98 research outputs found
Computation of the radiation amplitude of oscillons
The radiation loss of small amplitude oscillons (very long-living, spatially
localized, time dependent solutions) in one dimensional scalar field theories
is computed in the small-amplitude expansion analytically using matched
asymptotic series expansions and Borel summation. The amplitude of the
radiation is beyond all orders in perturbation theory and the method used has
been developed by Segur and Kruskal in Phys. Rev. Lett. 58, 747 (1987). Our
results are in good agreement with those of long time numerical simulations of
oscillons.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figure
Polarization of superfluid turbulence
We show that normal fluid eddies in turbulent helium II polarize the tangle
of quantized vortex lines present in the flow, thus inducing superfluid
vorticity patterns similar to the driving normal fluid eddies. We also show
that the polarization is effective over the entire inertial range. The results
help explain the surprising analogies between classical and superfluid
turbulence which have been observed recently.Comment: 3 figure
Outliers, Extreme Events and Multiscaling
Extreme events have an important role which is sometime catastrophic in a
variety of natural phenomena including climate, earthquakes and turbulence, as
well as in man-made environments like financial markets. Statistical analysis
and predictions in such systems are complicated by the fact that on the one
hand extreme events may appear as "outliers" whose statistical properties do
not seem to conform with the bulk of the data, and on the other hands they
dominate the (fat) tails of probability distributions and the scaling of high
moments, leading to "abnormal" or "multi"-scaling. We employ a shell model of
turbulence to show that it is very useful to examine in detail the dynamics of
onset and demise of extreme events. Doing so may reveal dynamical scaling
properties of the extreme events that are characteristic to them, and not
shared by the bulk of the fluctuations. As the extreme events dominate the
tails of the distribution functions, knowledge of their dynamical scaling
properties can be turned into a prediction of the functional form of the tails.
We show that from the analysis of relatively short time horizons (in which the
extreme events appear as outliers) we can predict the tails of the probability
distribution functions, in agreement with data collected in very much longer
time horizons. The conclusion is that events that may appear unpredictable on
relatively short time horizons are actually a consistent part of a multiscaling
statistics on longer time horizons.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figures included, PRE submitte
Singularity of the Vortex Density of States in d-wave Superconductors
In d-wave superconductors, the electronic density of states (DOS) induced by
a vortex exhibits 1/|E| divergency at low energies. It is the result of gap
nodes in the excitations spectrum outside the vortex core. The heat capacity in
two regimes, (T/T_c)^2 >> B/B_{c2} and (T/T_c)^2 << B/B_{c2}, is discussed.Comment: LaTeX file, 8 pages, no figures, submitted to JETP Letter
Probability Density Function of Longitudinal Velocity Increment in Homogeneous Turbulence
Two conditional averages for the longitudinal velocity increment u_r of the
simulated turbulence are calculated: h(u_r) is the average of the increment of
the longitudinal Laplacian velocity field with u_r fixed, while g(u_r) is the
corresponding one of the square of the difference of the gradient of the
velocity field. Based on the physical argument, we suggest the formulae for h
and g, which are quite satisfactorily fitted to the 512^3 DNS data. The
predicted PDF is characterized as
(1) the Gaussian distribution for the small amplitudes,
(2) the exponential distribution for the large ones, and (3) a prefactor
before the exponential function for the intermediate ones.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, using RevTeX3.
Bailout Embeddings and Neutrally Buoyant Particles in Three-Dimensional Flows
We use the bailout embeddings of three-dimensional volume-preserving maps to
study qualitatively the dy- namics of small spherical neutrally buoyant
impurities suspended in a time-periodic incompressible fluid flow. The
accumulation of impurities in tubular vortical structures, the detachment of
particles from fluid trajectories near hyperbolic invariant lines, and the
formation of nontrivial three-dimensional structures in the distribution of
particles are predicted.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Global Diffusion in a Realistic Three-Dimensional Time-Dependent Nonturbulent Fluid Flow
We introduce and study the first model of an experimentally realizable
three-dimensional time-dependent nonturbulent fluid flow to display the
phenomenon of global diffusion of passive-scalar particles at arbitrarily small
values of the nonintegrable perturbation. This type of chaotic advection,
termed {\it resonance-induced diffusion\/}, is generic for a large class of
flows.Comment: 4 pages, uuencoded compressed postscript file, to appear in Phys.
Rev. Lett. Also available on the WWW from http://formentor.uib.es/~julyan/,
or on paper by reques
Absence of squirt singularities for the multi-phase Muskat problem
In this paper we study the evolution of multiple fluids with different
constant densities in porous media. This physical scenario is known as the
Muskat and the (multi-phase) Hele-Shaw problems. In this context we prove that
the fluids do not develop squirt singularities.Comment: 16 page
Semi-classical description of the frustrated antiferromagnetic chain
The antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model on a chain with nearest and next
nearest neighbor couplings is mapped onto the nonlinear sigma model in
the continuum limit. In one spatial dimension this model is always in its
disordered phase and a gap opens to excited states. The latter form a doubly
degenerate spin-1 branch at all orders in . We argue that this feature
should be present in the spin-1 Heisenberg model itself. Exact diagonalizations
are used to support this claim. The inapplicability of this model to
half-integer spin chains is discussed.Comment: 19 pages (RevTeX 3.0), 6 PostScript figures appended (printing
instructions included), preprint CRPS-94-1
Spin Dynamics of the Triangular Heisenberg Antiferromagnet: A Schwinger Boson Approach
We have analyzed the two-dimensional antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model on
the triangular lattice using a Schwinger boson mean-field theory. By expanding
around a state with local order, we obtain, in the limit of
infinite spin, results for the excitation spectrum in complete agreement with
linear spin wave theory (LSWT). In contrast to LSWT, however, the modes at the
ordering wave vectors acquire a mass for finite spin. We discuss the origin of
this effect.Comment: 15 pages REVTEX 3.0 preprint, 6 postscript figures ( uuencoded and
compressed using the script uufiles ) are submitted separately
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