89 research outputs found
Capillary nanowaves on surfactant-laden liquid films with surface viscosity and elasticity
Thermal motions of molecules can generate nanowaves on the free surface of a
liquid film. As nanofilms are susceptible to the contamination of surfactants,
this work investigates the effects of surfactants on dynamics of nanowaves on a
bounded film with a finite depth, using both molecular dynamics simulations and
analytical theories. In molecular simulations, a bead-spring model is adopted
to simulate surfactants, where beads are connected by the finite extensive
nonlinear elastic potentials. Fourier transforms of the film surface profiles
extracted from molecular simulations are performed to obtain the
static spectrum and temporal correlations of surface
modes . It is shown that the spectral amplitude is increased
for the contaminated liquid surface compared to the clean surface because
surfactants can decrease surface tension. A higher concentration of surfactants
on the surface not only decreases the surface tension but also causes elastic
energy to the free surface, as the scaling of spectral amplitude with
wavenumbers changes from to
for modes with large wavenumbers. Regarding
the temporal correlations of surface modes, it is observed that the presence of
surfactants leads to a slower decay, which, however, cannot be predicted by
only considering the decreased surface tension. Based on the Boussinesq Scriven
model for surface viscosity, a linear stability analysis of Stokes flow for
films with arbitrary depth is conducted and the obtained dispersion relation
considering surface viscosity can justify the simulation results
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Exhausting the background approach for bounding the heat transport in Rayleigh-Bénard convection
We revisit the optimal heat transport problem for Rayleigh-B\'enard convection in which a rigorous upper bound on the Nusselt number, , is sought as a function of the Rayleigh number . Concentrating on the 2-dimensional problem with stress-free boundary conditions, we impose the full heat equation as a constraint for the bound using a novel 2-dimensional background approach thereby complementing the `wall-to-wall' approach of Hassanzadeh \etal \,(\emph{J. Fluid Mech.} \textbf{751}, 627-662, 2014). Imposing the same symmetry on the problem, we find correspondence with their result for but, beyond that, the optimal fields complexify to produce a higher bound. This bound approaches that by a 1-dimensional background field as the length of computational domain . On lifting the imposed symmetry, the optimal 2-dimensional temperature background field reverts back to being 1-dimensional giving the best bound compared to in the non-slip case. % We then show via an inductive bifurcation analysis that imposing the full time-averaged Boussinesq equations as constraints (by introducing 2-dimensional temperature {\em and} velocity background fields) is also unable to lower this bound. This then exhausts the background approach for the 2-dimensional (and by extension 3-dimensional) Rayleigh-Benard problem with the bound remaining stubbornly while data seems more to scale like for large . % Finally, we show that adding a velocity background field to the formulation of Wen \etal\, (\emph{Phys. Rev. E.} \textbf{92}, 043012, 2015), which is able to use an extra vorticity constraint due to the stress-free condition to lower the bound to , also fails to improve the bound.EPSRC under grant EP/P001130/1
Evidence for Dirac Fermions in a honeycomb lattice based on silicon
Silicene, a sheet of silicon atoms in a honeycomb lattice, was proposed to be
a new Dirac-type electron system similar as graphene. We performed scanning
tunneling microscopy and spectroscopy studies on the atomic and electronic
properties of silicene on Ag(111). An unexpected
reconstruction was found, which is explained by an extra-buckling model.
Pronounced quasi-particle interferences (QPI) patterns, originating from both
the intervalley and intravalley scattering, were observed. From the QPI
patterns we derived a linear energy-momentum dispersion and a large Fermi
velocity, which prove the existence of Dirac Fermions in silicene.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Tell Me How to Survey: Literature Review Made Simple with Automatic Reading Path Generation
Recent years have witnessed the dramatic growth of paper volumes with plenty
of new research papers published every day, especially in the area of computer
science. How to glean papers worth reading from the massive literature to do a
quick survey or keep up with the latest advancement about a specific research
topic has become a challenging task. Existing academic search engines such as
Google Scholar return relevant papers by individually calculating the relevance
between each paper and query. However, such systems usually omit the
prerequisite chains of a research topic and cannot form a meaningful reading
path. In this paper, we introduce a new task named Reading Path Generation
(RPG) which aims at automatically producing a path of papers to read for a
given query. To serve as a research benchmark, we further propose SurveyBank, a
dataset consisting of large quantities of survey papers in the field of
computer science as well as their citation relationships. Each survey paper
contains key phrases extracted from its title and multi-level reading lists
inferred from its references. Furthermore, we propose a
graph-optimization-based approach for reading path generation which takes the
relationship between papers into account. Extensive evaluations demonstrate
that our approach outperforms other baselines. A Real-time Reading Path
Generation System (RePaGer) has been also implemented with our designed model.
To the best of our knowledge, we are the first to target this important
research problem. Our source code of RePaGer system and SurveyBank dataset can
be found on here.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figure
Altered electrophysiology mechanism related to inhibitory control in adults with insomnia
BackgroundInsomnia disorder (ID), one of the most common psychophysiological disorders, can cause a serious burden on the individual's work and academic performance. Cognitive dysfunction often exists in patients with insomnia, which negatively affects their living quality. Inhibitory control (IC), as a vital cognitive function, allows individuals to suppress attention, behavior, or thoughts that are irrelevant to the task, so as to effectively adapt to the current goal. The earlier studies on the inhibitory control of insomnia patients predominantly used subjective scales for evaluation and that can have drawbacks because they don't provide an objective assessment.MethodsIn order to investigate the inhibitory control function of insomniacs, this research subdivides inhibitory control into response inhibition and conflict inhibition. The response inhibition and conflict inhibition capacities of insomniacs were evaluated using the two-choice oddball task and the color-word stroop task, and accordingly the association between insomnia disorder and inhibitory control capacity as well as its cognitive neural mechanism was able to be examined.ResultsBehavioral results finding, insomniacs conducted the two-choice oddball test and the color-word stroop task with lower accuracy and slower reaction times when compared to healthy sleepers. ERP results finding, when performing the two-choice oddball task, the P3 amplitude of the insomniacs was significantly lower than that of healthy sleepers while there was no significant difference between the two groups' N2 amplitudes. At the same time, when completing the color-word stroop task, the insomniacs' N450 amplitude was significantly lower than that of healthy sleepers.DiscussionThe above findings suggest that in response inhibition tasks, insomniacs may have weaker motor inhibition abilities, and similarly perform weaker conflict monitoring abilities in conflict inhibition tasks, which indicates that insomniacs' inhibitory control is impaired compared to that of healthy sleepers. This study thus relates to the finding at the electrophysiological level that there is a certain correlation between insomnia and a decline in inhibitory control ability, which may suggest that improving inhibitory control function in patients with insomnia is a clinically significant and worthwhile area of adjuvant treatment
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