200 research outputs found
An agglomeration-based massively parallel non-overlapping additive Schwarz preconditioner for high-order discontinuous Galerkin methods on polytopic grids
In this article we design and analyze a class of two-level non-overlapping
additive Schwarz preconditioners for the solution of the linear system of
equations stemming from discontinuous Galerkin discretizations of second-order
elliptic partial differential equations on polytopic meshes. The preconditioner
is based on a coarse space and a non-overlapping partition of the computational
domain where local solvers are applied in parallel. In particular, the coarse
space can potentially be chosen to be non-embedded with respect to the finer
space; indeed it can be obtained from the fine grid by employing agglomeration
and edge coarsening techniques. We investigate the dependence of the condition
number of the preconditioned system with respect to the diffusion coefficient
and the discretization parameters, i.e., the mesh size and the polynomial
degree of the fine and coarse spaces. Numerical examples are presented which
confirm the theoretical bounds
The evolution of collision debris near the secular resonance and its role in the origin of terrestrial water
This work presents novel findings that broadens our understanding of the
amount of water that can be transported to Earth. The key innovation lies in
the combined usage of Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) and -body codes
to assess the role of collision fragments in water delivery. We also present a
method for generating initial conditions that enables the projectile to impact
at the designated location on the target's surface with the specified velocity.
The primary objective of this study is to simulate giant collisions between two
Ceres-sized bodies by SPH near the secular resonance and follow the
evolution of the ejected debris by numerical -body code. With our method 6
different initial conditions for the collision were determined and the
corresponding impacts were simulated by SPH. Examining the orbital evolution of
the debris ejected after collisions, we measured the amount of water delivered
to Earth, which is broadly 0.001 ocean equivalents of water, except in one case
where one large body transported 7\% oceans of water to the planet. Based on
this, and taking into account the frequency of collisions, the amount of
delivered water varies between 1.2 and 8.3 ocean's worth of water, depending on
the primordial disk mass. According to our results, the prevailing external
pollution model effectively accounts for the assumed water content on Earth,
whether it's estimated at 1 or 10 ocean's worth of water.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figure
Existence and equilibration of global weak solutions to Hookean-type bead-spring chain models for dilute polymers
We show the existence of global-in-time weak solutions to a general class of
coupled Hookean-type bead-spring chain models that arise from the kinetic
theory of dilute solutions of polymeric liquids with noninteracting polymer
chains. The class of models involves the unsteady incompressible Navier-Stokes
equations in a bounded domain in two or three space dimensions for the velocity
and the pressure of the fluid, with an elastic extra-stress tensor appearing on
the right-hand side in the momentum equation. The extra-stress tensor stems
from the random movement of the polymer chains and is defined by the Kramers
expression through the associated probability density function that satisfies a
Fokker-Planck-type parabolic equation, a crucial feature of which is the
presence of a center-of-mass diffusion term. We require no structural
assumptions on the drag term in the Fokker-Planck equation; in particular, the
drag term need not be corotational. With a square-integrable and
divergence-free initial velocity datum for the Navier-Stokes equation and a
nonnegative initial probability density function for the Fokker-Planck
equation, which has finite relative entropy with respect to the Maxwellian of
the model, we prove the existence of a global-in-time weak solution to the
coupled Navier-Stokes-Fokker-Planck system. It is also shown that in the
absence of a body force, the weak solution decays exponentially in time to the
equilibrium solution, at a rate that is independent of the choice of the
initial datum and of the centre-of-mass diffusion coefficient.Comment: 86 page
Which are Better Conditioned Meshes Adaptive, Uniform, Locally Refined or Localised
Adaptive, locally refined and locally adjusted meshes are preferred over
uniform meshes for capturing singular or localised solutions. Roughly speaking,
for a given degree of freedom a solution associated with adaptive, locally
refined and locally adjusted meshes is more accurate than the solution given by
uniform meshes. In this work, we answer the question which meshes are better
conditioned. We found, for approximately same degree of freedom (same size of
matrix), it is easier to solve a system of equations associated with an
adaptive mesh.Comment: 4 Page
Heisenberg-limited metrology with a squeezed vacuum state, three-mode mixing, and information recycling
We have previously shown that quantum-enhanced atom interferometry can be achieved by mapping the quantum state of squeezed optical vacuum to one of the atomic inputs via a beamsplitter-like process [Phys. Rev. A 90, 063630 (2014)]. Here we ask the question: is a better phase sensitivity possible if the quantum state transfer (QST) is described by a three-mode-mixing model, rather than a beamsplitter? The answer is yes, but only if the portion of the optical state not transferred to the atoms is incorporated via information recycling. Surprisingly, our scheme gives a better sensitivity for lower QST efficiencies and with a sufficiently large degree of squeezing can attain near-Heisenberg-limited sensitivities for arbitrarily small QST efficiencies. Furthermore, we use the quantum Fisher information to demonstrate the near optimality of our scheme
On the influence of the Kozai mechanism in habitable zones of extrasolar planetary systems
Aims. We investigate the long-term evolution of inclined test particles representing a small Earth-like body with negligible gravitational effects (hereafter called massless test-planets) in the restricted three-body problem, and consisting of a star, a gas giant, and a massless test-planet. The test-planet is initially on a circular orbit and moves around the star at distances closer than the gas giant. The aim is to show the influences of the eccentricity and the mass of the gas giant on the dynamics, for various inclinations of the test-planet, and to investigate in more detail the Kozai mechanism in the elliptic problem.
Methods. We performed a parametric study, integrating the orbital evolution of test particles whose initial conditions were distributed on the semi-major axis â inclination plane. The gas giantâs initial eccentricity was varied. For the calculations, we used the Lie integration method and in some cases the Bulirsch-Stoer algorithm. To analyze the results, the maximum eccentricity and the Lyapunov characteristic indicator were used. All integrations were performed for 105 periods of the gas giant.
Results. Our calculations show that inclined massless test-planets can be in stable configurations with gas giants on either circular or elliptic orbits. The higher the eccentricity of the gas giant, the smaller the possible range in semi-major axis for the test-planet. For gas giants on circular orbits, our results illustrate the well-known results associated with the Kozai mechanism, which do not allow stable orbits above a critical inclination of approximately 40°. For gas giants on eccentric orbits, the dynamics is quite similar, and the massless companion exhibits limited variations in eccentricity. In addition, we identify a region around 35° consisting of long-time stable, low eccentric orbits. We show that these results are also valid for Earth-mass companions, therefore they can be applied to extrasolar systems: for instance, the extrasolar planetary system HD 154345 can possess a 35° degree inclined, nearly circular, Earth-mass companion in the habitable zone
Drivers of grassland loss in Hungary during the post-socialist transformation (1987â1999)
The increase in the speed of land-cover change experienced worldwide is becoming a growing
concern. Major socio-economic transitions, such as the breakdown of socialism in Europe, may
lead to particularly high rates of landscape transformations. In this paper we examined the loss of semi-natural grasslands in Hungary between 1987 and 1999. We studied the relationship between 9
potential driving forces and the fate of grasslands using logistic GLMs.
Grassland loss was found to be very high (1.31 % per year), which is far higher than either before
or after this period. The most influential predictors of grassland loss were environmental and
landscape characteristics (soil type, area of remnant grassland patches), and the socio-economic context (distance to paved road, and nearest settlement, human population density). Several
processes and relationships can only be understood from a historical perspective (e.g. large extent
of afforestation, strong decrease of soil water table). Grassland loss during the study period
emerged as a consequence of survival strategies of individual farmers seeking adaptation to the
changing environmental and socio-economic conditions, and not urbanization and agricultural intensification which are the main underlying drivers for the ongoing landscape transformations in
most parts of the developed world.
Though globalization increasingly influences local land use decisions , reconstructing and
modelling recent landscape changes cannot be done without a proper understanding of local history
and culture. Our analysis shows the importance of large-area yet high resolution landscape change research, which may reveal unexpected patterns of land cover change, undetected at coarser scales
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