1,543 research outputs found
Parametric phenomena of the particle dynamics in a periodic gravitational wave field
We establish exactly solvable models for the motion of neutral particles,
electrically charged point and spin particles (U(1) symmetry), isospin
particles (SU(2) symmetry), and particles with color charges (SU(3) symmetry)
in a gravitational wave background. Special attention is devoted to parametric
effects induced by the gravitational field. In particular, we discuss
parametric instabilities of the particle motion and parametric oscillations of
the vectors of spin, isospin, and color charge.Comment: 26 pages, to be published in J. Math. Phy
Axion-induced oscillations of cooperative electric field in a cosmic magneto-active plasma
We consider one cosmological application of an axionic extension of the
Maxwell-Vlasov theory, which describes axionically induced oscillatory regime
in the state of global magnetic field evolving in the anisotropic expanding
(early) universe. We show that the cooperative electric field in the
relativistic plasma, being coupled to the pseudoscalar (axion) and global
magnetic fields, plays the role of a regulator in this three-level system; in
particular, the cooperative (Vlasov) electric field converts the regime of
anomalous growth of the pseudoscalar field, caused by the axion-photon coupling
at the inflationary epoch of the universe expansion, into an oscillatory regime
with finite density of relic axions. We analyze solutions to the dispersion
equations for the axionically induced cooperative oscillations of the electric
field in the relativistic plasma.Comment: 7 pages, misprints correcte
Coulomb Correlations and Magnetic Anisotropy in ordered CoPt and FePt alloys
We present results of the magneto-crystalline anisotropy energy (MAE)
calculations for chemically ordered CoPt and FePt alloys taking into
account the effects of strong electronic correlations and spin-orbit coupling.
The local spin density + Hubbard U approximation (LSDA+U) is shown to provide a
consistent picture of the magnetic ground state properties when intra-atomic
Coulomb correlations are included for both 3 and 5 elements. Our results
demonstrate significant and complex contribution of correlation effects to
large MAE of these material.Comment: revised version; 4 pages, 2 figure
Electromagnetic waves in an axion-active relativistic plasma non-minimally coupled to gravity
We consider cosmological applications of a new self-consistent system of
equations, accounting for a nonminimal coupling of the gravitational,
electromagnetic and pseudoscalar (axion) fields in a relativistic plasma. We
focus on dispersion relations for electromagnetic perturbations in an initially
isotropic ultrarelativistic plasma coupled to the gravitational and axion
fields in the framework of isotropic homogeneous cosmological model of the de
Sitter type. We classify the longitudinal and transversal electromagnetic modes
in an axionically active plasma and distinguish between waves (damping,
instable or running), and nonharmonic perturbations (damping or instable). We
show that for the special choice of the guiding model parameters the
transversal electromagnetic waves in the axionically active plasma,
nonminimally coupled to gravity, can propagate with the phase velocity less
than speed of light in vacuum, thus displaying a possibility for a new type of
resonant particle-wave interactions.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures, published versio
Three-Dimensional Coherent Bragg Imaging of Rotating Nanoparticles
Bragg coherent diffraction imaging is a powerful strain imaging tool, often limited by beam-induced sample instability for small particles and high power densities. Here, we devise and validate an adapted diffraction volume assembly algorithm, capable of recovering three-dimensional datasets from particles undergoing uncontrolled and unknown rotations. We apply the method to gold nanoparticles which rotate under the influence of a focused coherent x-ray beam, retrieving their three-dimensional shapes and strain fields. The results show that the sample instability problem can be overcome, enabling the use of fourth generation synchrotron sources for Bragg coherent diffraction imaging to their full potential.Research conducted at MAX IV, a Swedish national user facility, is supported by the Swedish Research council under Contract No. 2018-07152, the Swedish Governmental Agency for Innovation Systems under Contract No. 2018-04969, and Formas under Contract No. 2019-02496. This work has also received funding from the ÅForsk Foundation (Contract No. 17-408), the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (Contract No. 801847), from the Olle Engkvist Foundation, from the Swedish Research council (Contract No. 2018-00234), and from NanoLund
Fractional moment bounds and disorder relevance for pinning models
We study the critical point of directed pinning/wetting models with quenched
disorder. The distribution K(.) of the location of the first contact of the
(free) polymer with the defect line is assumed to be of the form
K(n)=n^{-\alpha-1}L(n), with L(.) slowly varying. The model undergoes a
(de)-localization phase transition: the free energy (per unit length) is zero
in the delocalized phase and positive in the localized phase. For \alpha<1/2 it
is known that disorder is irrelevant: quenched and annealed critical points
coincide for small disorder, as well as quenched and annealed critical
exponents. The same has been proven also for \alpha=1/2, but under the
assumption that L(.) diverges sufficiently fast at infinity, an hypothesis that
is not satisfied in the (1+1)-dimensional wetting model considered by Forgacs
et al. (1986) and Derrida et al. (1992), where L(.) is asymptotically constant.
Here we prove that, if 1/21, then quenched and annealed
critical points differ whenever disorder is present, and we give the scaling
form of their difference for small disorder. In agreement with the so-called
Harris criterion, disorder is therefore relevant in this case. In the marginal
case \alpha=1/2, under the assumption that L(.) vanishes sufficiently fast at
infinity, we prove that the difference between quenched and annealed critical
points, which is known to be smaller than any power of the disorder strength,
is positive: disorder is marginally relevant. Again, the case considered by
Forgacs et al. (1986) and Derrida et al. (1992) is out of our analysis and
remains open.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figure; v2: few typos corrected, references revised. To
appear on Commun. Math. Phy
Geospatial analysis and living urban geometry
This essay outlines how to incorporate morphological rules within the exigencies of our technological age. We propose using the current evolution of GIS (Geographical Information Systems) technologies beyond their original representational domain, towards predictive and dynamic spatial models that help in constructing the new discipline of "urban seeding". We condemn the high-rise tower block as an unsuitable typology for a living city, and propose to re-establish human-scale urban fabric that resembles the traditional city. Pedestrian presence, density, and movement all reveal that open space between modernist buildings is not urban at all, but neither is the open space found in today's sprawling suburbs. True urban space contains and encourages pedestrian interactions, and has to be designed and built according to specific rules. The opposition between traditional self-organized versus modernist planned cities challenges the very core of the urban planning discipline. Planning has to be re-framed from being a tool creating a fixed future to become a visionary adaptive tool of dynamic states in evolution
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