22,380 research outputs found
Limiting stable currents in bounded electron and ion streams
The classical static analysis of the infinite planar diode has been extended to include the effects of finite transverse beam size. Simple expressions have been found for the increase in maximum stable current density over that of an infinite stream for finite cylindrical and strip streams flowing between plates of infinite diodes. The results are also given in terms of stream perveance. The effect of a nonuniform distribution of current across the stream is shown to be relatively small. Experimental values of maximum stable current agree with those obtained from the analysis. A further extension of the static analysis has been made to include the effects of additional conducting plane boundaries parallel to the stream motion. For length-to-width ratios L/D less than 0.25 the tube is adequately described by the results for the infinite planar diode and for L/D greater than 4, the infinitely-long drift tube theory suffices. At intermediate values of L/D, the maximum amount of current that can be stably passed through the tube is greater than that predicted by either asymptotic theory
Current reversal and exclusion processes with history-dependent random walks
A class of exclusion processes in which particles perform history-dependent
random walks is introduced, stimulated by dynamic phenomena in some biological
and artificial systems. The particles locally interact with the underlying
substrate by breaking and reforming lattice bonds. We determine the
steady-state current on a ring, and find current-reversal as a function of
particle density. This phenomenon is attributed to the non-local interaction
between the walkers through their trails, which originates from strong
correlations between the dynamics of the particles and the lattice. We
rationalize our findings within an effective description in terms of
quasi-particles which we call front barriers. Our analytical results are
complemented by stochastic simulations.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figure
Stiff Polymers, Foams and Fiber Networks
We study the elasticity of fibrous materials composed of generalized stiff
polymers. It is shown that in contrast to cellular foam-like structures affine
strain fields are generically unstable. Instead, a subtle interplay between the
architecture of the network and the elastic properties of its building blocks
leads to intriguing mechanical properties with intermediate asymptotic scaling
regimes. We present exhaustive numerical studies based on a finite element
method complemented by scaling arguments.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy analysis of segmental dynamics in Actin filaments
We adapt Fluorescence Correlation spectroscopy (FCS) formalism to the studies
of the dynamics of semi-flexible polymers and derive expressions relating FCS
correlation function to the longitudinal and transverse mean square
displacements of polymer segments. We use the derived expressions to measure
the dynamics of actin filaments in two experimental situations: filaments
labeled at distinct positions and homogeneously labeled filaments. Both
approaches give consistent results and allow to measure the temporal dependence
of the segmental mean-square displacement (MSD) over almost five decades in
time, from ~0.04ms to 2s. These noninvasive measurements allow for a detailed
quantitative comparison of the experimental data to the current theories of
semi-flexible polymer dynamics. Good quantitative agreement is found between
the experimental results and theories explicitly accounting for the
hydrodynamic interactions between polymer segments
Item-writing Rules: Collective Wisdom
In student assessment, teachers place the greatest weight on tests they have constructed themselves and have an equally great interest in the quality of those tests. To increase the validity of teacher-made tests, many item-writing rules-of-thumb are available in the literature, but few rules have been tested experimentally. In light of the paucity of empirical studies, the validity of any given guideline might best be established by relying on experts. This study analyzed twenty classroom assessment textbooks to identify a consensus list of item-writing rules. Forty rules for which there was agreement among textbook authors are presented. The rules address four different validity concerns-potentially confusing wording or ambiguous requirements, the problem of guessing, test-taking efficiency, and controlling for testwiseness
The use of happiness research for public policy
Research on happiness tends to follow a "benevolent dictator" approach where politicians pursue people's happiness. This paper takes an antithetic approach based on the insights of public choice theory. First, we inquire how the results of happiness research may be used to improve the choice of institutions. Second, we show that the policy approach matters for the choice of research questions and the kind of knowledge happiness research aims to provide. Third, we emphasize that there is no shortcut to an optimal policy maximizing some happiness indicator or social welfare function since governments have an incentive to manipulate this indicator
Traffic jams induced by rare switching events in two-lane transport
We investigate a model for driven exclusion processes where internal states are assigned to the particles. The latter account for diverse situations, ranging from spin states in spintronics to parallel lanes in intracellular or vehicular traffic. Introducing a coupling between the internal states by allowing particles to switch from one to another induces an intriguing polarization phenomenon. In a mesoscopic scaling, a rich stationary regime for the density profiles is discovered, with localized domain walls in the density profile of one of the internal states being feasible. We derive the shape of the density profiles as well as resulting phase diagrams analytically by a mean-field approximation and a continuum limit. Continuous as well as discontinuous lines of phase transition emerge, their intersections induce multi-critical behaviour
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