105 research outputs found
The Effect of Shear on Phase-Ordering Dynamics with Order-Parameter-Dependent Mobility: The Large-n Limit
The effect of shear on the ordering-kinetics of a conserved order-parameter
system with O(n) symmetry and order-parameter-dependent mobility
\Gamma({\vec\phi}) \propto (1- {\vec\phi} ^2/n)^\alpha is studied analytically
within the large-n limit. In the late stage, the structure factor becomes
anisotropic and exhibits multiscaling behavior with characteristic length
scales (t^{2\alpha+5}/\ln t)^{1/2(\alpha+2)} in the flow direction and (t/\ln
t)^{1/2(\alpha+2)} in directions perpendicular to the flow. As in the \alpha=0
case, the structure factor in the shear-flow plane has two parallel ridges.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Interface Motion and Pinning in Small World Networks
We show that the nonequilibrium dynamics of systems with many interacting
elements located on a small-world network can be much slower than on regular
networks. As an example, we study the phase ordering dynamics of the Ising
model on a Watts-Strogatz network, after a quench in the ferromagnetic phase at
zero temperature. In one and two dimensions, small-world features produce
dynamically frozen configurations, disordered at large length scales, analogous
of random field models. This picture differs from the common knowledge
(supported by equilibrium results) that ferromagnetic short-cuts connections
favor order and uniformity. We briefly discuss some implications of these
results regarding the dynamics of social changes.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures with minor corrections. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Persistence in q-state Potts model: A Mean-Field approach
We study the Persistence properties of the T=0 coarsening dynamics of one
dimensional -state Potts model using a modified mean-field approximation
(MMFA). In this approximation, the spatial correlations between the interfaces
separating spins with different Potts states is ignored, but the correct time
dependence of the mean density of persistent spins is imposed. For this
model, it is known that follows a power-law decay with time, where is the -dependent persistence exponent. We
study the spatial structure of the persistent region within the MMFA. We show
that the persistent site pair correlation function has the scaling
form for all values of the persistence
exponent . The scaling function has the limiting behaviour () and (). We then show within the
Independent Interval Approximation (IIA) that the distribution of
separation between two consecutive persistent spins at time has the
asymptotic scaling form where the
dynamical exponent has the form =max(). The behaviour of
the scaling function for large and small values of the arguments is found
analytically. We find that for small separations where =max(), while for large
separations , decays exponentially with . The
unusual dynamical scaling form and the behaviour of the scaling function is
supported by numerical simulations.Comment: 11 pages in RevTeX, 10 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Single ionization of helium by 102 eV electron impact: three-dimensional images for electron emission
Single ionization of helium by 102 eV electron impact has been studied by measuring the momentum vectors of all final-state particles, i.e., two electrons and the He + ion, with an advanced reaction microscope. Fully differential cross sections for asymmetric scattering geometry, which have been normalized to an absolute scale, have been obtained covering a large range of emission angles for the emitted low-energy (E ≤ 15 eV) electron and different scattering angles for the fast electron. Strong electron emission out of the projectile scattering plane is confirmed for electron impact, as was observed before for heavy-ion impact ionization. The data are compared with theoretical predictions from a three-Coulomb wavefunction model, first-order and second-order distorted-wave approaches, as well as a convergent close-coupling calculation
Persistence in higher dimensions : a finite size scaling study
We show that the persistence probability , in a coarsening system of
linear size at a time , has the finite size scaling form where is the persistence exponent and
is the coarsening exponent. The scaling function for
and is constant for large . The scaling form implies a fractal
distribution of persistent sites with power-law spatial correlations. We study
the scaling numerically for Glauber-Ising model at dimension to 4 and
extend the study to the diffusion problem. Our finite size scaling ansatz is
satisfied in all these cases providing a good estimate of the exponent
.Comment: 4 pages in RevTeX with 6 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Fraction of uninfected walkers in the one-dimensional Potts model
The dynamics of the one-dimensional q-state Potts model, in the zero
temperature limit, can be formulated through the motion of random walkers which
either annihilate (A + A -> 0) or coalesce (A + A -> A) with a q-dependent
probability. We consider all of the walkers in this model to be mutually
infectious. Whenever two walkers meet, they experience mutual contamination.
Walkers which avoid an encounter with another random walker up to time t remain
uninfected. The fraction of uninfected walkers is investigated numerically and
found to decay algebraically, U(t) \sim t^{-\phi(q)}, with a nontrivial
exponent \phi(q). Our study is extended to include the coupled
diffusion-limited reaction A+A -> B, B+B -> A in one dimension with equal
initial densities of A and B particles. We find that the density of walkers
decays in this model as \rho(t) \sim t^{-1/2}. The fraction of sites unvisited
by either an A or a B particle is found to obey a power law, P(t) \sim
t^{-\theta} with \theta \simeq 1.33. We discuss these exponents within the
context of the q-state Potts model and present numerical evidence that the
fraction of walkers which remain uninfected decays as U(t) \sim t^{-\phi},
where \phi \simeq 1.13 when infection occurs between like particles only, and
\phi \simeq 1.93 when we also include cross-species contamination.Comment: Expanded introduction with more discussion of related wor
Scale invariance in coarsening of binary and ternary fluids
Phase separation in binary and ternary fluids is studied using a two
dimensional Lattice Gas Automata. The lengths, given by the the first zero
crossing point of the correlation function and the total interface length is
shown to exhibit power law dependence on time. In binary mixtures, our data
clearly indicate the existence of a regime having more than one length scale
where the coarsening process proceeds through the rupture and reassociation of
domains. In ternary fluids; in the case of symmetric mixtures there exists a
regime with a single length scale having dynamic exponent 1/2, while in
asymmetric mixtures our data establish the break down of scale invariance.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figure
Adaptive cluster expansion for the inverse Ising problem: convergence, algorithm and tests
We present a procedure to solve the inverse Ising problem, that is to find
the interactions between a set of binary variables from the measure of their
equilibrium correlations. The method consists in constructing and selecting
specific clusters of variables, based on their contributions to the
cross-entropy of the Ising model. Small contributions are discarded to avoid
overfitting and to make the computation tractable. The properties of the
cluster expansion and its performances on synthetic data are studied. To make
the implementation easier we give the pseudo-code of the algorithm.Comment: Paper submitted to Journal of Statistical Physic
Phase separating binary fluids under oscillatory shear
We apply lattice Boltzmann methods to study the segregation of binary fluid
mixtures under oscillatory shear flow in two dimensions. The algorithm allows
to simulate systems whose dynamics is described by the Navier-Stokes and the
convection-diffusion equations. The interplay between several time scales
produces a rich and complex phenomenology. We investigate the effects of
different oscillation frequencies and viscosities on the morphology of the
phase separating domains. We find that at high frequencies the evolution is
almost isotropic with growth exponents 2/3 and 1/3 in the inertial (low
viscosity) and diffusive (high viscosity) regimes, respectively. When the
period of the applied shear flow becomes of the same order of the relaxation
time of the shear velocity profile, anisotropic effects are clearly
observable. In correspondence with non-linear patterns for the velocity
profiles, we find configurations where lamellar order close to the walls
coexists with isotropic domains in the middle of the system. For particular
values of frequency and viscosity it can also happen that the convective
effects induced by the oscillations cause an interruption or a slowing of the
segregation process, as found in some experiments. Finally, at very low
frequencies, the morphology of domains is characterized by lamellar order
everywhere in the system resembling what happens in the case with steady shear.Comment: 1 table and 12 figures in .gif forma
Three-dimensional lattice-Boltzmann simulations of critical spinodal decomposition in binary immiscible fluids
We use a modified Shan-Chen, noiseless lattice-BGK model for binary
immiscible, incompressible, athermal fluids in three dimensions to simulate the
coarsening of domains following a deep quench below the spinodal point from a
symmetric and homogeneous mixture into a two-phase configuration. We find the
average domain size growing with time as , where increases
in the range , consistent with a crossover between
diffusive and hydrodynamic viscous, , behaviour. We find
good collapse onto a single scaling function, yet the domain growth exponents
differ from others' works' for similar values of the unique characteristic
length and time that can be constructed out of the fluid's parameters. This
rebuts claims of universality for the dynamical scaling hypothesis. At early
times, we also find a crossover from to in the scaled structure
function, which disappears when the dynamical scaling reasonably improves at
later times. This excludes noise as the cause for a behaviour, as
proposed by others. We also observe exponential temporal growth of the
structure function during the initial stages of the dynamics and for
wavenumbers less than a threshold value.Comment: 45 pages, 18 figures. Accepted for publication in Physical Review
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