303,140 research outputs found
Visualization of Word Usage in Fluid Mechanics Abstracts
The fluid dynamics video linked in the document shows how `keywords' from
abstracts contained in three journals--Physics of Fluids (A) from 1970,
Experiments in Fluids from 1983, and Journal of Fluid Mechanics from 1954--have
changed over time
Predicting rogue waves in random oceanic sea states
Using the inverse spectral theory of the nonlinear Schrodinger (NLS) equation
we correlate the development of rogue waves in oceanic sea states characterized
by the JONSWAP spectrum with the proximity to homoclinic solutions of the NLS
equation. We find in numerical simulations of the NLS equation that rogue waves
develop for JONSWAP initial data that is ``near'' NLS homoclinic data, while
rogue waves do not occur for JONSWAP data that is ``far'' from NLS homoclinic
data. We show the nonlinear spectral decomposition provides a simple criterium
for predicting the occurrence and strength of rogue waves (PACS: 92.10.Hm,
47.20.Ky, 47.35+i).Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures submitted to Physics of Fluids, October 25, 2004
Revised version submitted to Physics of Fluids, December 12, 200
Microfluidic and Nanofluidic Cavities for Quantum Fluids Experiments
The union of quantum fluids research with nanoscience is rich with
opportunities for new physics. The relevant length scales in quantum fluids,
3He in particular, are comparable to those possible using microfluidic and
nanofluidic devices. In this article, we will briefly review how the physics of
quantum fluids depends strongly on confinement on the microscale and nanoscale.
Then we present devices fabricated specifically for quantum fluids research,
with cavity sizes ranging from 30 nm to 11 microns deep, and the
characterization of these devices for low temperature quantum fluids
experiments.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, Accepted to Journal of Low Temperature Physic
Strongly Correlated Quantum Fluids: Ultracold Quantum Gases, Quantum Chromodynamic Plasmas, and Holographic Duality
Strongly correlated quantum fluids are phases of matter that are
intrinsically quantum mechanical, and that do not have a simple description in
terms of weakly interacting quasi-particles. Two systems that have recently
attracted a great deal of interest are the quark-gluon plasma, a plasma of
strongly interacting quarks and gluons produced in relativistic heavy ion
collisions, and ultracold atomic Fermi gases, very dilute clouds of atomic
gases confined in optical or magnetic traps. These systems differ by more than
20 orders of magnitude in temperature, but they were shown to exhibit very
similar hydrodynamic flow. In particular, both fluids exhibit a robustly low
shear viscosity to entropy density ratio which is characteristic of quantum
fluids described by holographic duality, a mapping from strongly correlated
quantum field theories to weakly curved higher dimensional classical gravity.
This review explores the connection between these fields, and it also serves as
an introduction to the Focus Issue of New Journal of Physics on Strongly
Correlated Quantum Fluids: from Ultracold Quantum Gases to QCD Plasmas. The
presentation is made accessible to the general physics reader and includes
discussions of the latest research developments in all three areas.Comment: 138 pages, 25 figures, review associated with New Journal of Physics
special issue "Focus on Strongly Correlated Quantum Fluids: from Ultracold
Quantum Gases to QCD Plasmas"
(http://iopscience.iop.org/1367-2630/focus/Focus%20on%20Strongly%20Correlated%20Quantum%20Fluids%20-%20from%20Ultracold%20Quantum%20Gases%20to%20QCD%20Plasmas
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