10,448 research outputs found
Jet mixing under the influence of a pressure gradient
Theoretical analysis of jet mixing under influence of non-constant pressure gradien
Local transient rheological behavior of concentrated suspensions
This paper reports experiments on the shear transient response of
concentrated non-Brownian suspensions. The shear viscosity of the suspensions
is measured using a wide-gap Couette rheometer equipped with a Particle Image
Velocimetry (PIV) device that allows measuring the velocity field. The
suspensions made of PMMA particles (31m in diameter) suspended in a
Newtonian index- and density-matched liquid are transparent enough to allow an
accurate measurement of the local velocity for particle concentrations as high
as 50%. In the wide-gap Couette cell, the shear induced particle migration is
evidenced by the measurement of the time evolution of the flow profile. A
peculiar radial zone in the gap is identified where the viscosity remains
constant. At this special location, the local particle volume fraction is taken
to be the mean particle concentration. The local shear transient response of
the suspensions when the shear flow is reversed is measured at this point where
the particle volume fraction is well defined. The local rheological
measurements presented here confirm the macroscopic measurements of
Gadala-Maria and Acrivos (1980). After shear reversal, the viscosity undergoes
a step-like reduction, decreases slower and passes through a minimum before
increasing again to reach a plateau. Upon varying the particle concentration,
we have been able to show that the minimum and the plateau viscosities do not
obey the same scaling law with respect to the particle volume fraction. These
experimental results are consistent with the scaling predicted by Mills and
Snabre (2009) and with the results of numerical simulation performed on random
suspensions [Sierou and Brady (2001)]. The minimum seems to be associated with
the viscosity of an isotropic suspension, or at least of a suspension whose
particles do not interact through non-hydrodynamic forces, while the plateau
value would correspond to the viscosity of a suspension structured by the shear
where the non-hydrodynamic forces play a crucial role
Relaxation properties of the quantum kinetics of carrier-LO-phonon interaction in quantum wells and quantum dots
The time evolution of optically excited carriers in semiconductor quantum
wells and quantum dots is analyzed for their interaction with LO-phonons. Both
the full two-time Green's function formalism and the one-time approximation
provided by the generalized Kadanoff-Baym ansatz are considered, in order to
compare their description of relaxation processes. It is shown that the
two-time quantum kinetics leads to thermalization in all the examined cases,
which is not the case for the one-time approach in the intermediate-coupling
regime, even though it provides convergence to a steady state. The
thermalization criterion used is the Kubo-Martin-Schwinger condition.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Calculation of pure dephasing for excitons in quantum dots
Pure dephasing of an exciton in a small quantum dot by optical and acoustic
phonons is calculated using the ``independent boson model''. Considering the
case of zero temperature the dephasing is shown to be only partial which
manifests itself in the polarization decaying to a finite value. Typical
dephasing times can be assigned even though the spectra exhibits strongly
non-Lorentzian line shapes. We show that the dephasing from LO phonon
scattering, occurs on a much larger time scale than that of dephasing due to
acoustic phonons which for low temperatures are also a more efficient dephasing
mechanism. The typical dephasing time is shown to strongly depend on the
quantum dot size whereas the electron phonon ``coupling strength'' and external
electric fields tend mostly to effect the residual coherence. The relevance of
the dephasing times for current quantum information processing implementation
schemes in quantum dots is discussed
Multiplpe Choice Minority Game With Different Publicly Known Histories
In the standard Minority Game, players use historical minority choices as the
sole public information to pick one out of the two alternatives. However,
publishing historical minority choices is not the only way to present global
system information to players when more than two alternatives are available.
Thus, it is instructive to study the dynamics and cooperative behaviors of this
extended game as a function of the global information provided. We numerically
find that although the system dynamics depends on the kind of public
information given to the players, the degree of cooperation follows the same
trend as that of the standard Minority Game. We also explain most of our
findings by the crowd-anticrowd theory.Comment: Extensively revised, to appear in New J Phys, 7 pages with 4 figure
Exploring a rheonomic system
A simple and illustrative rheonomic system is explored in the Lagrangian
formalism. The difference between Jacobi's integral and energy is highlighted.
A sharp contrast with remarks found in the literature is pointed out. The
non-conservative system possess a Lagrangian not explicitly dependent on time
and consequently there is a Jacobi's integral. The Lagrange undetermined
multiplier method is used as a complement to obtain a few interesting
conclusion
Actions of the braid group, and new algebraic proofs of results of Dehornoy and Larue
This article surveys many standard results about the braid group with
emphasis on simplifying the usual algebraic proofs.
We use van der Waerden's trick to illuminate the Artin-Magnus proof of the
classic presentation of the algebraic mapping-class group of a punctured disc.
We give a simple, new proof of the Dehornoy-Larue braid-group trichotomy,
and, hence, recover the Dehornoy right-ordering of the braid group.
We then turn to the Birman-Hilden theorem concerning braid-group actions on
free products of cyclic groups, and the consequences derived by Perron-Vannier,
and the connections with the Wada representations. We recall the very simple
Crisp-Paris proof of the Birman-Hilden theorem that uses the Larue-Shpilrain
technique. Studying ends of free groups permits a deeper understanding of the
braid group; this gives us a generalization of the Birman-Hilden theorem.
Studying Jordan curves in the punctured disc permits a still deeper
understanding of the braid group; this gave Larue, in his PhD thesis,
correspondingly deeper results, and, in an appendix, we recall the essence of
Larue's thesis, giving simpler combinatorial proofs.Comment: 51`pages, 13 figure
Physical Results from Unphysical Simulations
We calculate various properties of pseudoscalar mesons in partially quenched
QCD using chiral perturbation theory through next-to-leading order. Our results
can be used to extrapolate to QCD from partially quenched simulations, as long
as the latter use three light dynamical quarks. In other words, one can use
unphysical simulations to extract physical quantities - in this case the quark
masses, meson decay constants, and the Gasser-Leutwyler parameters L_4-L_8. Our
proposal for determining L_7 makes explicit use of an unphysical (yet
measurable) effect of partially quenched theories, namely the double-pole that
appears in certain two-point correlation functions. Most of our calculations
are done for sea quarks having up to three different masses, except for our
result for L_7, which is derived for degenerate sea quarks.Comment: 26 pages, 12 figures (discussion on discretization errors at end of
sec. IV clarified; minor improvements in presentation; results unchanged
Enabling Proactive Adaptation through Just-in-time Testing of Conversational Services
Service-based applications (SBAs) will increasingly be composed of third-party services available over the Internet. Reacting to failures of those third-party services by dynamically adapting the SBAs will become a key enabler for ensuring reliability. Determining when to adapt an SBA is especially challenging in the presence of conversational (aka. stateful) services. A conversational service might fail in the middle of an invocation sequence, in which case adapting the SBA might be costly; e.g., due to the necessary state transfer to an alternative service. In this paper we propose just-in-time testing of conversational services as a novel approach to detect potential problems and to proactively trigger adaptations, thereby preventing costly compensation activities. The approach is based on a framework for online testing and a formal test-generation method which guarantees functional correctness for conversational services. The applicability of the approach is discussed with respect to its underlying assumptions and its performance. The benefits of the approach are demonstrated using a realistic example
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