860 research outputs found
Theoretical modeling of an A6 relativistic magnetron
The analytical modeling of the initialization stage of a relativistic magnetron of the A6 cylindrical design is presented, where only two dominant modes are used: a direct current (dc) background mode and a radio frequency (rf) pump mode. These two modes interaction nonlinearly, with the dc background being driven by the dc electromagnetic forces and the ponderomotive forces of the rf mode, while the rf mode is the most unstable linear eigenmode on this dc background. In cylindrical geometry, the diocotron resonance is found to occur over a broader region than in planar models. In fact, in certain parameter regimes, the resonance can appear twice, once near the Brillouin edge, and second, just below the anode. In these parameter regimes, the oscillating electrons can be accelerated twice. Numerical results for the initiation stage agree quite well with the known experimental results on the A6. Results for 350 kV are emphasized, and similar results have also been obtained for voltages between 300 and 500 kV. Numerical data are presented that indicate a possible source for a nonlinear instability, which could give rise to pulse shortening, in the later operating stage, where the device should be smoothly delivering power
Computing Small Certificates of Inconsistency of Quadratic Fewnomial Systems
B{\'e}zout 's theorem states that dense generic systems of n multivariate
quadratic equations in n variables have 2 n solutions over algebraically closed
fields. When only a small subset M of monomials appear in the equations
(fewnomial systems), the number of solutions may decrease dramatically. We
focus in this work on subsets of quadratic monomials M such that generic
systems with support M do not admit any solution at all. For these systems,
Hilbert's Nullstellensatz ensures the existence of algebraic certificates of
inconsistency. However, up to our knowledge all known bounds on the sizes of
such certificates -including those which take into account the Newton polytopes
of the polynomials- are exponential in n. Our main results show that if the
inequality 2|M| -- 2n \sqrt 1 + 8{\nu} -- 1 holds for a quadratic
fewnomial system -- where {\nu} is the matching number of a graph associated
with M, and |M| is the cardinality of M -- then there exists generically a
certificate of inconsistency of linear size (measured as the number of
coefficients in the ground field K). Moreover this certificate can be computed
within a polynomial number of arithmetic operations. Next, we evaluate how
often this inequality holds, and we give evidence that the probability that the
inequality is satisfied depends strongly on the number of squares. More
precisely, we show that if M is picked uniformly at random among the subsets of
n + k + 1 quadratic monomials containing at least (n 1/2+)
squares, then the probability that the inequality holds tends to 1 as n grows.
Interestingly, this phenomenon is related with the matching number of random
graphs in the Erd{\"o}s-Renyi model. Finally, we provide experimental results
showing that certificates in inconsistency can be computed for systems with
more than 10000 variables and equations.Comment: ISSAC 2016, Jul 2016, Waterloo, Canada. Proceedings of ISSAC 201
Solitons created by chirped initial profiles in coherent pulse propagation
"Solitons created by chirped initial profiles in coherent pulse propagation", L.V.Hmurcik and
D.J.Kaup, Journal of the Optical Society of America, vol 69, p 597 (1979).If an incident pulse is chirped, the critical parameters for self-induced transparency to occur in coherent pulse propagation can no longer be obtained from the well-known McCall-Hahn area theorem. We have been able to obtain these parameters by solving the Zakharov-Shabat eigenvalue equation for the bound-state eigenvalues. We find that critical (threshold) areas will be increased for a chirped incident pulse in almost all cases, except for a box profile or for a pulse that is approximately box-like in shape. In these latter cases, the chirped critical areas will instead decrease for the second and all higher branches. The first branch’s critical area is always increased due to chirping
Integration of a generalized H\'enon-Heiles Hamiltonian
The generalized H\'enon-Heiles Hamiltonian
with an additional
nonpolynomial term is known to be Liouville integrable for three
sets of values of . It has been previously integrated by genus
two theta functions only in one of these cases. Defining the separating
variables of the Hamilton-Jacobi equations, we succeed here, in the two other
cases, to integrate the equations of motion with hyperelliptic functions.Comment: LaTex 2e. To appear, Journal of Mathematical Physic
Unstaggered-staggered solitons in two-component discrete nonlinear Schr\"{o}dinger lattices
We present stable bright solitons built of coupled unstaggered and staggered
components in a symmetric system of two discrete nonlinear Schr\"{o}dinger
(DNLS) equations with the attractive self-phase-modulation (SPM) nonlinearity,
coupled by the repulsive cross-phase-modulation (XPM) interaction. These mixed
modes are of a "symbiotic" type, as each component in isolation may only carry
ordinary unstaggered solitons. The results are obtained in an analytical form,
using the variational and Thomas-Fermi approximations (VA and TFA), and the
generalized Vakhitov-Kolokolov (VK) criterion for the evaluation of the
stability. The analytical predictions are verified against numerical results.
Almost all the symbiotic solitons are predicted by the VA quite accurately, and
are stable. Close to a boundary of the existence region of the solitons (which
may feature several connected branches), there are broad solitons which are not
well approximated by the VA, and are unstable
On complete integrability of the Mikhailov-Novikov-Wang system
We obtain compatible Hamiltonian and symplectic structure for a new
two-component fifth-order integrable system recently found by Mikhailov,
Novikov and Wang (arXiv:0712.1972), and show that this system possesses a
hereditary recursion operator and infinitely many commuting symmetries and
conservation laws, as well as infinitely many compatible Hamiltonian and
symplectic structures, and is therefore completely integrable. The system in
question admits a reduction to the Kaup--Kupershmidt equation.Comment: 5 pages, no figure
Renormalization Group Theory for a Perturbed KdV Equation
We show that renormalization group(RG) theory can be used to give an analytic
description of the evolution of a perturbed KdV equation. The equations
describing the deformation of its shape as the effect of perturbation are RG
equations. The RG approach may be simpler than inverse scattering theory(IST)
and another approaches, because it dose not rely on any knowledge of IST and it
is very concise and easy to understand. To the best of our knowledge, this is
the first time that RG has been used in this way for the perturbed soliton
dynamics.Comment: 4 pages, no figure, revte
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