10,892 research outputs found
The Numerical Simulation of Radiative Shocks I: The elimination of numerical shock instabilities using a localized oscillation filter
We address a numerical instability that arises in the directionally split
computation of hydrodynamic flows when shock fronts are parallel to a grid
plane. Transverse oscillations in pressure, density and temperature are
produced that are exacerbated by thermal instability when cooling is present,
forming post--shock `stripes'. These are orthogonal to the classic post--shock
'ringing' fluctuations. The resulting post--shock `striping' substantially
modifies the flow. We discuss three different methods to resolve this problem.
These include (1) a method based on artificial viscosity; (2) grid--jittering
and (3) a new localized oscillation filter that acts on specific grid cells in
the shock front. These methods are tested using a radiative wall shock problem
with an embedded shear layer. The artificial viscosity method is unsatisfactory
since, while it does reduce post--shock ringing, it does not eliminate the
stripes and the excessive shock broadening renders the calculation of cooling
inaccurate, resulting in an incorrect shock location. Grid--jittering
effectively counteracts striping. However, elsewhere on the grid, the shear
layer is unphysically diffused and this is highlighted in an extreme case. The
oscillation filter method removes stripes and permits other high velocity
gradient regions of the flow to evolve in a physically acceptable manner. It
also has the advantage of only acting on a small fraction of the cells in a two
or three dimensional simulation and does not significantly impair performance.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures, revised version submitted to ApJ Supplement
Serie
Atlas 5013 tank corrosion test
The type and cause of corrosion in spot welded joints were determined by X-ray and chemical analysis. Fatigue and static tests showed the degree of degradation of mechanical properties. The corrosion inhibiting effectiveness of WD-40 compound and required renewal period by exposing typical joint specimens were examined
Some Properties of the Calogero-Sutherland Model with Reflections
We prove that the Calogero-Sutherland Model with reflections (the BC_N model)
possesses a property of duality relating the eigenfunctions of two Hamiltonians
with different coupling constants. We obtain a generating function for their
polynomial eigenfunctions, the generalized Jacobi polynomials. The symmetry of
the wave-functions for certain particular cases (associated to the root systems
of the classical Lie groups B_N, C_N and D_N) is also discussed.Comment: 16 pages, harvmac.te
Exact calculation of the ground-state dynamical spin correlation function of a S=1/2 antiferromagnetic Heisenberg chain with free spinons
We calculate the exact dynamical magnetic structure factor S(Q,E) in the
ground state of a one-dimensional S=1/2 antiferromagnet with gapless free S=1/2
spinon excitations, the Haldane-Shastry model with inverse-square exchange,
which is in the same low-energy universality class as Bethe's nearest-neighbor
exchange model. Only two-spinon excited states contribute, and S(Q,E) is found
to be a very simple integral over these states.Comment: 11 pages, LaTeX, RevTeX 3.0, cond-mat/930903
Asymmetry in the Outburst of SN 1987A Detected Using Light Echo Spectroscopy
We report direct evidence for asymmetry in the early phases of SN 1987A via
optical spectroscopy of five fields of its light echo system. The light echoes
allow the first few hundred days of the explosion to be reobserved, with
different position angles providing different viewing angles to the supernova.
Light echo spectroscopy therefore allows a direct spectroscopic comparison of
light originating from different regions of the photosphere during the early
phases of SN 1987A. Gemini multi-object spectroscopy of the light echo fields
shows fine-structure in the H-alpha line as a smooth function of position angle
on the near-circular light echo rings. H-alpha profiles originating from the
northern hemisphere of SN 1987A show an excess in redshifted emission and a
blue knee, while southern hemisphere profiles show an excess of blueshifted
H-alpha emission and a red knee. This fine-structure is reminiscent of the
"Bochum event" originally observed for SN 1987A, but in an exaggerated form.
Maximum deviation from symmetry in the H-alpha line is observed at position
angles 16 and 186 degrees, consistent with the major-axis of the expanding
elongated ejecta. The asymmetry signature observed in the H-alpha line smoothly
diminishes as a function of viewing angle away from the poles of the elongated
ejecta. We propose an asymmetric two-sided distribution of 56Ni most dominant
in the southern far quadrant of SN 1987A as the most probable explanation of
the observed light echo spectra. This is evidence that the asymmetry of
high-velocity 56Ni in the first few hundred days after explosion is correlated
to the geometry of the ejecta some 25 years later.Comment: 15 pages, 24 figures. Accepted to ApJ (with 2 additional figures
From arbitrariness to ambiguities in the evaluation of perturbative physical amplitudes and their symmetry relations
A very general calculational strategy is applied to the evaluation of the
divergent physical amplitudes which are typical of perturbative calculations.
With this approach in the final results all the intrinsic arbitrariness of the
calculations due to the divergent character is still present. We show that by
using the symmetry properties as a guide to search for the (compulsory) choices
in such a way as to avoid ambiguities, a deep and clear understanding of the
role of regularization methods emerges. Requiring then an universal point of
view for the problem, as allowed by our approach, very interesting conclusions
can be stated about the possible justifications of most intriguing aspect of
the perturbative calculations in quantum field theory: the triangle anomalies.Comment: 16 pages, no figure
Self-similarity and novel sample-length-dependence of conductance in quasiperiodic lateral magnetic superlattices
We study the transport of electrons in a Fibonacci magnetic superlattice
produced on a two-dimensional electron gas modulated by parallel magnetic field
stripes arranged in a Fibonacci sequence. Both the transmission coefficient and
conductance exhibit self-similarity and the six-circle property. The presence
of extended states yields a finite conductivity at infinite length, that may be
detected as an abrupt change in the conductance as the Fermi energy is varied,
much as a metal-insulator transition. This is a unique feature of transport in
this new kind of structure, arising from its inherent two-dimensional nature.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, revtex, important revisions made. to be published
in Phys. Rev.
Gamma-ray transfer and energy deposition in supernovae
Solutions to the energy-independent (gray) radiative transfer equations are compared to results of Monte Carlo simulations of the \Ni\ and \Co\ radioactive decay \GR\ energy deposition in supernovae. The comparison shows that an effective, purely absorptive, gray opacity, \KG\ \sim (0.06 \pm 0.01)Y_e cm^2 g^{-1}, where Y_e is the total number of electrons per baryon, accurately describes the interaction of \GRs\ with the cool supernova gas and the local \GR\ energy deposition within the gas. The nature of the \GR\ interaction process (dominated by Compton scattering in the relativistic regime) creates a weak dependence of \KG\ on the optical thickness of the (spherically symmetric) supernova atmosphere: The maximum value of \KG\ applies during optically thick conditions when individual \GRs\ undergo multiple scattering encounters and the lower bound is reached at the phase characterized by a total Thomson optical depth to the center of the atmosphere \te\ \LA\ 1. Our results quantitatively confirm that the quick and efficient solution to the gray transfer problem provides an accurate representation of \GR\ energy deposition for a broad range of supernova conditions
Exact Dynamical Correlation Functions of Calogero-Sutherland Model and One-Dimensional Fractional Statistics
One-dimensional model of non-relativistic particles with inverse-square
interaction potential known as Calogero-Sutherland Model (CSM) is shown to
possess fractional statistics. Using the theory of Jack symmetric polynomial
the exact dynamical density-density correlation function and the one-particle
Green's function (hole propagator) at any rational interaction coupling
constant are obtained and used to show clear evidences of the
fractional statistics. Motifs representing the eigenstates of the model are
also constructed and used to reveal the fractional {\it exclusion} statistics
(in the sense of Haldane's ``Generalized Pauli Exclusion Principle''). This
model is also endowed with a natural {\it exchange } statistics (1D analog of
2D braiding statistics) compatible with the {\it exclusion} statistics.
(Submitted to PRL on April 18, 1994)Comment: Revtex 11 pages, IASSNS-HEP-94/27 (April 18, 1994
Novel correlations in two dimensions: Some exact solutions
We construct a new many-body Hamiltonian with two- and three-body
interactions in two space dimensions and obtain its exact many-body ground
state for an arbitrary number of particles. This ground state has a novel
pairwise correlation. A class of exact solutions for the excited states is also
found. These excited states display an energy spectrum similar to the
Calogero-Sutherland model in one dimension. The model reduces to an analog of
the well-known trigonometric Sutherland model when projected on to a circular
ring.Comment: 8 pages, REVTE
- …
