1,358 research outputs found
Collisions of micron-sized, charged water droplets in still air
We investigate the effect of electrical charge on collisions of
hydrodynamically interacting, micron-sized water droplets settling through
quiescent air. The relative dynamics of charged droplets is determined by
hydrodynamic interactions, particle and fluid inertia, and electrostatic
forces. We analyse the resulting relative dynamics of oppositely charged
droplets by determining its fixed points and their stable and unstable
manifolds. The stable manifold of a saddle point forms a separatrix that
separates colliding trajectories from those that do not collide. The
qualitative conclusions from this theory are in excellent agreement with
experiments.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, supplemental materia
Electron-phonon coupling in the conventional superconductor YNiBC at high phonon energies studied by time-of-flight neutron spectroscopy
We report an inelastic neutron scattering investigation of phonons with
energies up to 159 meV in the conventional superconductor YNiBC. Using
the SWEEP mode, a newly developed time-of-flight technique involving the
continuous rotation of a single crystal specimen, allowed us to measure a four
dimensional volume in (Q,E) space and, thus, determine the dispersion surface
and linewidths of the (~ 102 meV) and (~ 159 meV) type phonon
modes for the whole Brillouin zone. Despite of having linewidths of , modes do not strongly contribute to the total electron-phonon
coupling constant . However, experimental linewidths show a remarkable
agreement with ab-initio calculations over the complete phonon energy range
demonstrating the accuracy of such calculations in a rare comparison to a
comprehensive experimental data set.Comment: accepted for publication in PR
Characterization of reconnecting vortices in superfluid helium
When two vortices cross, each of them breaks into two parts and exchanges
part of itself for part of the other. This process, called vortex reconnection,
occurs in classical as well as superfluids, and in magnetized plasmas and
superconductors. We present the first experimental observations of reconnection
between quantized vortices in superfluid helium. We do so by imaging
micron-sized solid hydrogen particles trapped on quantized vortex cores (Bewley
GP, Lathrop DP, Sreenivasan KR, 2006, Nature, 441:588), and by inferring the
occurrence of reconnection from the motions of groups of recoiling particles.
We show the distance separating particles on the just-reconnected vortex lines
grows as a power law in time. The average value of the scaling exponent is
approximately 1/2, consistent with the scale-invariant evolution of the
vortices
Social Preferences, Skill Segregation and Wage Dynamics
We study the earning structure and the equilibrium asignment of workers to firms in a model in which workers have social preferences, and skills are perfectly substitutable in production. Firms offer long-term contracts, and we allow for frictions in the labour market in the form of mobility costs. The model delivers specific predictions about the nature of worker flows, about the characteristic of workplace skill segregation, and about wage dispersion both within and cross firms. We shows that long-term contracts in the resence of social preferences associate within-firm wage dispersion with novel "internal labour market" features such as gradual promotions, productivity-unrelated wage increases, and downward wage flexibility. These three dynamic features lead to productivity-unrelated wage volatily within firms.Publicad
Effects of acute lying and sleep deprivation on metabolic and inflammatory responses of lactating dairy cows
Dairy cows that are restricted from lying down have a reduced ability to sleep. In other species, sleep loss is a key risk factor for disease, mediated by changes in metabolic and inflammatory responses. The cumulative effect of lying and sleep deprivation on cow health is unknown. The objective was to determine the effects of lying and sleep deprivation on metabolic and inflammatory responses of dairy cows. Data were collected from 8 multiparous and 4 primiparous lactating cows (199 +/- 44 d in milk, 77 +/- 30 d pregnant; mean +/- standard deviation) enrolled in a study using a crossover design. Each cow was exposed to 2 treatments meant to induce sleep loss: (1) human disturbance (imposed by researchers making noise or physical contact when the cow's posture suggested sleep) and (2) lying deprivation (imposed by a wooden grid placed on the pen floor). Cows experienced a 24-h baseline period (d - 1) followed by a 24-h treatment period (d 0), with a 12-d washout period between treatments. Baseline and treatment periods were imposed from 2100 to 2059 h. Cows were housed in individual pens during the acclimation period (d - 3 and - 2), d - 1, and d 0. Nonesterified fatty acid and glucose concentrations were measured at 0300, 0900, 1500, and 2059 h on d - 1 and 0. Proinflammatory cytokine mRNA [tumor necrosis factor (TNF), interleukin-1B (IL1B), and interleukin-6 (IL6)] abundance in whole-blood leukocytes, both nonstimulated and stimulated with lipopolysaccharide, were assessed at 2059 h on d -1 (end of baseline) and d 0 (end of treatment). Nonesterified fatty acids and glucose varied by time of day but were not affected by treatment or day. The abundances of TNF and IL1B from both stimulated and nonstimulated cells were higher following 24 h of lying deprivation (d 0) compared with baseline (d -1). Abundance of IL6 was increased in nonstimulated cells after lying deprivation compared with baseline. In contrast, human disturbance for 24 h did not alter TNF, IL1B, or IL6 abundance relative to baseline levels. These results suggest that a short period of lying deprivation generally increases inflammatory responses but not metabolic responses.Peer reviewe
Velocity Statistics Distinguish Quantum Turbulence from Classical Turbulence
By analyzing trajectories of solid hydrogen tracers, we find that the
distributions of velocity in decaying quantum turbulence in superfluid He
are strongly non-Gaussian with power-law tails. These features differ
from the near-Gaussian statistics of homogenous and isotropic turbulence of
classical fluids. We examine the dynamics of many events of reconnection
between quantized vortices and show by simple scaling arguments that they
produce the observed power-law tails.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Yb-Yb correlations and crystal-field effects in the Kondo insulator YbB12 and its solid solutions
We have studied the effect of Lu substitution on the spin dynamics of the
Kondo insulator YbB12 to clarify the origin of the spin-gap response previously
observed at low temperature in this material. Inelastic neutron spectra have
been measured in Yb1-xLuxB12 compounds for four Lu concentrations x = 0, 0.25,
0.90 and 1.0. The data indicate that the disruption of coherence on the Yb
sublattice primarily affects the narrow peak structure occurring near 15-20 meV
in pure YbB12, whereas the spin gap and the broad magnetic signal around 38 meV
remain almost unaffected. It is inferred that the latter features reflect
mainly local, single-site processes, and may be reminiscent of the inelastic
magnetic response reported for mixed-valence intermetallic compounds. On the
other hand, the lower component at 15 meV is most likely due to dynamic
short-range magnetic correlations. The crystal-field splitting in YbB12
estimated from the Er3+ transitions measured in a Yb0.9Er0.1B12 sample, has the
same order of magnitude as other relevant energy scales of the system and is
thus likely to play a role in the form of the magnetic spectral response.Comment: 16 pages in pdf format, 9 figures. v. 2: coauthor list updated; extra
details given in section 3.2 (pp. 6-7); one reference added; fig. 5 axis
label change
Identification of Kelvin waves: numerical challenges
Kelvin waves are expected to play an essential role in the energy dissipation
for quantized vortices. However, the identification of these helical
distortions is not straightforward, especially in case of vortex tangle. Here
we review several numerical methods that have been used to identify Kelvin
waves within the vortex filament model. We test their validity using several
examples and estimate whether these methods are accurate enough to verify the
correct Kelvin spectrum. We also illustrate how the correlation dimension is
related to different Kelvin spectra and remind that the 3D energy spectrum E(k)
takes the form 1/k in the high-k region, even in the presence of Kelvin waves.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. The final publication is available at
http://www.springerlink.co
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