22 research outputs found
Magnetic Nernst effect
The thermodynamics of irreversible processes in continuous media predicts the
existence of a Magnetic Nernst effect that results from a magnetic analog to
the Seebeck effect in a ferromagnet and magnetophoresis occurring in a
paramagnetic electrode in contact with the ferromagnet. Thus, a voltage that
has DC and AC components is expected across a Pt electrode as a response to the
inhomogeneous magnetic induction field generated by magnetostatic waves of an
adjacent YIG slab subject to a temperature gradient. The voltage frequency and
dependence on the orientation of the applied magnetic induction field are quite
distinct from that of spin pumping.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Onsager-Casimir reciprocal relations
The Onsager reciprocal relations are established within the phenomenological
framework of the thermodynamics of irreversible processes. In order to do so,
the dissipated power densities associated to scalar and vectorial processes are
written as positive semi-definite quadratic forms of the corresponding
generalised forces, as required by the local expression of the second law in
the neighbourhood of the equilibrium. The antisymmetric part of the scalar and
vectorial Onsager matrices do not contribute to the dissipation, which yields
the scalar and vectorial Onsager reciprocal relations. Furthermore, the
positive semi-definite quadratic forms of the generalised scalar and vectorial
forces are invariant under time reversal, which yields the scalar and vectorial
Casimir-Onsager reciprocal relations, that are a generalisation of the Onsager
reciprocal relations.Comment: 18 page
Thermodynamics of a continuous medium with electric and magnetic dipoles
The thermodynamics of an electrically charged, multicomponent fluid with spontaneous electric and magnetic dipoles is analysed in the presence of electromagnetic fields. Taking into account the chemical composition of the current densities and stress tensors leads to three types of irreversible terms: scalars, vectors and pseudo-vectors. The scalar terms account for chemical reactivities, the vectorial terms account for transport and the pseudo-vectorial terms account for relaxation. The linear phenomenological relations, derived from the irreversible evolution, describe notably the Lehmann and electric Lehmann effects, the Debye relaxation of polar molecules and the Landau-Lifshitz relaxation of the magnetisation. This formalism accounts for the thermal and electric magnetisation accumulations and magnetisation waves. It also predicts that a temperature gradient affects the dynamics of magnetic vortices and drives magnetisation wave
Thermodynamics of a continuous medium with electric dipoles and magnetic moments
The thermodynamics of an electrically charged, multicomponent fluid with
spontaneous electric dipoles and magnetic moments is analysed in the presence
of electromagnetic fields. Taking into account the chemical composition of the
current densities and stress tensors leads to three types of dissipation terms:
scalars, vectors and pseudo-vectors. The scalar terms account for chemical
reactivities, the vectorial terms account for transport and the
pseudo-vectorial terms account for relaxation. The linear phenomenological
relations, derived from the irreversible evolution, describe notably the
Lehmann and electric Lehmann effects, the Debye relaxation of polar molecules
and the Landau-Lifshitz relaxation of the magnetisation. This formalism
accounts for the thermal and electric magnetisation accumulations and
magnetisation waves. It also predicts that a temperature gradient affects the
dynamics of magnetic vortices and drives magnetisation waves
Rotational Heisenberg Inequalities
Since their discovery in 1927, the Heisenberg Inequalities have become an
icon of quantum mechanics. Often inappropriately referred to as the Uncertainty
Principle, these inequalities relating the standard deviations of the position
and momentum observables to Planck's constant are one of the cornerstones of
the quantum formalism even if the physical interpretation of quantum mechanics
remains still open to controversy nowadays. The Heisenberg Inequalities
governing translational motion are well understood. However, the corresponding
inequalities pertaining to rotational motion have not been established so far.
To fill this gap, we present here the Rotational Heisenberg Inequalities
relating the standard deviations of the orientation axis and orbital angular
momentum observables of an isolated molecule. The reason for choosing this
system is that a molecule separated from its environment corresponds to a bound
system preserving the orbital angular momentum.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1412.211
Relativistic thermodynamics of perfect fluids
The relativistic continuity equations for the extensive thermodynamic
quantities are derived based on the divergence theorem in Minkowski space
outlined by St\"uckelberg. This covariant approach leads to a relativistic
formulation of the first and second laws of thermodynamics. The internal energy
density and the pressure of a relativistic perfect fluid carry inertia, which
leads to a relativistic coupling between heat and work. The relativistic
continuity equation for the relativistic inertia is derived. The relativistic
corrections in the Euler equation and in the continuity equations for the
energy and momentum are identified. This relativistic theoretical framework
allows a rigorous derivation of the relativistic transformation laws for the
temperature, the pressure and the chemical potential based on the relativistic
transformation laws for the energy density, the entropy density, the mass
density and the number density.Comment: 62 page
Evidence for a Magnetic Seebeck effect
The irreversible thermodynamics of a continuous medium with magnetic dipoles
predicts that a temperature gradient in the presence of magnetisation waves
induces a magnetic induction field, which is the magnetic analog of the Seebeck
effect. This thermal gradient modulates the precession and relaxation. The
Magnetic Seebeck effect implies that magnetisation waves propagating in the
direction of the temperature gradient and the external magnetic induction field
are less attenuated, while magnetisation waves propagating in the opposite
direction are more attenuated
Quantum description of a rotating and vibrating molecule
A rigorous quantum description of molecular dynamics with a particular
emphasis on internal observables is developed accounting explicitly for kinetic
couplings between nuclei and electrons. Rotational modes are treated in a
genuinely quantum framework by defining a molecular orientation operator.
Canonical rotational commutation relations are established explicitly.
Moreover, physical constraints are imposed on the observables in order to
define the state of a molecular system located in the neighborhood of the
ground state defined by the equilibrium condition.Comment: 28 page