1,863 research outputs found

    On the Kantorovich–Rubinstein theorem

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    AbstractThe Kantorovich–Rubinstein theorem provides a formula for the Wasserstein metric W1 on the space of regular probability Borel measures on a compact metric space. Dudley and de Acosta generalized the theorem to measures on separable metric spaces. Kellerer, using his own work on Monge–Kantorovich duality, obtained a rapid proof for Radon measures on an arbitrary metric space. The object of the present expository article is to give an account of Kellerer’s generalization of the Kantorovich–Rubinstein theorem, together with related matters. It transpires that a more elementary version of Monge–Kantorovich duality than that used by Kellerer suffices for present purposes. The fundamental relations that provide two characterizations of the Wasserstein metric are obtained directly, without the need for prior demonstration of density or duality theorems. The latter are proved, however, and used in the characterization of optimal measures and functions for the Kantorovich–Rubinstein linear programme. A formula of Dobrushin is proved

    Testing the validity of the effective rate constant approximation for surface reaction with transport

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    AbstractWhen one incorporates transport effects into a surface-volume reaction, an integrodifferential equation for the bound state concentration occurs. Such a form is inconvenient for data analysis. An effective rate constant approximation for the solution is correct to O(Da2) as the Damköhler number Da → 0. A numerical simulation of the integrodifferential equation is performed which shows that the effective rate constant approximation is useful even outside this regime

    Effect of Interband Transitions on the c axis Penetration Depth of Layered Superconductors

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    The electromagnetic response of a system with two planes per unit cell involves, in addition to the usual intraband contribution, an added interband term. These transitions affect the temperature dependence and the magnitude of the zero temperature c-axis penetration depth. When the interplane hopping is sufficiently small, the interband transitions dominate the low temperature behaviour of the penetration depth which then does not reflect the linear temperature dependence of the intraband term and in comparison becomes quite flat even for a d-wave gap. It is in this regime that the pseudogap was found in our previous normal state calculations of the c-axis conductivity, and the effects are connected.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure

    Sedimentology and kinematics of a large, retrogressive growth-fault system in Upper Carboniferous deltaic sediments, western Ireland

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    Growth faulting is a common feature of many deltaic environments and is vital in determining local sediment dispersal and accumulation, and hence in controlling the resultant sedimentary facies distribution and architecture. Growth faults occur on a range of scales, from a few centimetres to hundreds of metres, with the largest growth faults frequently being under-represented in outcrops that are often smaller than the scale of feature under investigation. This paper presents data from the exceptionally large outcrops of the Cliffs of Moher, western Ireland, where a growth-fault complex affects strata up to 60 m in thickness and extends laterally for 3 km. Study of this Namurian (Upper Carboniferous) growth-fault system enables the relationship between growth faulting and sedimentation to be detailed and permits reconstruction of the kinematic history of faulting. Growth faulting was initiated with the onset of sandstone deposition on a succession of silty mudstones that overlie a thin, marine shale. The decollement horizon developed at the top of the marine shale contact for the first nine faults, by which time aggradation in the hangingwall exceeded 60 m in thickness. After this time, failure planes developed at higher stratigraphic levels and were associated with smaller scale faults. The fault complex shows a dominantly landward retrogressive movement, in which only one fault was largely active at any one time. There is no evidence of compressional features at the base of the growth faults, thus suggesting open-ended slides, and the faults display both disintegrative and non-disintegrative structure. Thin-bedded, distal mouth bar facies dominate the hangingwall stratigraphy and, in the final stages of growth-fault movement, erosion of the crests of rollover structures resulted in the highest strata being restricted to the proximity of the fault. These upper erosion surfaces on the fault scarp developed erosive chutes that were cut parallel to flow and are downlapped by the distal hangingwall strata of younger growth faults

    Chiral Symmetry restoration in the massive Thirring model at finite T and μ\mu: Dimensional reduction and the Coulomb gas

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    We show that in certain limits the (1+1)-dimensional massive Thirring model at finite temperature TT is equivalent to a one-dimensional Coulomb gas of charged particles at the same TT. This equivalence is then used to explore the phase structure of the massive Thirring model. For strong coupling and T>>mT>>m (the fermion mass) the system is shown to behave as a free gas of "molecules" (charge pairs in the Coulomb gas terminology) made of pairs of chiral condensates. This binding of chiral condensates is responsible for the restoration of chiral symmetry as TT\to\infty. In addition, when a fermion chemical potential μ0\mu\neq 0 is included, the analogy with a Coulomb gas still holds with μ\mu playing the role of a purely imaginary external electric field. For small TT and μ\mu we find a typical massive Fermi gas behaviour for the fermion density, whereas for large μ\mu it shows chiral restoration by means of a vanishing effective fermion mass. Some similarities with the chiral properties of low-energy QCD at finite TT and baryon chemical potential are discussed.Comment: 28 pages, 6 figures, better resolution figures are available upon reques

    Linear response of vibrated granular systems to sudden changes in the vibration intensity

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    The short-term memory effects recently observed in vibration-induced compaction of granular materials are studied. It is shown that they can be explained by means of quite plausible hypothesis about the mesoscopic description of the evolution of the system. The existence of a critical time separating regimes of ``anomalous'' and ``normal'' responses is predicted. A simple model fitting into the general framework is analyzed in the detail. The relationship between this work and previous studies is discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures; fixed errata, updtated reference

    Condensate fraction and critical temperature of a trapped interacting Bose gas

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    By using a mean field approach, based on the Popov approximation, we calculate the temperature dependence of the condensate fraction of an interacting Bose gas confined in an anisotropic harmonic trap. For systems interacting with repulsive forces we find a significant decrease of the condensate fraction and of the critical temperature with respect to the predictions of the non-interacting model. These effects go in the opposite direction compared to the case of a homogeneous gas. An analytic result for the shift of the critical temperature holding to first order in the scattering length is also derived.Comment: 8 pages, REVTEX, 2 figures, also available at http://anubis.science.unitn.it/~oss/bec/BEC.htm

    Slow dynamics for the dilute Ising model in the phase coexistence region

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    In this paper we consider the Glauber dynamics for a disordered ferromagnetic Ising model, in the region of phase coexistence. It was conjectured several decades ago that the spin autocorrelation decays as a negative power of time [Huse and Fisher, Phys. Rev. B, 1987]. We confirm this behavior by establishing a corresponding lower bound in any dimensions d2d \geqslant 2, together with an upper bound when d=2d=2. Our approach is deeply connected to the Wulff construction for the dilute Ising model. We consider initial phase profiles with a reduced surface tension on their boundary and prove that, under mild conditions, those profiles are separated from the (equilibrium) pure plus phase by an energy barrier.Comment: 44 pages, 6 figure
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