409 research outputs found
Phase Transitions in Granular Packings
We describe the contact network of granular packings by a frustrated lattice
gas that contains steric frustration as essential ingredient. Two transitions
are identified, a spin glass transition at the onset of Reynolds dilatancy and
at lower densities a percolation transition. We describe the correlation
functions that give rise to the singularities and propose some dynamical
experiments
Critical Susceptibility Exponent Measured from Fe/W(110) Bilayers
The critical phase transition in ferromagnetic ultrathin Fe/W(110) films has
been studied using the magnetic ac susceptibility. A statistically objective,
unconstrained fitting of the susceptibility is used to extract values for the
critical exponent (gamma), the critical temperature Tc, the critical amplitude
(chi_o) and the range of temperature that exhibits power-law behaviour. A
fitting algorithm was used to simultaneously minimize the statistical variance
of a power law fit to individual experimental measurements of chi(T). This
avoids systematic errors and generates objective fitting results. An ensemble
of 25 measurements on many different films are analyzed. Those which permit an
extended fitting range in reduced temperature lower than approximately .00475
give an average value gamma=1.76+-0.01. Bilayer films give a weighted average
value of gamma = 1.75+-0.02. These results are in agreement with the
-dimensional Ising exponent gamma= 7/4. Measurements that do not exhibit
power-law scaling as close to Tc (especially films of thickness 1.75ML) show a
value of gamma higher than the Ising value. Several possibilities are
considered to account for this behaviour.Comment: -Submitted to Phys. Rev. B -Revtex4 Format -6 postscript figure
Statistical Mechanics of the Self-Gravitating Gas: I. Thermodynamic Limit and Phase Diagram
We provide a complete picture to the selfgravitating non-relativistic gas at
thermal equilibrium using Monte Carlo simulations, analytic mean field methods
(MF) and low density expansions. The system is shown to possess an infinite
volume limit in the grand canonical (GCE), canonical (CE) and microcanonical
(MCE) ensembles when(N, V) --> infinity, keeping N/ V^{1/3} fixed. We compute
the equation of state (we do not assume it as is customary), as well as the
energy, free energy, entropy, chemical potential, specific heats, compressibi-
lities and speed of sound;we analyze their properties, signs and singularities.
All physical quantities turn out to depend on a single variable eta = G m^2 N/
[V^{1/3} T] that is kept fixed in the N--> infinity and V --> infinity limit.
The system is in a gaseous phase for eta < eta_T and collapses into a dense
objet for eta > \eta_T in the CE with the pressure becoming large and negative.
At eta simeq eta_T the isothermal compressibility diverges. Our Monte Carlo
simulations yield eta_T simeq 1.515. PV/[NT] = f(eta) and all physical magni-
tudes exhibit a square root branch point at eta = eta_C > eta_T. The MF for
spherical symmetry yields eta_C = 1.561764.. while Monte Carlo on a cube yields
eta_C simeq 1.540.The function f(eta) has a second Riemann sheet which is only
physically realized in the MCE.In the MCE, the collapse phase transition takes
place in this second sheet near eta_MC = 1.26 and the pressure and temperature
are larger in the collapsed phase than in the gas phase.Both collapse phase
transitions (CE and MCE) are of zeroth order since the Gibbs free energy jumps
at the transitions. f(eta), obeys in MF a first order non-linear differential
equation of first kind Abel's type.The MF gives an extremely accurate picture
in agreement with Monte Carlo both in the CE and MCE.Comment: Latex, 51 pages, 15 .ps figures, to appear in Nucl. Phys.
Short-time dynamics and magnetic critical behavior of two-dimensional random-bond Potts model
The critical behavior in the short-time dynamics for the random-bond Potts
ferromagnet in two-dimensions is investigated by short-time dynamic Monte Carlo
simulations. The numerical calculations show that this dynamic approach can be
applied efficiently to study the scaling characteristic, which is used to
estimate the critical exponents theta, beta/nu and z for the quenched disorered
systems from the power-law behavior of the kth moments of magnetizations.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures Soft Condensed Matte
The Quark-Hadron Phase Transition, QCD Lattice Calculations and Inhomogeneous Big-Bang Nucleosynthesis
We review recent lattice QCD results for the surface tension at the finite
temperature quark-hadron phase transition and discuss their implications on the
possible scale of inhomogeneities. In the quenched approximation the average
distance between nucleating centers is smaller than the diffusion length of a
protron, so that inhomogeneities are washed out by the time nucleosynthesis
sets in. Consequently the baryon density fluctuations formed by a QCD phase
transition in the early universe cannot significantly affect standard big-bang
nucleosynthesis calculations and certainly cannot allow baryons to close the
universe. At present lattice results are inconclusive when dynamical fermions
are included.Comment: 8 pages, LaTe
Collective motions in globally coupled tent maps with stochastic updating
We study a generalization of globally coupled maps, where the elements are
updated with probability . When is below a threshold , the
collective motion vanishes and the system is the stationary state in the large
size limit. We present the linear stability analysis.Comment: 6 pages including 5 figure
Polariton propagation in weak confinement quantum wells
Exciton-polariton propagation in a quantum well, under centre-of-mass
quantization, is computed by a variational self-consistent microscopic theory.
The Wannier exciton envelope functions basis set is given by the simple
analytical model of ref. [1], based on pure states of the centre-of-mass wave
vector, free from fitting parameters and "ad hoc" (the so called additional
boundary conditions-ABCs) assumptions. In the present paper, the former
analytical model is implemented in order to reproduce the centre-of-mass
quantization in a large range of quantum well thicknesses (5a_B < L < inf.).
The role of the dynamical transition layer at the well/barrier interfaces is
discussed at variance of the classical Pekar's dead-layer and ABCs. The Wannier
exciton eigenstates are computed, and compared with various theoretical models
with different degrees of accuracy. Exciton-polariton transmission spectra in
large quantum wells (L>> a_B) are computed and compared with experimental
results of Schneider et al.\cite{Schneider} in high quality GaAs samples. The
sound agreement between theory and experiment allows to unambiguously assign
the exciton-polariton dips of the transmission spectrum to the pure states of
the Wannier exciton center-of-mass quantization.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures; will appear in Phys.Rev.
Tunneling of quantum rotobreathers
We analyze the quantum properties of a system consisting of two nonlinearly
coupled pendula. This non-integrable system exhibits two different symmetries:
a permutational symmetry (permutation of the pendula) and another one related
to the reversal of the total momentum of the system. Each of these symmetries
is responsible for the existence of two kinds of quasi-degenerated states. At
sufficiently high energy, pairs of symmetry-related states glue together to
form quadruplets. We show that, starting from the anti-continuous limit,
particular quadruplets allow us to construct quantum states whose properties
are very similar to those of classical rotobreathers. By diagonalizing
numerically the quantum Hamiltonian, we investigate their properties and show
that such states are able to store the main part of the total energy on one of
the pendula. Contrary to the classical situation, the coupling between pendula
necessarily introduces a periodic exchange of energy between them with a
frequency which is proportional to the energy splitting between
quasi-degenerated states related to the permutation symmetry. This splitting
may remain very small as the coupling strength increases and is a decreasing
function of the pair energy. The energy may be therefore stored in one pendulum
during a time period very long as compared to the inverse of the internal
rotobreather frequency.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, REVTeX4 styl
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