8,938 research outputs found
Resummed Green-Kubo relations for a fluctuating fluid-particle model
A recently introduced stochastic model for fluid flow can be made Galilean
invariant by introducing a random shift of the computational grid before
collisions. This grid shifting procedure accelerates momentum transfer between
cells and leads to a collisional contribution to transport coefficients. By
resumming the Green-Kubo relations derived in a previous paper, it is shown
that this collisional contribution to the transport coefficients can be
determined exactly. The resummed Green-Kubo relations also show that there are
no mixed kinetic-collisional contributions to the transport coefficients. The
leading correlation corrections to the transport coefficients are discussed,
and explicit expressions for the transport coefficients are presented and
compared with simulation data.Comment: 4 pages including 4 figures, submitted to PRE Rapid Com
The tractability frontier of well-designed SPARQL queries
We study the complexity of query evaluation of SPARQL queries. We focus on
the fundamental fragment of well-designed SPARQL restricted to the AND,
OPTIONAL and UNION operators. Our main result is a structural characterisation
of the classes of well-designed queries that can be evaluated in polynomial
time. In particular, we introduce a new notion of width called domination
width, which relies on the well-known notion of treewidth. We show that, under
some complexity theoretic assumptions, the classes of well-designed queries
that can be evaluated in polynomial time are precisely those of bounded
domination width
Consistent particle-based algorithm with a non-ideal equation of state
A thermodynamically consistent particle-based model for fluid dynamics with
continuous velocities and a non-ideal equation of state is presented. Excluded
volume interactions are modeled by means of biased stochastic multiparticle
collisions which depend on the local velocities and densities. Momentum and
energy are exactly conserved locally. The equation of state is derived and
compared to independent measurements of the pressure. Results for the kinematic
shear viscosity and self-diffusion constants are presented. A caging and
order/disorder transition is observed at high densities and large collision
frequency.Comment: 7 pages including 4 figure
Polarization dependence of x-ray absorption spectra in Na_xCoO_2
In order to shed light on the electronic structure of Na_xCoO_2, and
motivated by recent Co L-edge X-ray absorption spectra (XAS) experiments with
polarized light, we calculate the electronic spectrum of a CoO_6 cluster
including all interactions between 3d orbitals. We obtain the ground state for
two electronic occupations in the cluster that correspond nominally to all O in
the O^{-2} oxidation state, and Co^{+3} or Co^{+4}. Then, all excited states
obtained by promotion of a Co 2p electron to a 3d electron, and the
corresponding matrix elements are calculated. A fit of the observed
experimental spectra is good and points out a large Co-O covalency and cubic
crystal field effects, that result in low spin Co 3d configurations. Our
results indicate that the effective hopping between different Co atoms plays a
major role in determining the symmetry of the ground state in the lattice.
Remaining quantitative discrepancies with the XAS experiments are expected to
come from composition effects of itineracy in the ground and excited states.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Bobcats Do Not Exhibit Rub Response Despite Presence at Hair Collection Stations
We evaluated the detection rate for hair snare sampling for bobcats (Lynx rufus) using colocated hair snares and infrared-triggered cameras at 20 locations on private property in eastern Texas. Hair snares and cameras were placed together at survey stations that included both visual and olfactory attractants. In 1,680 trap-nights we photographically documented 15 visits by bobcats but collected only one bobcat hair sample. Our observations suggested limited rubbing behavior by bobcats at hair snares despite presence at hair collection stations. The explanation for this behavior remains unclear but is consistent with observations of low and variable hair trap success for this species. Although presence of other carnivores, especially gray fox, may inhibit rub response of felids, we did not document gray foxes at our hair collection stations. Low rub frequency may limit the utility of these techniques for bobcats and we suggest that alternate techniques such as camera surveys or fecal DNA collection may be more suitable
Numerical investigation of a double frequency approach for longitudinal HF welding of cladded pipes
This article contains findings of simulation research on longitudinal induction welding of cladded pipes with use of simultaneous double frequency. Solutions are proposed to reach the required temperature distribution at the welding edge for the cladding composite of S355 and Alloy 625 with single and simultaneous double frequency. An advanced consideration of magnetic and other material properties was performed to simulate the dominating physical effects of high frequency (HF) welding. The background of use and advantages of simultaneous double frequency are presented. In the context of the research, a correlation for welding speed, frequency and temperature distribution with industrial relevance was found for the cladded pipe welding
Mesoscopic model for the fluctuating hydrodynamics of binary and ternary mixtures
A recently introduced particle-based model for fluid dynamics with continuous
velocities is generalized to model immiscible binary mixtures. Excluded volume
interactions between the two components are modeled by stochastic multiparticle
collisions which depend on the local velocities and densities. Momentum and
energy are conserved locally, and entropically driven phase separation occurs
for high collision rates. An explicit expression for the equation of state is
derived, and the concentration dependence of the bulk free energy is shown to
be the same as that of the Widom-Rowlinson model. Analytic results for the
phase diagram are in excellent agreement with simulation data. Results for the
line tension obtained from the analysis of the capillary wave spectrum of a
droplet agree with measurements based on the Laplace's equation. The
introduction of "amphiphilic" dimers makes it possible to model the phase
behavior and dynamics of ternary surfactant mixtures.Comment: 7 pages including 6 figure
Hammerhead, an ultrahigh resolution ePix camera for wavelength-dispersive spectrometers
Wavelength-dispersive spectrometers (WDS) are often used in synchrotron and
FEL applications where high energy resolution (in the order of eV) is
important. Increasing WDS energy resolution requires increasing spatial
resolution of the detectors in the dispersion direction. The common approaches
with strip detectors or small pixel detectors are not ideal. We present a novel
approach, with a sensor using rectangular pixels with a high aspect ratio
(between strips and pixels, further called "strixels"), and strixel
redistribution to match the square pixel arrays of typical ASICs while avoiding
the considerable effort of redesigning ASICs. This results in a sensor area of
17.4 mm x 77 mm, with a fine pitch of 25 m in the horizontal direction
resulting in 3072 columns and 176 rows. The sensors use ePix100 readout ASICs,
leveraging their low noise (43 e, or 180 eV rms). We present results
obtained with a Hammerhead ePix100 camera, showing that the small pitch (25
m) in the dispersion direction maximizes performance for both high and low
photon occupancies, resulting in optimal WDS energy resolution. The low noise
level at high photon occupancy allows precise photon counting, while at low
occupancy, both the energy and the subpixel position can be reconstructed for
every photon, allowing an ultrahigh resolution (in the order of 1 m) in
the dispersion direction and rejection of scattered beam and harmonics. Using
strixel sensors with redistribution and flip-chip bonding to standard ePix
readout ASICs results in ultrahigh position resolution (1 m) and low
noise in WDS applications, leveraging the advantages of hybrid pixel detectors
(high production yield, good availability, relatively inexpensive) while
minimizing development complexity through sharing the ASIC, hardware, software
and DAQ development with existing versions of ePix cameras.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
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