7,055 research outputs found
Moving Walkways, Escalators, and Elevators
We study a simple geometric model of transportation facility that consists of
two points between which the travel speed is high. This elementary definition
can model shuttle services, tunnels, bridges, teleportation devices, escalators
or moving walkways. The travel time between a pair of points is defined as a
time distance, in such a way that a customer uses the transportation facility
only if it is helpful.
We give algorithms for finding the optimal location of such a transportation
facility, where optimality is defined with respect to the maximum travel time
between two points in a given set.Comment: 16 pages. Presented at XII Encuentros de Geometria Computacional,
Valladolid, Spai
Breakdown of Hydrodynamics in a Simple One-Dimensional Fluid
We investigate the behavior of a one-dimensional diatomic fluid under a shock
wave excitation. We find that the properties of the resulting shock wave are in
striking contrast with those predicted by hydrodynamic and kinetic approaches,
e.g., the hydrodynamic profiles relax algebraically toward their equilibrium
values. Deviations from local thermodynamic equilibrium are persistent,
decaying as a power law of the distance to the shock layer. Non-equipartition
is observed infinitely far from the shock wave, and the velocity-distribution
moments exhibit multiscaling. These results question the validity of simple
hydrodynamic theories to understand collective behavior in 1d fluids.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Fluctuations of the heat flux of a one-dimensional hard particle gas
Momentum-conserving one-dimensional models are known to exhibit anomalous
Fourier's law, with a thermal conductivity varying as a power law of the system
size. Here we measure, by numerical simulations, several cumulants of the heat
flux of a one-dimensional hard particle gas. We find that the cumulants, like
the conductivity, vary as power laws of the system size. Our results also
indicate that cumulants higher than the second follow different power laws when
one compares the ring geometry at equilibrium and the linear case in contact
with two heat baths (at equal or unequal temperatures). keywords: current
fluctuations, anomalous Fourier law, hard particle gasComment: 5 figure
Strong Shock Waves and Nonequilibrium Response in a One-dimensional Gas: a Boltzmann Equation Approach
We investigate the nonequilibrium behavior of a one-dimensional binary fluid
on the basis of Boltzmann equation, using an infinitely strong shock wave as
probe. Density, velocity and temperature profiles are obtained as a function of
the mixture mass ratio \mu. We show that temperature overshoots near the shock
layer, and that heavy particles are denser, slower and cooler than light
particles in the strong nonequilibrium region around the shock. The shock width
w(\mu), which characterizes the size of this region, decreases as w(\mu) ~
\mu^{1/3} for \mu-->0. In this limit, two very different length scales control
the fluid structure, with heavy particles equilibrating much faster than light
ones. Hydrodynamic fields relax exponentially toward equilibrium, \phi(x) ~
exp[-x/\lambda]. The scale separation is also apparent here, with two typical
scales, \lambda_1 and \lambda_2, such that \lambda_1 ~ \mu^{1/2} as \mu-->0$,
while \lambda_2, which is the slow scale controlling the fluid's asymptotic
relaxation, increases to a constant value in this limit. These results are
discussed at the light of recent numerical studies on the nonequilibrium
behavior of similar 1d binary fluids.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figs, published versio
The Simplest Piston Problem II: Inelastic Collisions
We study the dynamics of three particles in a finite interval, in which two
light particles are separated by a heavy ``piston'', with elastic collisions
between particles but inelastic collisions between the light particles and the
interval ends. A symmetry breaking occurs in which the piston migrates near one
end of the interval and performs small-amplitude periodic oscillations on a
logarithmic time scale. The properties of this dissipative limit cycle can be
understood simply in terms of an effective restitution coefficient picture.
Many dynamical features of the three-particle system closely resemble those of
the many-body inelastic piston problem.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, 2-column revtex4 forma
Entangled networks, synchronization, and optimal network topology
A new family of graphs, {\it entangled networks}, with optimal properties in
many respects, is introduced. By definition, their topology is such that
optimizes synchronizability for many dynamical processes. These networks are
shown to have an extremely homogeneous structure: degree, node-distance,
betweenness, and loop distributions are all very narrow. Also, they are
characterized by a very interwoven (entangled) structure with short average
distances, large loops, and no well-defined community-structure. This family of
nets exhibits an excellent performance with respect to other flow properties
such as robustness against errors and attacks, minimal first-passage time of
random walks, efficient communication, etc. These remarkable features convert
entangled networks in a useful concept, optimal or almost-optimal in many
senses, and with plenty of potential applications computer science or
neuroscience.Comment: Slightly modified version, as accepted in Phys. Rev. Let
Compact Waves in Microscopic Nonlinear Diffusion
We analyze the spread of a localized peak of energy into vacuum for nonlinear
diffusive processes. In contrast with standard diffusion, the nonlinearity
results in a compact wave with a sharp front separating the perturbed region
from vacuum. In spatial dimensions, the front advances as
according to hydrodynamics, with the nonlinearity exponent. We show that
fluctuations in the front position grow as , where
is a new exponent that we measure and is a random
variable whose distribution we characterize. Fluctuating corrections to
hydrodynamic profiles give rise to an excess penetration into vacuum, revealing
scaling behaviors and robust features. We also examine the discharge of a
nonlinear rarefaction wave into vacuum. Our results suggest the existence of
universal scaling behaviors at the fluctuating level in nonlinear diffusion.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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