645 research outputs found
Equilibrium statistical mechanics for single waves and wave spectra in Langmuir wave-particle interaction
Under the conditions of weak Langmuir turbulence, a self-consistent
wave-particle Hamiltonian models the effective nonlinear interaction of a
spectrum of M waves with N resonant out-of-equilibrium tail electrons. In order
to address its intrinsically nonlinear time-asymptotic behavior, a Monte Carlo
code was built to estimate its equilibrium statistical mechanics in both the
canonical and microcanonical ensembles. First the single wave model is
considered in the cold beam/plasma instability and in the O'Neil setting for
nonlinear Landau damping. O'Neil's threshold, that separates nonzero
time-asymptotic wave amplitude states from zero ones, is associated to a second
order phase transition. These two studies provide both a testbed for the Monte
Carlo canonical and microcanonical codes, with the comparison with exact
canonical results, and an opportunity to propose quantitative results to
longstanding issues in basic nonlinear plasma physics. Then the properly
speaking weak turbulence framework is considered through the case of a large
spectrum of waves. Focusing on the small coupling limit, as a benchmark for the
statistical mechanics of weak Langmuir turbulence, it is shown that Monte Carlo
microcanonical results fully agree with an exact microcanonical derivation. The
wave spectrum is predicted to collapse towards small wavelengths together with
the escape of initially resonant particles towards low bulk plasma thermal
speeds. This study reveals the fundamental discrepancy between the long-time
dynamics of single waves, that can support finite amplitude steady states, and
of wave spectra, that cannot.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, to appear in Physics of Plasma
SCINTILLA A European project for the development of scintillation detectors and new technologies for nuclear security
Europe monitors transits using radiation detectors to prevent illicit
trafficking of nuclear materials. The SCINTILLA project aims to develop a
toolbox of innovative technologies designed to address different usage cases.
This article will review the scope, approach, results of the first benchmark
campaign and future plans of the SCINTILLA project.Comment: To appear on the Proceedings of the 13th ICATPP Conference on
Astroparticle, Particle, Space Physics and Detectors for Physics
Applications, Villa Olmo (Como, Italy), 23--27 October, 2013, to be published
by World Scientific (Singapore
Decomposicao da evolucao da desigualdade de renda no Brasil em efeitos idade, periodo e coorte / Explaining income inequality in Brazil: age, period and cohort effects
A partir dos microdados da Pesquisa Nacional por Amostra de Domicílios (PNAD), este trabalho tem como objetivo contribuir para o entendimento da evolução da desigualdade de renda no Brasil, de 1981 a 2001, ao identificar, sob algumas hipóteses, os efeitos idade, período e coorte. O método de identificação utilizado, proposto por Deaton e Paxson (1994), permitiu estimar esses efeitos para indicadores de desigualdade Theil-T com base na renda familiar de todas as fontes e na renda familiar do trabalho principal para a amostra total dos chefes de família e por grupo de escolaridade.
Os principais resultados encontrados mostram que: a) a desigualdade de renda aumenta para as gerações mais novas, sendo esse aumento mais acentuado para a medida de renda do trabalho principal; b) o efeito coorte não é significativo para famílias com chefes de mesma escolaridade, o que sugere que o crescimento da desigualdade de renda para as gerações mais novas possa refletir um aumento da escolaridade das gerações mais novas em relação às antigas; c) a desigualdade de rendimentos do trabalho principal cresce acentuadamente com a idade, sobretudo para os grupos de maior escolaridade, o que é compatível com implicações da teoria do capital humano; d) a desigualdade de renda de todas as fontes tende a se reduzir após uma certa idade para os grupos de menor escolaridade; e e) há um efeito período significativo de aumento da desigualdade de renda observado em 1989 e 1993, períodos de aguda aceleração inflacionária. /
Using Brazilian household survey data, this paper aims to contribute for a better understanding of the income inequality evolution from 1981 to 2001. This is done by decomposing the time evolution of the income inequality among Brazilian households into age, time and cohort effects. Identification of these effects follows as an application of the method proposed by Deaton and Paxson (1994) to a series of Theil-T inequality indexes of overall family income and earnings for the whole sample of household heads, as well as for schooling groups.
The main results are: a) income and, more pronouncedly, earnings, are more unevenly distributed among families belonging to the youngest generations; b) the cohort effect is not important among families whose heads have similar levels of schooling, which suggests that the rise in inequality among younger cohorts is a result of the increase in schooling levels along the last decades; c) large positive age effects are present, especially for groups with higher schooling levels; d) income inequality tends to decrease after a certain age for groups with low education; and e) peaks in income inequality were observed in 1989 and 1993, probably due to sharp increases in inflation
High velocity blue-shifted FeII absorption in the dwarf star-forming galaxy PHL293B: Evidence for a wind driven supershell?
X-shooter and ISIS WHT spectra of the starforming galaxy PHL 293B also known
as A2228-00 and SDSS J223036.79-000636.9 are presented in this paper.
We find broad (FWHM = 1000km/s) and very broad (FWZI = 4000km/s) components
in the Balmer lines, narrow absorption components in the Balmer series
blueshifted by 800km/s, previously undetected FeII multiplet (42) absorptions
also blueshifted by 800km/s, IR CaII triplet stellar absorptions consistent
with [Fe/H] < -2.0 and no broad components or blushifted absorptions in the HeI
lines. Based on historical records, we found no optical variability at the 5
sigma level of 0.02 mag between 2005 and 2013 and no optical variability at the
level of 0.1mag for the past 24 years.
The lack of variability rules out transient phenomena like luminous blue
variables or SN IIn as the origin of the blue shifted absorptions of HI and
FeII. The evidence points to either a young and dense expanding supershell or a
stationary cooling wind, in both cases driven by the young cluster wind.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; 15 pages, 10 figure
Phase transition in the collisionless regime for wave-particle interaction
Gibbs statistical mechanics is derived for the Hamiltonian system coupling
self-consistently a wave to N particles. This identifies Landau damping with a
regime where a second order phase transition occurs. For nonequilibrium initial
data with warm particles, a critical initial wave intensity is found: above it,
thermodynamics predicts a finite wave amplitude in the limit of infinite N;
below it, the equilibrium amplitude vanishes. Simulations support these
predictions providing new insight on the long-time nonlinear fate of the wave
due to Landau damping in plasmas.Comment: 12 pages (RevTeX), 2 figures (PostScript
Linear theory and violent relaxation in long-range systems: a test case
In this article, several aspects of the dynamics of a toy model for longrange
Hamiltonian systems are tackled focusing on linearly unstable unmagnetized
(i.e. force-free) cold equilibria states of the Hamiltonian Mean Field (HMF).
For special cases, exact finite-N linear growth rates have been exhibited,
including, in some spatially inhomogeneous case, finite-N corrections. A random
matrix approach is then proposed to estimate the finite-N growth rate for some
random initial states. Within the continuous, , approach,
the growth rates are finally derived without restricting to spatially
homogeneous cases. All the numerical simulations show a very good agreement
with the different theoretical predictions. Then, these linear results are used
to discuss the large-time nonlinear evolution. A simple criterion is proposed
to measure the ability of the system to undergo a violent relaxation that
transports it in the vicinity of the equilibrium state within some linear
e-folding times
Scaling laws for the largest Lyapunov exponent in long-range systems: A random matrix approach
We investigate the laws that rule the behavior of the largest Lyapunov
exponent (LLE) in many particle systems with long range interactions. We
consider as a representative system the so-called Hamiltonian alpha-XY model
where the adjustable parameter alpha controls the range of the interactions of
N ferromagnetic spins in a lattice of dimension d. In previous work the
dependence of the LLE with the system size N, for sufficiently high energies,
was established through numerical simulations. In the thermodynamic limit, the
LLE becomes constant for alpha greater than d whereas it decays as an inverse
power law of N for alpha smaller than d. A recent theoretical calculation based
on Pettini's geometrization of the dynamics is consistent with these numerical
results (M.-C. Firpo and S. Ruffo, cond-mat/0108158). Here we show that the
scaling behavior can also be explained by a random matrix approach, in which
the tangent mappings that define the Lyapunov exponents are modeled by random
simplectic matrices drawn from a suitable ensemble.Comment: 5 pages, no figure
A Two-Step Approach to Tune the Micro and Nanoscale Morphology of Porous Niobium Oxide to Promote Osteointegration
We present a two-step surface modification process to tailor the micro and nano morphology of niobium oxide layers. Niobium was firstly anodized in spark regime in a Ca-and P-containing solution and subsequently treated by acid etching. The effects of anodizing time and applied potential on the surface morphology is investigated with SEM and AFM, complemented by XPS compositional analysis. Anodizing with a limiting potential of 250 V results in the fast growth of oxide layers with a homogeneous distribution of micro-sized pores. Cracks are, however, observed on 250 V grown layers. Limiting the anodizing potential to 200 V slows down the oxide growth, increasing the anodizing time needed to achieve a uniform pore coverage but produces fracture-free oxide layers. The surface nano morphology is further tuned by a subsequent acid etching process that leads to the formation of nano-sized pits on the anodically grown oxide surface. In vitro tests show that the etching-induced nanostructure effectively promotes cell adhesion and spreading onto the niobium oxide surface
Direct path from microscopic mechanics to Debye shielding, Landau damping, and wave-particle interaction
The derivation of Debye shielding and Landau damping from the -body
description of plasmas is performed directly by using Newton's second law for
the -body system. This is done in a few steps with elementary calculations
using standard tools of calculus, and no probabilistic setting. Unexpectedly,
Debye shielding is encountered together with Landau damping. This approach is
shown to be justified in the one-dimensional case when the number of particles
in a Debye sphere becomes large. The theory is extended to accommodate a
correct description of trapping and chaos due to Langmuir waves. Shielding and
collisional transport are found to be two related aspects of the repulsive
deflections of electrons, in such a way that each particle is shielded by all
other ones while keeping in uninterrupted motion.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1310.3096,
arXiv:1210.154
Topological origin of the phase transition in a mean-field model
We argue that the phase transition in the mean-field XY model is related to a
particular change in the topology of its configuration space. The nature of
this topological transition can be discussed on the basis of elementary Morse
theory using the potential energy per particle V as a Morse function. The value
of V where such a topological transition occurs equals the thermodynamic value
of V at the phase transition and the number of (Morse) critical points grows
very fast with the number of particles N. Furthermore, as in statistical
mechanics, also in topology the way the thermodynamic limit is taken is
crucial.Comment: REVTeX, 5 pages, with 1 eps figure included. Some changes in the
text. To appear in Physical Review Letter
- …