1,280 research outputs found
On the propagation of an optical wave in a photorefractive medium
The aim of this paper is first to review the derivation of a model describing
the propagation of an optical wave in a photorefractive medium and to present
various mathematical results on this model: Cauchy problem, solitary waves
Predictable hydrodynamic conditions explain temporal variations in the density of benthic foraging seabirds in a tidal stream environment
VC International Council for the Exploration of the Sea 2016. James J. Waggitt was funded by a NERC Case studentship supported by OpenHydro Ltd and Marine Scotland Science (NE/J500148/1). Shore-based surveys were funded by a NERC (NE/J004340/1) and a Scottish National Heritage (SNH) grant. FVCOM was funded by a NERC grant (NE/J004316/1). The bathymetry data used in hydrodynamic models (HI 1122 Sanday Sound to Westray Firth) was collected by the Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) as part of the UK Civil Hydrography Programme. We wish to thank Christina Bristow, Matthew Finn and Jennifer Norris at the European Marine Energy Centre (EMEC); Ian Davies at Marine Scotland Science; Gail Davoren, Shaun Fraser, Pauline Goulet, Alex Robbins and Helen Wade for invaluable discussions; Thomas Cornulier, Alex Douglas, James Grecian and Samantha Patrick for their help with statistical analysis; and Jenny Campbell and the Cockram family for assistance during fieldwork.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
ESD Ideas: A 6-year oscillation in the whole Earth system?
An oscillation of about 6 years has been reported in Earth’s fluid core motions, magnetic field, rotation, and crustal deformations. Recently, a 6-year cycle has also been detected in several climatic parameters (e.g., sea level, surface temperature, precipitation, land ice, land hydrology, and atmospheric angular momentum). Here we suggest that the 6-year oscillations detected in the Earth’s deep interior, mantle rotation, and atmosphere are linked together, and that the core processes previously proposed as drivers of the 6-year cycle in the Earth’s rotation, cause in addition the atmosphere to oscillate together with the mantle, inducing fluctuations in the climate system with similar periodicities.</p
Well-Posedness for Semi-Relativistic Hartree Equations of Critical Type
We prove local and global well-posedness for semi-relativistic, nonlinear
Schr\"odinger equations with
initial data in , . Here is a critical
Hartree nonlinearity that corresponds to Coulomb or Yukawa type
self-interactions. For focusing , which arise in the quantum theory of
boson stars, we derive a sufficient condition for global-in-time existence in
terms of a solitary wave ground state. Our proof of well-posedness does not
rely on Strichartz type estimates, and it enables us to add external potentials
of a general class.Comment: 18 pages; replaced with revised version; remark and reference on blow
up adde
(Semi)classical limit of the Hartree equation with harmonic potential
Nonlinear Schrodinger Equations (NLS) of the Hartree type occur in the
modeling of quantum semiconductor devices. Their "semiclassical" limit of
vanishing (scaled) Planck constant is both a mathematical challenge and
practically relevant when coupling quantum models to classical models.
With the aim of describing the semi-classical limit of the 3D
Schrodinger--Poisson system with an additional harmonic potential, we study
some semi-classical limits of the Hartree equation with harmonic potential in
space dimension n>1. The harmonic potential is confining, and causes focusing
periodically in time. We prove asymptotics in several cases, showing different
possible nonlinear phenomena according to the interplay of the size of the
initial data and the power of the Hartree potential. In the case of the 3D
Schrodinger-Poisson system with harmonic potential, we can only give a formal
computation since the need of modified scattering operators for this long range
scattering case goes beyond current theory. We also deal with the case of an
additional "local" nonlinearity given by a power of the local density - a model
that is relevant when incorporating the Pauli principle in the simplest model
given by the "Schrodinger-Poisson-X equation". Further we discuss the
connection of our WKB based analysis to the Wigner function approach to
semiclassical limits.Comment: 26 page
Orbital stability of periodic waves for the nonlinear Schroedinger equation
The nonlinear Schroedinger equation has several families of quasi-periodic
travelling waves, each of which can be parametrized up to symmetries by two
real numbers: the period of the modulus of the wave profile, and the variation
of its phase over a period (Floquet exponent). In the defocusing case, we show
that these travelling waves are orbitally stable within the class of solutions
having the same period and the same Floquet exponent. This generalizes a
previous work where only small amplitude solutions were considered. A similar
result is obtained in the focusing case, under a non-degeneracy condition which
can be checked numerically. The proof relies on the general approach to orbital
stability as developed by Grillakis, Shatah, and Strauss, and requires a
detailed analysis of the Hamiltonian system satisfied by the wave profile.Comment: 34 pages, 7 figure
Gene induction during differentiation of human monocytes into dendritic cells: an integrated study at the RNA and protein levels
Changes in gene expression occurring during differentiation of human
monocytes into dendritic cells were studied at the RNA and protein levels.
These studies showed the induction of several gene classes corresponding to
various biological functions. These functions encompass antigen processing and
presentation, cytoskeleton, cell signalling and signal transduction, but also
an increase in mitochondrial function and in the protein synthesis machinery,
including some, but not all, chaperones. These changes put in perspective the
events occurring during this differentiation process. On a more technical
point, it appears that the studies carried out at the RNA and protein levels
are highly complementary.Comment: website publisher:
http://www.springerlink.com/content/ha0d2c351qhjhjdm
On the density-potential mapping in time-dependent density functional theory
The key questions of uniqueness and existence in time-dependent density
functional theory are usually formulated only for potentials and densities that
are analytic in time. Simple examples, standard in quantum mechanics, lead
however to non-analyticities. We reformulate these questions in terms of a
non-linear Schr\"odinger equation with a potential that depends non-locally on
the wavefunction.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figure
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