1,925 research outputs found
There Is No Now: An Archaeology of Contemporaneity
Drawing together discourses on contemporaneity and new materialisms, this book examines a material conception of temporality that makes it possible to develop a critique of the philosophical discourse on presence. Claiming that âthere is no now,â Knut Ebeling develops an archaeology of contemporaneity according to which the traces of the contemporary can only be secured through visual or material operations, not historical ones
Thermodynamics of hot dense H-plasmas: Path integral Monte Carlo simulations and analytical approximations
This work is devoted to the thermodynamics of high-temperature dense hydrogen
plasmas in the pressure region between and Mbar. In particular
we present for this region results of extensive calculations based on a
recently developed path integral Monte Carlo scheme (direct PIMC). This method
allows for a correct treatment of the thermodynamic properties of hot dense
Coulomb systems. Calculations were performed in a broad region of the
nonideality parameter and degeneracy parameter . We give a comparison with a few available results from
other path integral calculations (restricted PIMC) and with analytical
calculations based on Pade approximations for strongly ionized plasmas. Good
agreement between the results obtained from the three independent methods is
found.Comment: RevTex file, 21 pages, 5 ps-figures include
Nonlinear Debye-Onsager-Relaxation-Effect
The quantum kinetic equation for charged particles in strong electric fields
is used to derive the nonlinear particle flux. The relaxation field is
calculated quantum mechanically up to any order in the applied field provided a
given Maxwellian plasma. The classical limit is given in analytical form. In
the range of weak fields the deformation of the screening cloud is responsible
for the Debye-Onsager relaxation effect.Comment: Proceeding of the 8. International Workshop on Atomic Physics for
Ion-Driven Fusion, Heidelberg 1997, appear in Laser and Particle beam
All-Electron Path Integral Monte Carlo Simulations of Warm Dense Matter: Application to Water and Carbon Plasmas
We develop an all-electron path integral Monte Carlo (PIMC) method with
free-particle nodes for warm dense matter and apply it to water and carbon
plasmas. We thereby extend PIMC studies beyond hydrogen and helium to elements
with core electrons. PIMC pressures, internal energies, and pair-correlation
functions compare well with density functional theory molecular dynamics
(DFT-MD) at temperatures of (2.5-7.5) K and both methods together
form a coherent equation of state (EOS) over a density-temperature range of
3--12 g/cm and 10--10 K
Statistical Mechanics of Canonical-Dissipative Systems and Applications to Swarm Dynamics
We develop the theory of canonical-dissipative systems, based on the
assumption that both the conservative and the dissipative elements of the
dynamics are determined by invariants of motion. In this case, known solutions
for conservative systems can be used for an extension of the dynamics, which
also includes elements such as the take-up/dissipation of energy. This way, a
rather complex dynamics can be mapped to an analytically tractable model, while
still covering important features of non-equilibrium systems. In our paper,
this approach is used to derive a rather general swarm model that considers (a)
the energetic conditions of swarming, i.e. for active motion, (b) interactions
between the particles based on global couplings. We derive analytical
expressions for the non-equilibrium velocity distribution and the mean squared
displacement of the swarm. Further, we investigate the influence of different
global couplings on the overall behavior of the swarm by means of
particle-based computer simulations and compare them with the analytical
estimations.Comment: 14 pages incl. 13 figures. v2: misprints in Eq. (40) corrected, ref.
updated. For related work see also:
http://summa.physik.hu-berlin.de/~frank/active.htm
Flow measurement using micro-PIV and related temperature distributions within evaporating sessile drops of self-rewetting mixtures of 1-pentanol and water
This paper was presented at the 4th Micro and Nano Flows Conference (MNF2014), which was held at University College, London, UK. The conference was organised by Brunel University and supported by the Italian Union of Thermofluiddynamics, IPEM, the Process Intensification Network, the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, the Heat Transfer Society, HEXAG - the Heat Exchange Action Group, and the Energy Institute, ASME Press, LCN London Centre for Nanotechnology, UCL University College London, UCL Engineering, the International NanoScience Community, www.nanopaprika.eu.Recently interest has arisen in the use of so-called self-rewetting mixtures for micro-scale heat
transfer systems. Such fluids, in which the surface tension can increase with increasing temperature, are
expected to offer superior evaporative cooling performance by extending the region of operation before dryout
of the heated surface sets in. Whilst improved performance has been shown in some practical situations
using these fluids, it is not entirely clear as to the mechanism of such improvements.
We have studied the flow within evaporating sessile drops of 1-pentanol-water mixtures using micro-PIV
and have observed three stages in the evaporation process. During the first stage there appears to be a single
toroidal vortex with flow inwards along the base of the drop. The vortex only occupies the central region of
the drop and appears to pulsate, reducing in size during evaporation. This is followed by a second transition
stage to a third stage in which the flow is directed radially outward, as observed by us for pure water droplet
evaporation and in the latter stages of ethanol/water drop evaporation. Temperature measurements, using IR
thermography suggest that the initial stage of evaporation may be controlled by thermal Marangoni effects as
opposed to the concentration driven Marangoni flows postulated for ethanol-water mixtures
Reconstruction of a first-order phase transition from computer simulations of individual phases and subphases
We present a new method for investigating first-order phase transitions using
Monte Carlo simulations. It relies on the multiple-histogram method and uses
solely histograms of individual phases. In addition, we extend the method to
include histograms of subphases. The free energy difference between phases,
necessary for attributing the correct statistical weights to the histograms, is
determined by a detour in control parameter space via auxiliary systems with
short relaxation times. We apply this method to a recently introduced model for
structure formation in polypeptides for which other methods fail.Comment: 13 pages in preprint mode, REVTeX, 2 Figures available from the
authors ([email protected], [email protected]
Measurements of Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect Scaling Relations for Clusters of Galaxies
We present new measurements of the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) effect from
clusters of galaxies using the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Infrared Experiment (SuZIE
II). We combine these new measurements with previous cluster observations with
the SuZIE instrument to form a sample of 15 clusters of galaxies. For this
sample we calculate the central Comptonization, y, and the integrated SZ flux
decrement, S, for each of our clusters. We find that the integrated SZ flux is
a more robust observable derived from our measurements than the central
Comptonization due to inadequacies in the spatial modelling of the
intra-cluster gas with a standard Beta model. This is highlighted by comparing
our central Comptonization results with values calculated from measurements
using the BIMA and OVRO interferometers. On average, the SuZIE calculated
central Comptonizations are approximately 60% higher in the cooling flow
clusters than the interferometric values, compared to only approximately 12%
higher in the non-cooling flow clusters. We believe this discrepancy to be in
large part due to the spatial modelling of the intra-cluster gas. From our
cluster sample we construct y-T and S-T scaling relations. The y-T scaling
relation is inconsistent with what we would expect for self-similar clusters;
however this result is questionable because of the large systematic uncertainty
in the central Comptonization. The S-T scaling relation has a slope and
redshift evolution consistent with what we expect for self-similar clusters
with a characteristic density that scales with the mean density of the
universe. We rule out zero redshift evolution of the S-T relation at 90%
confidence.Comment: Accepted to Astrophysical Journal. 52 pages, 14 tables, 7 figures
;replaced to match ApJ accepted versio
Discovery of an overdensity of faint red galaxies in the vicinity of the z=1.786 radio galaxy 3C 294
We report the discovery of an overdensity of faint red galaxies in the
vicinity of the z=1.786 radio galaxy 3C 294. The overdensity, discovered in a
84 min Ks-band ISAAC/VLT image is significant at the 2.4 sigma level (compared
to the local field density), and overlaps with the extended X-ray emission
around 3C 294 detected with the Chandra X-ray Observatory. The near-infrared
colours of the galaxies making up the overdensity show a large scatter and the
galaxies do not follow a red sequence in the colour magnitude diagram. If the
galaxies are in a cluster at z=1.786 they must be dominated by young stellar
populations with different star-formation histories.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
SPEAR Far Ultraviolet Spectral Images of the Cygnus Loop
We present far-ultraviolet (FUV) spectral images, measured at C IV 1550, He
II 1640, Si IV+O IV] 1400, and O III] 1664, of the entire Cygnus Loop, observed
with the Spectroscopy of Plasma Evolution from Astrophysical Radiation (SPEAR)
instrument, also known as FIMS. The spatial distribution of FUV emission
generally corresponds with a limb-brightened shell, and is similar to optical,
radio and X-ray images. The features found in the present work include a
``carrot'', diffuse interior, and breakout features, which have not been seen
in previous FUV studies. Shock velocities of 140-160 km/s is found from a line
ratio of O IV] to O III], which is insensitive not only to resonance scattering
but also to elemental abundance. The estimated velocity indicates that the fast
shocks are widespread across the remnant. By comparing various line ratios with
steady-state shock models, it is also shown that the resonance scattering is
widespread.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in ApJ
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