975 research outputs found
On the theory of light scattering in molecular liquids
The theory of light scattering for a system of linear molecules with
anisotropic polarizabilities is considered. As a starting point for our theory,
we express the result of a scattering experiment in VV and VH symmetry as
dynamic correlation functions of tensorial densities with
and . , denote indices of spherical harmonics. To account for all
observed hydrodynamic singularities, a generalization of the theory of
Schilling and Scheidsteger \cite{schilling97} for these correlation functions
is presented, which is capable to describe the light scattering experiments
from the liquid regime to the glassy state. As a microscopic theory it fulfills
all sum rules contrary to previous {\em phenomenological} theories. We
emphasize the importance of the helicity index for the microscopic theory
by showing, that only the existence of components lead to the well known
Rytov dip in liquids and to the appearance of transversal sound waves in VH
symmetry in the deeply supercooled liquid and the glass. Exact expressions for
the phenomenological frequency dependent rotation translation coupling
coefficients of previous theories are derived.Comment: 30 pages including 15 figures, submitted to EPJ B, revised version a
detailed discussion on the depolarization ratio is added and the discussion
on the hydrodynamic analysis is enlarge
Self-Organized Criticality Below The Glass Transition
We obtain evidence that the dynamics of glassy systems below the glass
transition is characterized by self-organized criticality. Using molecular
dynamics simulations of a model glass-former we identify clusters of
cooperatively jumping particles. We find string-like clusters whose size is
power-law distributed not only close to T_c but for ALL temperatures below T_c,
indicating self-organized criticality which we interpret as a freezing in of
critical behavior.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Light-Scattering by Longitudinal phonons in Supercooled Molecular Liquids II: Microscopic Derivation of the Phenomenological Equations
The constitutive equations for the orientational dynamics of a liquid formed
of linear molecules are derived microscopically. The resulting generalised
Langevin equations coincide with the phenomenological approach of Dreyfus et
al. Formally exact expressions are given for the phenomenological coefficients
and various constraints are shown to be consequences of this microscopic
approach.Comment: 18 page
Microscopic Dynamics of Hard Ellipsoids in their Liquid and Glassy Phase
To investigate the influence of orientational degrees of freedom onto the
dynamics of molecular systems in its supercooled and glassy regime we have
solved numerically the mode-coupling equations for hard ellipsoids of
revolution. For a wide range of volume fractions and aspect ratios
we find an orientational peak in the center of mass spectra
and about one decade
below a high frequency peak. This orientational peak is the counterpart of a
peak appearing in the quadrupolar spectra and
. The latter peak is almost insensitive on
for close to one, i.e. for weak steric hindrance, and broadens strongly
with increasing . Deep in the glass we find an additional peak between
the orientational and the high frequency peak. We have evidence that this
intermediate peak is the result of a coupling between modes with and
, due to the nondiagonality of the static correlators.Comment: 6 figures, 12 page
Dynamical precursor of nematic order in a dense fluid of hard ellipsoids of revolution
We investigate hard ellipsoids of revolution in a parameter regime where no
long range nematic order is present but already finite size domains are formed
which show orientational order. Domain formation leads to a substantial slowing
down of a collective rotational mode which separates well from the usual
microscopic frequency regime. A dynamic coupling of this particular mode into
all other modes provides a general mechanism which explains an excess peak in
spectra of molecular fluids. Using molecular dynamics simulation on up to 4096
particles and on solving the molecular mode coupling equation we investigate
dynamic properties of the peak and prove its orientational origin.Comment: RevTeX4 style, 7 figure
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