486 research outputs found
Universal features of the off-equilibrium fragmentation with the Gaussian dissipation
We investigate universal features of the off-equilibrium sequential and
conservative fragmentation processes with the dissipative effects which are
simulated by the Gaussian random inactivation process. The relation between the
fragment multiplicity scaling law and the fragment size distribution is studied
and a dependence of scaling exponents on the parameters of fragmentation and
inactivation rate functions is established.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Universal fluctuations in heavy-ion collisions in the Fermi energy domain
We discuss the scaling laws of both the charged fragments multiplicity
fluctuations and the charge of the largest fragment fluctuations for Xe+Sn
collisions in the range of bombarding energies between 25 MeV/A and 50 MeV/A.
We show close to E_{lab}=32 MeV/A the transition in the fluctuation regime of
the charge of the largest fragment which is compatible with the transition from
the ordered to disordered phase of excited nuclear matter. The size (charge) of
the largest fragment is closely related to the order parameter characterizing
this process.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Universal features of fluctuations
Universal scaling laws of fluctuations (the -scaling laws) can be
derived for equilibrium and off-equilibrium systems when combined with the
finite-size scaling analysis. In any system in which the second-order critical
behavior can be identified, the relation between order parameter, criticality
and scaling law of fluctuations has been established and the relation between
the scaling function and the critical exponents has been found.Comment: 10 pages; TORINO 2000, New Frontiers in Soft Physics and Correlations
on the Threshold of the Third Milleniu
Scanning the critical fluctuations -- application to the phenomenology of the two-dimensional XY-model --
We show how applying field conjugated to the order parameter, may act as a
very precise probe to explore the probability distribution function of the
order parameter. Using this `magnetic-field scanning' on large-scale numerical
simulations of the critical 2D XY-model, we are able to discard the conjectured
double-exponential form of the large-magnetization asymptote.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Universal features of the order-parameter fluctuations : reversible and irreversible aggregation
We discuss the universal scaling laws of order parameter fluctuations in any
system in which the second-order critical behaviour can be identified. These
scaling laws can be derived rigorously for equilibrium systems when combined
with the finite-size scaling analysis. The relation between order parameter,
criticality and scaling law of fluctuations has been established and the
connexion between the scaling function and the critical exponents has been
found. We give examples in out-of-equilibrium aggregation models such as the
Smoluchowski kinetic equations, or of at-equilibrium Ising and percolation
models.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figure
Decay of Nuclear Giant Resonances: Quantum Self-similar Fragmentation
Scaling analysis of nuclear giant resonance transition probabilities with
increasing level of complexity in the background states is performed. It is
found that the background characteristics, typical for chaotic systems lead to
nontrivial multifractal scaling properties.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX format, pc96.sty + 2 eps figures, accepted as: talk at
the 8th Joint EPS-APS International Conference on Physics Computing (PC'96,
17-21. Sept. 1996), to appear in the Proceeding
Power-law tails from multiplicative noise
We show that the well-known Langevin equation, modeling the Brownian motion
and leading to a Gaussian stationary distribution of the corresponding
Fokker-Planck equation, is changed by the smallest multiplicative noise. This
leads to a power-law tail of the distribution at large enough momenta. At
finite ratio of the correlation strength for the multiplicative and additive
noise the stationary energy distribution becomes exactly the Tsallis
distribution.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX, revtex4 style, 2 figure
From colloidal dispersions to colloidal pastesthrough solid–liquid separation processes
Solid–liquid separation is an operation that starts with a dispersion of solid particles in a liquid and removes some of the liquid from the particles, producing a concentrated
solid paste and a clean liquid phase. It is similar to thermodynamic processes where pressure is applied to a system in order to reduce its volume. In dispersions, the resistance to this osmotic compression depends on interactions between the dispersed particles.
The first part of this work deals with dispersions of repelling particles, which are either silica nanoparticles or synthetic clay platelets, dispersed in aqueous solutions. In these conditions, each particle is surrounded by an ionic layer, which repels other ionic layers. This results in a structure with strong short-range order. At high particle volume fractions, the overlap
of ionic layers generates large osmotic pressures; these pressures may be calculated, through the cell model, as the cost of reducing the volume of each cell. The variation of osmotic pressure with volume fraction is the equation of state of the dispersion.
The second part of this work deals with dispersions of aggregated particles, which are silica nanoparticles, dispersed in water and flocculated by multivalent cations. This produces large bushy aggregates, with fractal structures that are maintained through interparticle surface– surface bonds. As the paste is submitted to osmotic pressures, small relative displacements
of the aggregated particles lead to structural collapse. The final structure is made of a dense skeleton immersed in a nearly homogeneous matrix of aggregated particles. The variation of osmotic resistance with volume fraction is the compression law of the paste; it may be calculated through a numerical model that takes into account the noncentral interparticle forces. According to this model, the response of aggregated pastes to applied stress may be
controlled through the manipulation of interparticle adhesion
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