1,952 research outputs found
Scaling Theory of Giant Frictional Slips in Decompressed Granular Media
When compressed frictional granular media are decompressed, generically a
fragile configuration is created at low pressures. Typically this is
accompanied by a giant frictional slippage as the fragile state collapses. We
show that this instability is understood in terms of a scaling theory with
theoretically computable amplitudes and exponents. The amplitude diverges in
the thermodynamic limit hinting to the possibility of huge frictional slip
events in decompressed granular media. The physics of this slippage is
discussed in terms of the probability distribution functions of the tangential
and normal forces on the grains which are highly correlated due to the Coulomb
condition.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1804.0771
Microscopic Mechanism of Shear Bands in Amorphous Solids
The fundamental instability responsible for the shear localization which
results in shear bands in amorphous solids remains unknown despite enormous
amount of research, both experimental and theoretical. As this is the main
mechanism for the failure of metallic glasses, understanding the instability is
invaluable in finding how to stabilize such materials against the tendency to
shear localize. In this Letter we explain the mechanism for shear localization
under shear, which is the appearance of highly correlated lines of Eshelby-like
quadrupolar singularities which organize the non-affine plastic flow of the
amorphous solid into a shear band. We prove analytically that such highly
correlated solutions in which \C N quadrupoles are aligned with equal
orientations are minimum energy states when the strain is high enough. The line
lies at 45 degrees to the compressive stress
Plasticity-Induced Magnetization in Amorphous Magnetic Solids
Amorphous magnetic solids, like metallic glasses, exhibit a novel effect: the
growth of magnetic order as a function of mechanical strain under athermal
conditions in the presence of a magnetic field. The magnetic moment increases
in steps whenever there is a plastic event. Thus plasticity induces the
magnetic ordering, acting as the effective noise driving the system towards
equilibrium. We present results of atomistic simulations of this effect in a
model of a magnetic amorphous solid subjected to pure shear and a magnetic
field. To elucidate the dependence on external strain and magnetic field we
offer a mean-field theory that provides an adequate qualitative understanding
of the observed phenomenon
Non-Hamiltonian dynamics in optical microcavities resulting from wave-inspired corrections to geometric optics
We introduce and investigate billiard systems with an adjusted ray dynamics
that accounts for modifications of the conventional reflection of rays due to
universal wave effects. We show that even small modifications of the specular
reflection law have dramatic consequences on the phase space of classical
billiards. These include the creation of regions of non-Hamiltonian dynamics,
the breakdown of symmetries, and changes in the stability and morphology of
periodic orbits. Focusing on optical microcavities, we show that our adjusted
dynamics provides the missing ray counterpart to previously observed wave
phenomena and we describe how to observe its signatures in experiments. Our
findings also apply to acoustic and ultrasound waves and are important in all
situations where wavelengths are comparable to system sizes, an increasingly
likely situation considering the systematic reduction of the size of electronic
and photonic devices.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, final published versio
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