3,137,905 research outputs found
Note on nonequilibrium stationary states and entropy
In transformations between nonequilibrium stationary states, entropy might be
a not well defined concept. It might be analogous to the ``heat content'' in
transformations in equilibrium which is not well defined either, if they are
not isochoric ({\it i.e.} do involve mechanical work). Hence we conjecture that
un a nonequilbrium stationary state the entropy is just a quantity that can be
transferred or created, like heat in equilibrium, but has no physical meaning
as ``entropy content'' as a property of the system.Comment: 4 page
Shear viscosity in magnetized neutron star crust
The electron shear viscosity due to Coulomb scattering of degenerate
electrons by atomic nuclei throughout a magnetized neutron star crust is
calculated. The theory is based on the shear viscosity coefficient calculated
neglecting magnetic fields but taking into account gaseous, liquid and solid
states of atomic nuclei, multiphonon scattering processes, and finite sizes of
the nuclei albeit neglecting the effects of electron band structure. The
effects of strong magnetic fields are included in the relaxation time
approximation with the effective electron relaxation time taken from the
field-free theory. The viscosity in a magnetized matter is described by five
shear viscosity coefficients. They are calculated and their dependence on the
magnetic field and other parameters of dense matter is analyzed. Possible
applications and open problems are outlined.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, EPL, accepte
Network representation of electromagnetic fields and forces using generalized bond graphs
We show that it is possible to describe electromagnetic (E-M) fields with a generalized network representation (generalized bond graphs). E-M fields inmoving matter, forces due to E-M fields (Lorentz force, ets.) and field transformations are included in the network description. The relations of these E-M phenomena with respect to each other are clearly represented by the bond graph. We also show that it is not possible to describe E-M phenomena in moving matter with conventional bond graphs, but that a generalized bond graph concept is required.\ud
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The description of simple E-M devices with conventional bond graphs is based on rather drastic assumptions, i.e. quasi-static conditions (E-M radiation neglected), homogeneous fields, isotropic linear material, etc. These assumptions are not made in this paper
Deep space FM system, a concept
Deep space frequency modulation system permits transmission of data where the signal deviation is greater than 1/2 the predetection bandwidth. It provides satisfactory performance at great distances or with low signal levels
Phase detector assembly Patent
Detector assembly for discriminating first signal with respect to presence or absence of second signal at time of occurrence of first signa
Nonlinear quantum optical computing via measurement
We show how the measurement induced model of quantum computation proposed by
Raussendorf and Briegel [Phys. Rev. Letts. 86, 5188 (2001)] can be adapted to a
nonlinear optical interaction. This optical implementation requires a Kerr
nonlinearity, a single photon source, a single photon detector and fast feed
forward. Although nondeterministic optical quantum information proposals such
as that suggested by KLM [Nature 409, 46 (2001)] do not require a Kerr
nonlinearity they do require complex reconfigurable optical networks. The
proposal in this paper has the benefit of a single static optical layout with
fixed device parameters, where the algorithm is defined by the final
measurement procedure.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, 4 table
-ray spectra and enhancement factors for positron annihilation spectra with core-electrons
Many-body theory is developed to calculate the -spectra for positron
annihilation with valence and core electrons in the noble gas atoms. A proper
inclusion of correlation effects and core annihilation provides for an accurate
description of the measured spectra [Iwata \textit{et al.}, Phys. Rev. Lett.
{\bf 79}, 39 (1997)]. The theory enables us to calculate the enhancement
factors , which describe the effect of electron-positron
correlations for annihilation on individual electron orbitals . We find
that the enhancement factors scale with the orbital ionization energy
(in electron-volt), as ,
where ~eV, ~eV and .Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
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