltonian two-dimensional lattices
In nonlinear disordered Hamiltonian lattices, where there are no propagating
phonons, the spreading of energy is of subdiffusive nature. Recently, the
universality class of the subdiffusive spreading according to the nonlinear
diffusion equation (NDE) has been suggested and checked for one-dimensional
lattices. Here, we apply this approach to two-dimensional strongly nonlinear
lattices and find a nice agreement of the scaling predicted from the NDE with
the spreading results from extensive numerical studies. Moreover, we show that
the scaling works also for regular lattices with strongly nonlinear coupling,
for which the scaling exponent is estimated analytically. This shows that the
process of chaotic diffusion in such lattices does not require disorder.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Disorder Screening in Strongly Correlated Systems
Electron-electron interactions generally reduce the low temperature
resistivity due to the screening of the impurity potential by the electron gas.
In the weak-coupling limit, the magnitude of this screening effect is
determined by the thermodynamic compressibility which is proportional to the
inverse screening length. We show that when strong correlations are present,
although the compressibility is reduced, the screening effect is nevertheless
strongly enhanced. This phenomenon is traced to the same non-perturbative
Kondo-like processes that lead to strong mass enhancements, but which are
absent in weak coupling approaches. We predict metallicity to be strongly
stabilized in an intermediate regime where the interactions and the disorder
are of comparable magnitude.Comment: 4+epsilon pages, 3 figure
Mathematical wind profiles
Augmented Fourier polynomials for mathematical representation of vertical profiles for horizontal wind velocitie
Formation of three-particle clusters in hetero-junctions and MOSFET structures
A novel interaction mechanism in MOSFET structures and
hetero-junctions between the zone electrons of the two-dimensional (2D) gas and
the charged traps on the insulator side is considered. By applying a canonical
transformation, off-diagonal terms in the Hamiltonian due to the trapped level
subsystem are excluded. This yields an effective three-particle attractive
interaction as well as a pairing interaction inside the 2D electronic band. A
type of Bethe- Goldstone equation for three particles is studied to clarify the
character of the binding and the energy of the three-particle bound states. The
results are used to offer a possible explanation of the Metal-Insulator
transition recently observed in MOSFET and hetero-junctions.Comment: 4 page
Cauchy-perturbative matching and outer boundary conditions: computational studies
We present results from a new technique which allows extraction of
gravitational radiation information from a generic three-dimensional numerical
relativity code and provides stable outer boundary conditions. In our approach
we match the solution of a Cauchy evolution of the nonlinear Einstein field
equations to a set of one-dimensional linear equations obtained through
perturbation techniques over a curved background. We discuss the validity of
this approach in the case of linear and mildly nonlinear gravitational waves
and show how a numerical module developed for this purpose is able to provide
an accurate and numerically convergent description of the gravitational wave
propagation and a stable numerical evolution.Comment: 20 pages, RevTe
Cauchy-perturbative matching and outer boundary conditions I: Methods and tests
We present a new method of extracting gravitational radiation from
three-dimensional numerical relativity codes and providing outer boundary
conditions. Our approach matches the solution of a Cauchy evolution of
Einstein's equations to a set of one-dimensional linear wave equations on a
curved background. We illustrate the mathematical properties of our approach
and discuss a numerical module we have constructed for this purpose. This
module implements the perturbative matching approach in connection with a
generic three-dimensional numerical relativity simulation. Tests of its
accuracy and second-order convergence are presented with analytic linear wave
data.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, RevTe
Interaction corrections to the Hall coefficient at intermediate temperatures
We investigate the effect of electron-electron interaction on the temperature
dependence of the Hall coefficient of 2D electron gas at arbitrary relation
between the temperature and the elastic mean-free time . At small
temperature we reproduce the known relation between the
logarithmic temperature dependences of the Hall coefficient and of the
longitudinal conductivity. At higher temperatures, this relation is violated
quite rapidly; correction to the Hall coefficient becomes whereas
the longitudinal conductivity becomes linear in temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 3 .eps figure
Critical behavior at Mott-Anderson transition: a TMT-DMFT perspective
We present a detailed analysis of the critical behavior close to the
Mott-Anderson transition. Our findings are based on a combination of numerical
and analytical results obtained within the framework of Typical-Medium Theory
(TMT-DMFT) - the simplest extension of dynamical mean field theory (DMFT)
capable of incorporating Anderson localization effects. By making use of
previous scaling studies of Anderson impurity models close to the
metal-insulator transition, we solve this problem analytically and reveal the
dependence of the critical behavior on the particle-hole symmetry. Our main
result is that, for sufficiently strong disorder, the Mott-Anderson transition
is characterized by a precisely defined two-fluid behavior, in which only a
fraction of the electrons undergo a "site selective" Mott localization; the
rest become Anderson-localized quasiparticles.Comment: 4+ pages, 4 figures, v2: minor changes, accepted for publication in
Phys. Rev. Let
Nevirapine-Induced Heratotoxicity: Incidence, Risk Factors and Associated Mortality in a Primary Care ART Programme in South Africa
CROI 200
The Evolution of Distorted Rotating Black Holes II: Dynamics and Analysis
We have developed a numerical code to study the evolution of distorted,
rotating black holes. This code is used to evolve a new family of black hole
initial data sets corresponding to distorted ``Kerr'' holes with a wide range
of rotation parameters, and distorted Schwarzschild black holes with odd-parity
radiation. Rotating black holes with rotation parameters as high as
are evolved and analyzed in this paper. The evolutions are generally carried
out to about , where is the ADM mass. We have extracted both the
even- and odd-parity gravitational waveforms, and find the quasinormal modes of
the holes to be excited in all cases. We also track the apparent horizons of
the black holes, and find them to be a useful tool for interpreting the
numerical results. We are able to compute the masses of the black holes from
the measurements of their apparent horizons, as well as the total energy
radiated and find their sum to be in excellent agreement with the ADM mass.Comment: 26 pages, LaTeX with RevTeX 3.0 macros. 27 uuencoded gz-compressed
postscript figures. Also available at http://jean-luc.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Papers/
Submitted to Physical Review
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