63,495 research outputs found

    Magnetohydrodynamic waves in a plasma slab

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    Magnetohydrodynamic wave propagation in plasma

    IMAT graphics manual

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    The Integrated Multidisciplinary Analysis Tool (IMAT) consists of a menu driven executive system coupled with a relational database which links commercial structures, structural dynamics and control codes. The IMAT graphics system, a key element of the software, provides a common interface for storing, retrieving, and displaying graphical information. The IMAT Graphics Manual shows users of commercial analysis codes (MATRIXx, MSC/NASTRAN and I-DEAS) how to use the IMAT graphics system to obtain high quality graphical output using familiar plotting procedures. The manual explains the key features of the IMAT graphics system, illustrates their use with simple step-by-step examples, and provides a reference for users who wish to take advantage of the flexibility of the software to customize their own applications

    Optical response of high-TcT_c cuprates: possible role of scattering rate saturation and in-plane anisotropy

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    We present a generalized Drude analysis of the in-plane optical conductivity σab\sigma_{ab}(TT,ω\omega) in cuprates taking into account the effects of in-plane anisotropy. A simple ansatz for the scattering rate Γ\Gamma(TT,ω\omega), that includes anisotropy, a quadratic frequency dependence and saturation at the Mott-Ioffe-Regel limit, is able to reproduce recent normal state data on an optimally doped cuprate over a wide frequency range. We highlight the potential importance of including anisotropy in the full expression for σab\sigma_{ab}(TT,ω\omega) and challenge previous determinations of Γ\Gamma(ω\omega) in which anisotropy was neglected and Γ\Gamma(ω\omega) was indicated to be strictly linear in frequency over a wide frequency range. Possible implications of our findings for understanding thermodynamic properties and self-energy effects in high-TcT_c cuprates will also be discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures. To be published in Physical Review

    Chaos in Time Dependent Variational Approximations to Quantum Dynamics

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    Dynamical chaos has recently been shown to exist in the Gaussian approximation in quantum mechanics and in the self-consistent mean field approach to studying the dynamics of quantum fields. In this study, we first show that any variational approximation to the dynamics of a quantum system based on the Dirac action principle leads to a classical Hamiltonian dynamics for the variational parameters. Since this Hamiltonian is generically nonlinear and nonintegrable, the dynamics thus generated can be chaotic, in distinction to the exact quantum evolution. We then restrict attention to a system of two biquadratically coupled quantum oscillators and study two variational schemes, the leading order large N (four canonical variables) and Hartree (six canonical variables) approximations. The chaos seen in the approximate dynamics is an artifact of the approximations: this is demonstrated by the fact that its onset occurs on the same characteristic time scale as the breakdown of the approximations when compared to numerical solutions of the time-dependent Schrodinger equation.Comment: 10 pages (12 figures), RevTeX (plus macro), uses epsf, minor typos correcte
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