2,139 research outputs found

    Critical behavior of plastic depinning of vortex lattices in two dimensions: Molecular dynamics simulations

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    Using molecular dynamics simulations, we report a study of the dynamics of two-dimensional vortex lattices driven over a disordered medium. In strong disorder, when topological order is lost, we show that the depinning transition is analogous to a second order critical transition: the velocity-force response at the onset of motion is continuous and characterized by critical exponents. Combining studies at zero and nonzero temperature and using a scaling analysis, two critical expo- nents are evaluated. We find v\sim (F-F_c)^\beta with \beta=1.3\pm0.1 at T=0 and F>F_c, and v\sim T^{1/\delta} with \delta^{-1}=0.75\pm0.1 at F=F_c, where F_c is the critical driving force at which the lattice goes from a pinned state to a sliding one. Both critical exponents and the scaling function are found to exhibit universality with regard to the pinning strength and different disorder realizations. Furthermore, the dynamics is shown to be chaotic in the whole critical region.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure

    Non-Markovian dissipative dynamics of two coupled qubits in independent reservoirs: a comparison between exact solutions and master equation approaches

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    The reduced dynamics of two interacting qubits coupled to two independent bosonic baths is investigated. The one-excitation dynamics is derived and compared with that based on the resolution of appropriate non-Markovian master equations. The Nakajima-Zwanzig and the time-convolutionless projection operator techniques are exploited to provide a description of the non-Markovian features of the dynamics of the two-qubits system. The validity of such approximate methods and their range of validity in correspondence to different choices of the parameters describing the system are brought to light.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to PR

    The elastic depinning transition of vortex lattices in two dimensions

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    Large scale numerical simulations are used to study the elastic dynamics of two-dimensional vortex lattices driven on a disordered medium in the case of weak disorder. We investigate the so-called elastic depinning transition by decreasing the driving force from the elastic dynamical regime to the state pinned by the quenched disorder. Similarly to the plastic depinning transition, we find results compatible with a second order phase transition, although both depinning transitions are very different from many viewpoints. We evaluate three critical exponents of the elastic depinning transition. β=0.29±0.03\beta = 0.29 \pm 0.03 is found for the velocity exponent at zero temperature, and from the velocity-temperature curves we extract the critical exponent δ1=0.28±0.05\delta^{-1} = 0.28 \pm 0.05. Furthermore, in contrast with charge-density waves, a finite-size scaling analysis suggests the existence of a unique diverging length at the depinning threshold with an exponent ν=1.04±0.04\nu= 1.04 \pm 0.04, which controls the critical force distribution, the finite-size crossover force distribution and the intrinsic correlation length. Finally, a scaling relation is found between velocity and temperature with the β\beta and δ\delta critical exponents both independent with regard to pinning strength and disorder realizations.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figure

    Femtosecond β-cleavage dynamics: Observation of the diradical intermediate in the nonconcerted reactions of cyclic ethers

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    Femtosecond (fs) dynamics of reactions of cyclic ethers, symmetric and asymmetric structures, are reported. The diradical intermediates and their beta-cleavages, which involve simultaneous C-C, C-H sigma-bond breakage and C-O, C-C pi-bond formation, are observed and studied by fs-resolved mass spectrometry. To compare with experiments, we present density functional theory calculations of the potential energy surface and microcanonical rates and product distributions

    Border Crossings: The Impact of Migration on the New Hampshire House of Representatives

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    This paper studies the political effects of population migration to New Hampshire. Data suggest that, although migration from Massachusetts caused significant “suburbanization” effects in New Hampshire over the last four decades, demographic changes have not yielded commensurate changes in voting behavior, or party registration in the state. But the New Hampshire House of Representatives reveals more impact from the dramatic population increase. Population migration has led to suburbanization of the composition of the 400-member lower chamber. Citizen-legislators native-born to New Hampshire now compose just slightly over a third of the House, a proportion far lower than that in other New England states. Also, levels of education among legislators have increased significantly. White-collar professionals and retirees now dominate the House delegations of both major parties. A review of selected roll-call votes over the past two decades reveals that party line voting on legislative bills has been on the rise in several significant issue areas. A more highly educated, white-collar citizen-legislature has not led to moderation and bipartisanship. Instead, House legislators are increasingly polarized over a series of ideologically charged issues

    Polar Actions on Berger Spheres

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    The object of this article is to study a torus action on a so-called Berger sphere. We also make some comments on polar actions on naturally reductive homogeneous spaces. Finally, we prove a rigidity-type theorem for Riemannian manifolds carrying a polar action with a fix point

    experimental and numerical analyses of a spark ignition engine firing with n butanol gasoline blends at high load operation

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    Abstract In this paper, the potential of alcohol-gasoline blends as fuels for spark-ignition engines has been evaluated. The general purpose of the work is to verify the possibility of incrementing the bio-fuels penetration in the market of transportation fuels. As it is well known, bio-mass derived fuels, in fact, could significantly reduce the CO2 emissions of energy thermal systems. The behavior of a small, turbocharged spark-ignition engine, firing with gasoline-butanol blends, has been analyzed. Analyses have been carried out by means of both experimental tests and numerical simulations. In previous works, engine main performances have been illustrated and discussed. Here, experimental tests have been carried out in order to compare the engine knock resistance and the obtainable fuel conversion efficiency when the engine is fueled by pure gasoline or gasoline-butanol blends at high load operation. Furthermore, one dimensional numerical analyses have been utilized in order to compare the engine behavior, at different operating points, when it is firing with pure gasoline or pure butanol. In general, the obtained results seem to indicate that butanol (produced by bio-masses) is a viable alternative to fossil fuels in the way of CO2 emission reduction
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