1,635 research outputs found

    Critical Casimir Forces for Films with Bulk Ordering Fields

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    The confinement of long-ranged critical fluctuations in the vicinity of second-order phase transitions in fluids generates critical Casimir forces acting on confining surfaces or among particles immersed in a critical solvent. This is realized in binary liquid mixtures close to their consolute point TcT_{c} which belong to the universality class of the Ising model. The deviation of the difference of the chemical potentials of the two species of the mixture from its value at criticality corresponds to the bulk magnetic filed of the Ising model. By using Monte Carlo simulations for this latter representative of the corresponding universality class we compute the critical Casimir force as a function of the bulk ordering field at the critical temperature T=TcT=T_{c}. We use a coupling parameter scheme for the computation of the underlying free energy differences and an energy-magnetization integration method for computing the bulk free energy density which is a necessary ingredient. By taking into account finite-size corrections, for various types of boundary conditions we determine the universal Casimir force scaling function as a function of the scaling variable associated with the bulk field. Our numerical data are compared with analytic results obtained from mean-field theory.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure

    Action at a distance in classical uniaxial ferromagnetic arrays

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    We examine in detail the theoretical foundations of striking long-range couplings emerging in arrays of fluid cells connected by narrow channels by using a lattice gas (Ising model) description of a system. We present a reexamination of the well known exact determination of the two-point correlation function along the edge of a channel using the transfer matrix technique and a new interpretation is provided. The explicit form of the correlation length is found to grow exponentially with the cross section of the channels at the bulk two-phase coexistence. The aforementioned result is recaptured by a refined version of the Fisher-Privman theory of first order phase transitions in which the Boltzmann factor for a domain wall is decorated with a contribution stemming from the point tension originated at its endpoints. The Boltzmann factor for a domain wall together with the point tension is then identified exactly thanks to two independent analytical techniques, providing a critical test of the Fisher-Privman theory. We then illustrate how to build up the network model from its elementary constituents, the cells and the channels. Moreover, we are able to extract the strength of the coupling between cells and express them in terms of the length and width and coarse grained quantities such as surface and point tensions. We then support our theoretical investigation with a series of corroborating results based on Monte Carlo simulations. We illustrate how the long range ordering occurs and how the latter is signaled by the thermodynamic quantities corresponding to both planar and three-dimensional Ising arrays.Comment: 36 pages, 19 figure

    Current-mediated synchronization of a pair of beating non-identical flagella

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    The basic phenomenology of experimentally observed synchronization (i.e., a stochastic phase locking) of identical, beating flagella of a biflagellate alga is known to be captured well by a minimal model describing the dynamics of coupled, limit-cycle, noisy oscillators (known as the noisy Kuramoto model). As demonstrated experimentally, the amplitudes of the noise terms therein, which stem from fluctuations of the rotary motors, depend on the flagella length. Here we address the conceptually important question which kind of synchrony occurs if the two flagella have different lengths such that the noises acting on each of them have different amplitudes. On the basis of a minimal model, too, we show that a different kind of synchrony emerges, and here it is mediated by a current carrying, steady-state; it manifests itself via correlated "drifts" of phases. We quantify such a synchronization mechanism in terms of appropriate order parameters QQ and QSQ_{\cal S} - for an ensemble of trajectories and for a single realization of noises of duration S{\cal S}, respectively. Via numerical simulations we show that both approaches become identical for long observation times S{\cal S}. This reveals an ergodic behavior and implies that a single-realization order parameter QSQ_{\cal S} is suitable for experimental analysis for which ensemble averaging is not always possible.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure

    Suppression of stimulated Brillouin scattering in optical fibers using a linearly chirped diode laser

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    The output of high power fiber amplifiers is typically limited by stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS). An analysis of SBS with a chirped pump laser indicates that a chirp of 2.5 × 10^(15) Hz/s could raise, by an order of magnitude, the SBS threshold of a 20-m fiber. A diode laser with a constant output power and a linear chirp of 5 × 10^(15) Hz/s has been previously demonstrated. In a low-power proof-of-concept experiment, the threshold for SBS in a 6-km fiber is increased by a factor of 100 with a chirp of 5 × 10^(14) Hz/s. A linear chirp will enable straightforward coherent combination of multiple fiber amplifiers, with electronic compensation of path length differences on the order of 0.2 m

    Critical Casimir torques and forces acting on needles in two spatial dimensions

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    We investigate the universal orientation-dependent interactions between non-spherical colloidal particles immersed in a critical solvent by studying the instructive paradigm of a needle embedded in bounded two-dimensional Ising models at bulk criticality. For a needle in an Ising strip the interaction on mesoscopic scales depends on the width of the strip and the length, position, and orientation of the needle. By lattice Monte Carlo simulations we evaluate the free energy difference between needle configurations being parallel and perpendicular to the strip. We concentrate on small but nonetheless mesoscopic needle lengths for which analytic predictions are available for comparison. All combinations of boundary conditions for the needles and boundaries are considered which belong to either the "normal" or the "ordinary" surface universality class, i.e., which induce local order or disorder, respectively. We also derive exact results for needles of arbitrary mesoscopic length, in particular for needles embedded in a half plane and oriented perpendicular to the corresponding boundary as well as for needles embedded at the center line of a symmetric strip with parallel orientation.Comment: 33 pages, 15 figure

    Frames of solutions and discrete analysis of pseudo-differential equations

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    We construct discrete analogs of multidimensional singular integral operators and study their invertibility. Moreover, we give a comparison between continual and discrete case. We give the theory of periodic Riemann problem also, because it is needed for studying invertibility of so-called paired equation

    On discrete solutions for elliptic pseudo-differential equations

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    We consider discrete analogue for simplest boundary value problem for elliptic pseudo-differential equation in a half-space with Dirichlet boundary condition in Sobolev-Slobodetskii spaces. Based on the theory of discrete boundary value problems for elliptic pseudo-differential equations we give a comparison between discrete and continuous solutions for certain model boundary value proble
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