9,150 research outputs found
A possible cosmological application of some thermodynamic properties of the black body radiation in dimensional Euclidean spaces
In this work we present the generalization of some thermodynamic properties
of the black body radiation (BBR) towards an dimensional Euclidean space.
For this case the Planck function and the Stefan-Boltzmann law have already
been given by Landsberg and de Vos and some adjustments by Menon and Agrawal.
However, since then no much more has been done on this subject and we believe
there are some relevant aspects yet to explore. In addition to the results
previously found we calculate the thermodynamic potentials, the efficiency of
the Carnot engine, the law for adiabatic processes and the heat capacity at
constant volume. There is a region at which an interesting behavior of the
thermodynamic potentials arise, maxima and minima appear for the BBR
system at very high temperatures and low dimensionality, suggesting a possible
application to cosmology. Finally we propose that an optimality criterion in a
thermodynamic framework could have to do with the nature of the universe.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure
Fluid-Wall Interactions in Pseudopotential Lattice Boltzmann Models
Designing proper fluid-wall interaction forces to achieve proper wetting conditions is an important area of interest in pseudopotential lattice Boltzmann models. In this paper, we propose a modified fluid-wall interaction force that applies for pseudopotential models of both single-component fluids and partially miscible multicomponent fluids, such as hydrocarbon mixtures. A reliable correlation that predicts the resulting liquid contact angle on a flat solid surface is also proposed. This correlation works well over a wide variety of pseudopotential lattice Boltzmann models and thermodynamic conditions
Fugacity-Based Lattice Boltzmann Method for Multicomponent Multiphase Systems
The free-energy model can extend the lattice Boltzmann method to multiphase systems. However, there is a lack of models capable of simulating multicomponent multiphase fluids with partial miscibility. In addition, existing models cannot be generalized to honor thermodynamic information provided by any multicomponent equation of state of choice. In this paper, we introduce a free-energy lattice Boltzmann model where the forcing term is determined by the fugacity of the species, the thermodynamic property that connects species partial pressure to chemical potential calculations. By doing so, we are able to carry out multicomponent multiphase simulations of partially miscible fluids and generalize the methodology for use with any multicomponent equation of state of interest. We test this fugacity-based lattice Boltzmann method for the cases of vapor-liquid equilibrium for two- and three-component mixtures in various temperature and pressure conditions. We demonstrate that the model is able to reliably reproduce phase densities and compositions as predicted by multicomponent thermodynamics and can reproduce different characteristic pressure-composition and temperature-composition envelopes with a high degree of accuracy. We also demonstrate that the model can offer accurate predictions under dynamic conditions
Dynamical quark recombination in ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions and the proton to pion ratio
We study quark thermal recombination as a function of energy density during
the evolution of a heavy-ion collision in a numerical model that reproduces
aspects of QCD phenomenology. We show that starting with a set of free quarks
(or quarks and antiquarks) the probability to form colorless clusters of three
quarks differs from that to form colorless clusters of quark-antiquark and that
the former has a sharp jump at a critical energy density whereas the latter
transits smoothly from the low to the high energy density domains. We interpret
this as a quantitative difference in the production of baryons and mesons with
energy density. We use this approach to compute the proton and pion spectra in
a Bjorken scenario that incorporates the evolution of these probabilities with
energy density, and therefore with proper time. From the spectra, we compute
the proton to pion ratio and compare to data at the highest RHIC energies. We
show that for a standard choice of parameters, this ratio reaches one, though
the maximum is very sensitive to the initial evolution proper time.Comment: 10 pages, 12 figures, version to appear in Phys. Rev.
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