41,736 research outputs found
A deductive statistical mechanics approach for granular matter
We introduce a deductive statistical mechanics approach for granular
materials which is formally built from few realistic physical assumptions. The
main finding is an universal behavior for the distribution of the density
fluctuations. Such a distribution is the equivalent of the Maxwell-Boltzmann's
distribution in the kinetic theory of gasses. The comparison with a very
extensive set of experimental and simulation data for packings of monosized
spherical grains, reveals a remarkably good quantitative agreement with the
theoretical predictions for the density fluctuations both at the grain level
and at the global system level. Such agreement is robust over a broad range of
packing fractions and it is observed in several distinct systems prepared by
using different methods. The equilibrium distributions are characterized by
only one parameter () which is a quantity very sensitive to changes in the
structural organization. The thermodynamical equivalent of and its relation
with the `granular temperature' are also discussed.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure
Approach to the Continuum Limit of the Quenched Hermitian Wilson-Dirac Operator
We investigate the approach to the continuum limit of the spectrum of the
Hermitian Wilson-Dirac operator in the supercritical mass region for pure gauge
SU(2) and SU(3) backgrounds. For this we study the spectral flow of the
Hermitian Wilson-Dirac operator in the range . We find that the
spectrum has a gap for and that the spectral density at zero,
, is non-zero for . We find that and, for
(exponential in the lattice spacing) as one goes to
the continuum limit. We also compute the topological susceptibility and the
size distribution of the zero modes. The topological susceptibility scales well
in the lattice spacing for both SU(2) and SU(3). The size distribution of the
zero modes does not appear to show a peak at a physical scale.Comment: 19 pages revtex with 9 postscript figures included by eps
Statistical Mechanics of Vibration-Induced Compaction of Powders
We propose a theory which describes the density relaxation of loosely packed,
cohesionless granular material under mechanical tapping. Using the compactivity
concept we develope a formalism of statistical mechanics which allows us to
calculate the density of a powder as a function of time and compactivity. A
simple fluctuation-dissipation relation which relates compactivity to the
amplitude and frequency of a tapping is proposed. Experimental data of
E.R.Nowak et al. [{\it Powder Technology} 94, 79 (1997) ] show how density of
initially deposited in a fluffy state powder evolves under carefully controlled
tapping towards a random close packing (RCP) density. Ramping the vibration
amplitude repeatedly up and back down again reveals the existence of reversible
and irreversible branches in the response. In the framework of our approach the
reversible branch (along which the RCP density is obtained) corresponds to the
steady state solution of the Fokker-Planck equation whereas the irreversible
one is represented by a superposition of "excited states" eigenfunctions. These
two regimes of response are analyzed theoretically and a qualitative
explanation of the hysteresis curve is offered.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, Latex. Revised tex
Topological Phases in Neuberger-Dirac operator
The response of the Neuberger-Dirac fermion operator D=\Id + V in the
topologically nontrivial background gauge field depends on the negative mass
parameter in the Wilson-Dirac fermion operator which enters
through the unitary operator . We classify
the topological phases of by comparing its index to the topological charge
of the smooth background gauge field. An exact discrete symmetry in the
topological phase diagram is proved for any gauge configurations. A formula for
the index of D in each topological phase is derived by obtaining the total
chiral charge of the zero modes in the exact solution of the free fermion
propagator.Comment: 27 pages, Latex, 3 figures, appendix A has been revise
Investigation of metal flow in bridge die extrusion of Alloy 6063 and subsequent effect on surface quality and weld seam integrity
This paper describes a detailed study of tube extrusion by simulation using finite element method (FEM). The finite element model used one-sixth of symmetry. The extrusion load, emperature evolution and metal flow were predicted. Innovative methods, combining both grid and surface tools, were used to define in detail the flow of material. These showed clearly the inner and outer surface formation mechanisms of the tube extrusion. The seam weld, an important quality indicator, was also evaluated by selecting an appropriate criterion
Volume fluctuations and geometrical constraints in granular packs
Structural organization and correlations are studied in very large packings
of equally sized acrylic spheres, reconstructed in three-dimensions by means of
X-ray computed tomography. A novel technique, devised to analyze correlations
among more than two spheres, shows that the structural organization can be
conveniently studied in terms of a space-filling packing of irregular
tetrahedra. The study of the volume distribution of such tetrahedra reveals an
exponential decay in the region of large volumes; a behavior that is in very
good quantitative agreement with theoretical prediction. I argue that the
system's structure can be described as constituted of two phases: 1) an
`unconstrained' phase which freely shares the volume; 2) a `constrained' phase
which assumes configurations accordingly with the geometrical constraints
imposed by the condition of non-overlapping between spheres and mechanical
stability. The granular system exploits heterogeneity maximizing freedom and
entropy while constraining mechanical stability.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Domain Wall Fermions with Exact Chiral Symmetry
We show how the standard domain wall action can be simply modified to allow
arbitrarily exact chiral symmetry at finite fifth dimensional extent. We note
that the method can be used for both quenched and dynamical calculations. We
test the method using smooth and thermalized gauge field configurations. We
also make comparisons of the performance (cost) of the domain wall operator for
spectroscopy compared to other methods such as the overlap-Dirac operator and
find both methods are comparable in cost.Comment: revtex, 37 pages, 11 color postscript figure
Unkindest cuts: reflections on destruction and resilience in LGBTQ community-based mental health support
This article reflects on the closure of specialist community-based LGBTQ mental health support from the perspective of people who have used or work in such services. The authors discuss the need for community-based specialist support for LGBTQ people who experience mental health problems or work in mental health services
Political and Media Discourses about Integrating Refugees in the UK
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.This article addresses political and media discourses about integrating refugees in the UK in the context of the ârefugee crisisâ. A discursive psychological approach is presented as the best way to understand what talk about the concept is used to accomplish in these debates. A large corpus of political discussions (13 hours of debate featuring 146 politicians) and 960 newspaper articles from the UK were discourse analysed. The analysis identified five dilemmas about integration: Integration is positive and necessary, but challenging; Host communities are presented as welcoming, but there are limits to their capacity; Refugees are responsible for integration, but host communities need to provide support; Good refugees integrate, bad ones don't; Refugees are vulnerable and are skilled. All are used to warrant the inclusion or exclusion of refugees. The responsibility of western nations to support refugees is therefore contingent on the refugees behaving in specific ways
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