31,308 research outputs found
Magnetic Helicity Conservation and Inverse Energy Cascade in Electron Magnetohydrodynamic Wave Packets
Electron magnetohydrodynamics (EMHD) provides a fluid-like description of
small-scale magnetized plasmas. An EMHD wave (also known as whistler wave)
propagates along magnetic field lines. The direction of propagation can be
either parallel or anti-parallel to the magnetic field lines. We numerically
study propagation of 3-dimensional (3D) EMHD wave packets moving in one
direction. We obtain two major results: 1. Unlike its magnetohydrodynamic (MHD)
counterpart, an EMHD wave packet is dispersive. Because of this, EMHD wave
packets traveling in one direction create opposite traveling wave packets via
self-interaction and cascade energy to smaller scales. 2. EMHD wave packets
traveling in one direction clearly exhibit inverse energy cascade. We find that
the latter is due to conservation of magnetic helicity. We compare inverse
energy cascade in 3D EMHD turbulence and 2-dimensional (2D) hydrodynamic
turbulence.Comment: Phys. Rev. Lett., accepted (4pages, 4 figures
Warped brane-world compactification with Gauss-Bonnet term
In the Randall-Sundrum (RS) brane-world model a singular delta-function
source is matched by the second derivative of the warp factor. So one should
take possible curvature corrections in the effective action of the RS models in
a Gauss-Bonnet (GB) form. We present a linearized treatment of gravity in the
RS brane-world with the Gauss-Bonnet modification to Einstein gravity. We give
explicit expressions for the Neumann propagator in arbitrary D dimensions and
show that a bulk GB term gives, along with a tower of Kaluza-Klein modes in the
bulk, a massless graviton on the brane, as in the standard RS model. Moreover,
a non-trivial GB coupling can allow a new branch of solutions with finite
Planck scale and no naked bulk singularity, which might be useful to avoid some
of the previously known ``no--go theorems'' for RS brane-world
compactifications.Comment: 23 pages, typos in Secs. 5 & 6 corrected, expanded/published version
(IJMPA
Charged particle display
An optical shutter based on charged particles is presented. The output light
intensity of the proposed device has an intrinsic dependence on the
interparticle spacing between charged particles, which can be controlled by
varying voltages applied to the control electrodes. The interparticle spacing
between charged particles can be varied continuously and this opens up the
possibility of particle based displays with continuous grayscale.Comment: typographic errors corrected in Eqs (37) and (39); published in
Journal of Applied Physics; doi:10.1063/1.317648
Fundamental study of flow field generated by rotorcraft blades using wide-field shadowgraph
The vortex trajectory and vortex wake generated by helicopter rotors are visualized using a wide-field shadowgraph technique. Use of a retro-reflective Scotchlite screen makes it possible to investigate the flow field generated by full-scale rotors. Tip vortex trajectories are visible in shadowgraphs for a range of tip Mach number of 0.38 to 0.60. The effect of the angle of attack is substantial. At an angle of attack greater than 8 degrees, the visibility of the vortex core is significant even at relatively low tip Mach numbers. The theoretical analysis of the sensitivity is carried out for a rotating blade. This analysis demonstrates that the sensitivity decreases with increasing dimensionless core radius and increases with increasing tip Mach number. The threshold value of the sensitivity is found to be 0.0015, below which the vortex core is not visible and above which it is visible. The effect of the optical path length is also discussed. Based on this investigation, it is concluded that the application of this wide-field shadowgraph technique to a large wind tunnel test should be feasible. In addition, two simultaneous shadowgraph views would allow three-dimensional reconstruction of vortex trajectories
Combined Field Integral Equation Based Theory of Characteristic Mode
Conventional electric field integral equation based theory is susceptible to
the spurious internal resonance problem when the characteristic modes of closed
perfectly conducting objects are computed iteratively. In this paper, we
present a combined field integral equation based theory to remove the
difficulty of internal resonances in characteristic mode analysis. The electric
and magnetic field integral operators are shown to share a common set of
non-trivial characteristic pairs (values and modes), leading to a generalized
eigenvalue problem which is immune to the internal resonance corruption.
Numerical results are presented to validate the proposed formulation. This work
may offer efficient solutions to characteristic mode analysis which involves
electrically large closed surfaces
Gauge Independent Trace Anomaly for Gravitons
We show that the trace anomaly for gravitons calculated using the usual
effective action formalism depends on the choice of gauge when the background
spacetime is not a solution of the classical equation of motion, that is, when
off-shell. We then use the gauge independent Vilkovisky-DeWitt effective action
to restore gauge independence to the off-shell case. Additionally we explicitly
evaluate trace anomalies for some N-sphere background spacetimes.Comment: 19 pages, additional references and title chang
Quasi-normal modes for doubly rotating black holes
Based on the work of Chen, L\"u and Pope, we derive expressions for the
dimensional metric for Kerr-(A)dS black holes with two independent
rotation parameters and all others set equal to zero: . The Klein-Gordon equation is then explicitly separated on this
background. For this separation results in a radial equation coupled
to two generalized spheroidal angular equations. We then develop a full
numerical approach that utilizes the Asymptotic Iteration Method (AIM) to find
radial Quasi-Normal Modes (QNMs) of doubly rotating flat Myers-Perry black
holes for slow rotations. We also develop perturbative expansions for the
angular quantum numbers in powers of the rotation parameters up to second
order.Comment: RevTeX 4-1, various figure
Recommended from our members
Single-shot optical conductivity measurement of dense aluminum plasmas
The optical conductivity of a dense femtosecond laser-heated aluminum plasma heated to 0.1-1.5 eV was measured using frequency-domain interferometry with chirped pulses, permitting simultaneous observation of optical probe reflectivity and probe pulse phase shift. Coupled with published models of bound-electron contributions to the conductivity, these two independent experimental data yielded a direct measurement of both real and imaginary components of the plasma conductivity.DOE National Nuclear Security Administration DE-FC52-03NA00156Physic
Stability of inflating branes in a texture
We investigate the stability of inflating branes embedded in an O(2) texture
formed in one extra dimension. The model contains two 3-branes of nonzero
tension, and the extra dimension is compact. When the gravitational
perturbation is applied, the vacuum energy which is responsible for inflation
on the branes stabilizes the branes if the symmetry-breaking scale of the
texture is smaller than some critical value. This critical value is determined
by the particle-hierarchy scale between the two branes, and is smaller than the
5D Planck-mass scale. The scale of the vacuum energy can be considerably low in
providing the stability. This stability story is very different from the
flat-brane case which always suffers from the instability due to the
gravitational perturbation.Comment: 16 pages, 5 eps figures, revte
- …