7,771 research outputs found
The prediction and measurement of sound radiated by structures
Theories regarding the radiation of sound are reviewed and the implementation in strategies for explaining or measuring the sound produced by practical strucutres are discussed. Particular attention is given to those aspects that relate to the determination of the relative amounts of sound generated by various parts of a machine or structure, which can be very useful information for noise reduction efforts
Confining potential in a color dielectric medium with parallel domain walls
We study quark confinement in a system of two parallel domain walls
interpolating different color dielectric media. We use the phenomenological
approach in which the confinement of quarks appears considering the QCD vacuum
as a color dielectric medium. We explore this phenomenon in QCD_2, where the
confinement of the color flux between the domain walls manifests, in a scenario
where two 0-branes (representing external quark and antiquark) are connected by
a QCD string. We obtain solutions of the equations of motion via first-order
differential equations. We find a new color confining potential that increases
monotonically with the distance between the domain walls.Comment: RevTex4, 5 pages, 1 figure; version to appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
Magnetic states of linear defects in graphene monolayers: effects of strain and interaction
The combined effects of defect-defect interaction and of uniaxial or biaxial
strains of up to 10\% on the development of magnetic states on the
defect-core-localized quasi-one-dimensional electronic states generated by the
so-called 558 linear extended defect in graphene monolayers are investigated by
means of {\it ab initio} calculations. Results are analyzed on the basis of the
heuristics of the Stoner criterion. We find that conditions for the emergence
of magnetic states on the 558 defect can be tuned by uniaxial tensile parallel
strains (along the defect direction) at both limits of isolated and interacting
558 defects. Parallel strains are shown to lead to two cooperative effects that
favor the emergence of itinerant magnetism: enhancement of the DOS of the
resonant defect states in the region of the Fermi level and tuning of the Fermi
level to the maximum of the related DOS peak. A perpendicular strain is
likewise shown to enhance the DOS of the defect states, but it also effects a
detunig of the Fermi level that shifts away from the maximum of the DOS of the
defect states, which inhibts the emergence of magnetic states. As a result,
under biaxial strains the stabilization of a magnetic state depends on the
relative magnitudes of the two components of strain.Comment: 9 pages 8 figure
Shear viscosity of a model for confined granular media
The shear viscosity in the dilute regime of a model for confined granular matter is studied by simulations and kinetic theory. The model consists on projecting into two dimensions the motion of vibrofluidized granular matter in shallow boxes by modifying the collision rule: besides the restitution coefficient that accounts for the energy dissipation, there is a separation velocity that is added in each collision in the normal direction. The two mechanisms balance on average, producing stationary homogeneous states. Molecular dynamics simulations show that in the steady state the distribution function departs from a Maxwellian, with cumulants that remain small in the whole range of inelasticities. The shear viscosity normalized with stationary temperature presents a clear dependence with the inelasticity, taking smaller values compared to the elastic case. A Boltzmann-like equation is built and analyzed using linear response theory. It is found that the predictions show an excellent agreement with the simulations when the correct stationary distribution is used but a Maxwellian approximation fails in predicting the inelasticity dependence of the viscosity. These results confirm that transport coefficients depend strongly on the mechanisms that drive them to stationary states
Universal scaling dynamics in a perturbed granular gas
We study the response of a granular system at rest to an instantaneous input
of energy in a localised region. We present scaling arguments that show that,
in dimensions, the radius of the resulting disturbance increases with time
as , and the energy decreases as , where the
exponent is independent of the coefficient of restitution. We
support our arguments with an exact calculation in one dimension and event
driven molecular dynamic simulations of hard sphere particles in two and three
dimensions.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Pattern Formation in the Inhomogeneous Cooling State of Granular Fluids
We present results from comprehensive event-driven (ED) simulations of
nonlinear pattern formation in freely-evolving granular gases. In particular,
we focus on the the morphologies of density and velocity fields in the
inhomogeneous cooling state (ICS). We emphasize the strong analogy between the
ICS morphologies and pattern formation in phase ordering systems with a
globally conserved order parameter.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures. to appear in Europhys. Let
Experimental study of super-rotation in a magnetostrophic spherical Couette flow
We report measurements of electric potentials at the surface of a spherical
container of liquid sodium in which a magnetized inner core is differentially
rotating. The azimuthal angular velocities inferred from these potentials
reveal a strong super-rotation of the liquid sodium in the equatorial region,
for small differential rotation. Super-rotation was observed in numerical
simulations by Dormy et al. [1]. We find that the latitudinal variation of the
electric potentials in our experiments differs markedly from the predictions of
a similar numerical model, suggesting that some of the assumptions used in the
model - steadiness, equatorial symmetry, and linear treatment for the evolution
of both the magnetic and velocity fields - are violated in the experiments. In
addition, radial velocity measurements, using ultrasonic Doppler velocimetry,
provide evidence of oscillatory motion near the outer sphere at low latitude:
it is viewed as the signature of an instability of the super-rotating region
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