5,500 research outputs found
Ferromagnetic behavior in magnetized plasmas
We consider a low-temperature plasma within a newly developed MHD Fluid
model. In addition to the standard terms, the electron spin, quantum particle
dispersion and degeneracy effects are included. It turns out that the electron
spin properties can give rise to Ferromagnetic behavior in certain regimes. If
additional conditions are fulfilled, a homogenous magnetized plasma can even be
unstable. This happen in the low-temperature high-density regime, when the
magnetic properties associated with the spin can overcome the stabilizing
effects of the thermal and Fermi pressure, to cause a Jeans like instability.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
An obstacle problem for Tug-of-War games
We consider the obstacle problem for the infinity Laplace equation. Given a
Lipschitz boundary function and a Lipschitz obstacle we prove the existence and
uniqueness of a super infinity-harmonic function constrained to lie above the
obstacle which is infinity harmonic where it lies strictly above the obstacle.
Moreover, we show that this function is the limit of value functions of a game
we call obstacle tug-of-war
Comment on "Interaction of two solitary waves in quantum electron-positron-ion plasma" [Phys. Plasmas \textbf{18}, 052301 (2011)]
Recently, Yan-Xia Xu, et al. in the article Ref. [Phys. Plasmas \textbf{18},
052301 (2011)] have studied the effects of various plasma parameters on
interaction of two ion-acoustic solitary waves in an unmagnetized
three-dimensional electron-positron-ion quantum plasma. They have used the
extended reductive perturbation technique, the so-called, extended
Poincare'-Lighthill-Kuo (PLK) technique, to deduce from the model governing the
quantum hydrodynamics (QHD) differential equations leading to the soliton
dynamical properties, namely, Korteweg-de Vries evolution equations (one for
each wave) and coupled differential equations describing the phase-shift in
trajectories of solitons due to the two dimensional collision. The variation of
the calculated collision phase-shifts are then numerically inspected in terms
of numerous plasma fractional parameters. In this comment we give some notes
specific to the validity of the results of above-mentioned article and refer to
important misconceptions about the use of the Fermi-temperature in quantum
plasmas, appearing in this article and many other recently published ones.Comment: Accepted Journal Physics of Plasma
Dust ion-acoustic shocks in quantum dusty pair-ion plasmas
The formation of dust ion-acoustic shocks (DIASs) in a four-component quantum
plasma whose constituents are electrons, both positive and negative ions and
immobile charged dust grains, is studied. The effects of both the dissipation
due to kinematic viscosity and the dispersion caused by the charge separation
as well as the quantum tunneling due to the Bohm potential are taken into
account. The propagation of small but finite amplitude dust ion-acoustic waves
(DIAWs) is governed by the Korteweg-de Vries-Burger (KdVB) equation which
exhibits both oscillatory and monotonic shocks depending not only on the
viscosity parameters, but also on the quantum parameter H (the ratio of the
electron plasmon to the electron Fermi energy) and the positive to negative ion
density ratio. Large amplitude stationary shocks are recovered for a Mach
number exceeding its critical value. Unlike the small amplitude shocks, quite a
smaller value of the viscosity parameter, H and the density ratio may lead to
the large amplitude monotonic shock strucutres. The results could be of
importance in astrophysical and laser produced plasmas.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
A linearized kinetic theory of spin-1/2 particles in magnetized plasmas
We have considered linear kinetic theory including the electron spin
properties in a magnetized plasma. The starting point is a mean field
Vlasov-like equation, derived from a fully quantum mechanical treatment, where
effects from the electron spin precession and the magnetic dipole force is
taken into account. The general conductivity tensor is derived, including both
the free current contribution, as well as the magnetization current associated
with the spin contribution. We conclude the paper with an extensive discussion
of the quantum-mechanical boundary where we list parameter conditions that must
be satisfied for various quantum effects to be influential.Comment: 11 page
Stochastic modeling of high-speed data links with nonlinear dynamic terminations
This paper addresses the statistical modeling and simulation of high-speed interconnects with uncertain physical properties and nonlinear dynamical terminations. The proposed approach is based on the expansion of voltage and current variables in terms of orthogonal polynomials of random variables. It extends the available literature results on the generation of an augmented deterministic SPICE equivalent of the stochastic link to the case in which the terminations are nonlinear and dynamical, like those modeling IC buffers. A single and standard SPICE simulation of the aforementioned equivalent circuit allows to efficiently compute the expansion coefficients that provide statistical information pertinent to the interconnect response. The feasibility and strength of the approach are demonstrated by means of a coupled microstrip interconnect with drivers and receiver
New Quantum Limits in Plasmonic Devices
Surface plasmon polaritons (SPPs) have recently been recognized as an
important future technique for microelectronics. Such SPPs have been studied
using classical theory. However, current state-of-the-art experiments are
rapidly approaching nanoscales, and quantum effects can then become important.
Here we study the properties of quantum SPPs at the interface between an
electron quantum plasma and a dielectric material. It is shown that the effect
of quantum broadening of the transition layer is most important. In particular,
the damping of SPPs does not vanish even in the absence of collisional
dissipation, thus posing a fundamental size limit for plasmonic devices.
Consequences and applications of our results are pointed out.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Europhysics Letter
Low power consumption mini rotary actuator with SMA wires
Shape memory alloys (SMAs) are smart materials widely used as actuators for their high power to weight ratio despite their well-known low energy efficiency and limited mechanical bandwidth. For robotic applications, SMAs exhibit limitations due to high power consumption and limited stroke, varying from 4% to 7% of the total length. Hysteresis, during the contraction and extension cycle, requires a complex control algorithm. On the positive side, the small size and low weight are eminently suited for the design of mini actuators for robotic platforms. This paper describes the design and construction of a light weight and low power consuming mini rotary actuator with on-board contact-less position and force sensors. The design is specifically intended to reduce (i) energy consumption, (ii) dimensions of the sensory system, and (iii) provide a simple control without any need for SMA characterisation. The torque produced is controlled by on-board force sensors. Experiments were performed to investigate the energy consumption and performance (step and sinusoidal angle profiles with a frequency varying from 0.5 to 10 Hz and maximal amplitude of 15?). We describe a transient capacitor effect related to the SMA wires during the sinusoidal profile when the active SMA wire is powered and the antagonist one switched-off, resulting in a transient current time varying from 300 to 400 ms
Bound states near a moving charge in a quantum plasma
It is investigated how the shielding of a moving point charge in a
one-component fully degenerate fermion plasma affects the bound states near the
charge at velocities smaller than the Fermi one. The shielding is accounted for
by using the Lindhard dielectric function, and the resulting potential is
substituted into the Schr\"odinger equation in order to obtain the energy
levels. Their number and values are shown to be primarily determined by the
value of the charge and the quantum plasma coupling parameter, while the main
effect of the motion is to split certain energy levels. This provides a link
between quantum plasma theory and possible measurements of spectra of ions
passing through solids.Comment: Published in EPL, see
http://epljournal.edpsciences.org/articles/epl/abs/2011/09/epl13478/epl13478.htm
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