16,226 research outputs found
Kicked Burgers Turbulence
Burgers turbulence subject to a force ,
where the 's are ``kicking times'' and the ``impulses'' have
arbitrary space dependence, combines features of the purely decaying and the
continuously forced cases. With large-scale forcing this ``kicked'' Burgers
turbulence presents many of the regimes proposed by E, Khanin, Mazel and Sinai
(1997) for the case of random white-in-time forcing. It is also amenable to
efficient numerical simulations in the inviscid limit, using a modification of
the Fast Legendre Transform method developed for decaying Burgers turbulence by
Noullez and Vergassola (1994). For the kicked case, concepts such as
``minimizers'' and ``main shock'', which play crucial roles in recent
developments for forced Burgers turbulence, become elementary since everything
can be constructed from simple two-dimensional area-preserving Euler--Lagrange
maps.
One key result is for the case of identical deterministic kicks which are
periodic and analytic in space and are applied periodically in time: the
probability densities of large negative velocity gradients and of
(not-too-large) negative velocity increments follow the power law with -7/2
exponent proposed by E {\it et al}. (1997) in the inviscid limit, whose
existence is still controversial in the case of white-in-time forcing. (More in
the full-length abstract at the beginning of the paper.)Comment: LATEX 30 pages, 11 figures, J. Fluid Mech, in pres
Lagrangian and Eulerian velocity structure functions in hydrodynamic turbulence
The Lagrangian and Eulerian transversal velocity structure functions of fully
developed fluid turbulence are found basing on the Navier-Stokes equation. The
structure functions are shown to obey the scaling relations inside the inertial
range. The scaling exponents are calculated analytically without using
dimensional considerations. The obtained values are in a very good agreement
with recent numerical and experimental data.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
On the third order structure function for rotating 3D homogeneous turbulent flow
A form for the two-point third order structure function has been calculated
for three dimensional homogeneous incompressible slowly rotating turbulent
fluid. It has been argued that it may possibly hint at the initiation of the
phenomenon of two-dimensionalisation of the 3D incompressible turbulence owing
to rotation.Comment: This revised version corrects some serious flaws in the discussions
after the equation (2) and the equation (13) of the earlier version. Some
typos are also correcte
Kinetic step bunching during surface growth
We study the step bunching kinetic instability in a growing crystal surface
characterized by anisotropic diffusion. The instability is due to the interplay
between the elastic interactions and the alternation of step parameters. This
instability is predicted to occur on a vicinal semiconductor surface Si(001) or
Ge(001) during epitaxial growth. The maximal growth rate of the step bunching
increases like , where is the deposition flux. Our results are
complemented with numerical simulations which reveals a coarsening behavior on
the long time for the nonlinear step dynamics.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, submitted to PR
Stiff polymer in monomer ensemble
We make use of the previously developed formalism for a monomer ensemble and
include angular dependence of the segments of the polymer chains thus
described. In particular we show how to deal with stiffness when the polymer
chain is confined to certain regions. We investigate the stiffness from the
perspectives of a differential equation, integral equations, or recursive
relations for both continuum and lattice models. Exact analytical solutions are
presented for two cases, whereas numerical results are shown for a third case.Comment: 10 pages, including 6 figure
Effect of step stiffness and diffusion anisotropy on the meandering of a growing vicinal surface
We study the step meandering instability on a surface characterized by the
alternation of terraces with different properties, as in the case of Si(001).
The interplay between diffusion anisotropy and step stiffness induces a finite
wavelength instability corresponding to a meandering mode. The instability sets
in beyond a threshold value which depends on the relative magnitudes of the
destabilizing flux and the stabilizing stiffness difference. The meander
dynamics is governed by the conserved Kuramoto-Sivashinsky equation, which
display spatiotemporal coarsening.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett. (February 2006
Thermodynamic ground states of platinum metal nitrides
The thermodynamic stabilities of various phases of the nitrides of the
platinum metal elements are systematically studied using density functional
theory. It is shown that for the nitrides of Rh, Pd, Ir and Pt two new crystal
structures, in which the metal ions occupy simple tetragonal lattice sites,
have lower formation enthalpies at ambient conditions than any previously
proposed structures. The region of stability with respect to those structures
extends to 17 GPa for PtN2. Calculations show that the PtN2 simple tetragonal
structures at this pressure are thermodynamically stable also with respect to
phase separation. The fact that the local density and generalized gradient
approximations predict different values of the absolute formation enthalpies as
well different relative stabilities between simple tetragonal and the pyrite or
marcasite structures are further discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
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