11,672 research outputs found
On the Large Time Behavior of Solutions of Hamilton-Jacobi Equations Associated with Nonlinear Boundary Conditions
In this article, we study the large time behavior of solutions of first-order
Hamilton-Jacobi Equations, set in a bounded domain with nonlinear Neumann
boundary conditions, including the case of dynamical boundary conditions. We
establish general convergence results for viscosity solutions of these
Cauchy-Neumann problems by using two fairly different methods : the first one
relies only on partial differential equations methods, which provides results
even when the Hamiltonians are not convex, and the second one is an optimal
control/dynamical system approach, named the "weak KAM approach" which requires
the convexity of Hamiltonians and gives formulas for asymptotic solutions based
on Aubry-Mather sets
Time-Dependent Variational Approach to the Non-Abelian Pure Gauge Theory
The time-dependent variational approach to the pure Yang-Mills gauge theory,
especially a color su(3) gauge theory, is formulated in the functional
Schroedinger picture with a Gaussian wave functional approximation. The
equations of motion for the quantum gauge fields are formulated in the
Liouville-von Neumann form. This variational approach is applied in order to
derive the transport coefficients, such as the shear viscosity, for the pure
gluonic matter by using the linear response theory. As a result, the
contribution to the shear viscosity from the quantum gluons is zero up to the
lowest order of the coupling g in the quantum gluonic matter.Comment: 19 pages, no figures, using PTPTeX.cl
user's guide to viscosity solutions of second order partial differential equations
The notion of viscosity solutions of scalar fully nonlinear partial
differential equations of second order provides a framework in which startling
comparison and uniqueness theorems, existence theorems, and theorems about
continuous dependence may now be proved by very efficient and striking
arguments. The range of important applications of these results is enormous.
This article is a self-contained exposition of the basic theory of viscosity
solutions.Comment: 67 page
Optimal control of the propagation of a graph in inhomogeneous media
We study an optimal control problem for viscosity solutions of a HamiltonâJacobi equation describing the propagation of a one-dimensional graph with the control being the speed function. The existence of an optimal control is proved together with an approximate controllability result in the -norm. We prove convergence of a discrete optimal control problem based on a monotone finite difference scheme and describe some numerical results
An approximation scheme for an Eikonal Equation with discontinuous coefficient
We consider the stationary Hamilton-Jacobi equation where the dynamics can
vanish at some points, the cost function is strictly positive and is allowed to
be discontinuous. More precisely, we consider special class of discontinuities
for which the notion of viscosity solution is well-suited. We propose a
semi-Lagrangian scheme for the numerical approximation of the viscosity
solution in the sense of Ishii and we study its properties. We also prove an
a-priori error estimate for the scheme in an integral norm. The last section
contains some applications to control and image processing problems
Baryon form factors in a diquark-quark bound state description
Nucleon form factors are calculated in a relativistic diquark--quark picture
based on the Nambu--Jona-Lasinio model. The nucleon wave function is obtained
in a static approximation to the quark exchange interaction between the valence
quark and the diquark. We evaluate the valence quark and --diquark
contribution to the nucleon electromagnetic and weak currents. We find
reasonable electric charge radii, magnetic moments as in the additive diquark
model, and . We discuss the dependence on the model parameters.Comment: 10 pages, latex, 1 postscript figure included (uuencoded
Nuclear Force from Monte Carlo Simulations of Lattice Quantum Chromodynamics
The nuclear force acting between protons and neutrons is studied in the Monte
Carlo simulations of the fundamental theory of the strong interaction, the
quantum chromodynamics defined on the hypercubic space-time lattice. After a
brief summary of the empirical nucleon-nucleon (NN) potentials which can fit
the NN scattering experiments in high precision, we outline the basic
formulation to derive the potential between the extended objects such as the
nucleons composed of quarks. The equal-time Bethe-Salpeter amplitude is a key
ingredient for defining the NN potential on the lattice. We show the results of
the numerical simulations on a lattice with the lattice spacing fm (lattice volume (4.4 fm)) in the quenched approximation.
The calculation was carried out using the massively parallel computer Blue
Gene/L at KEK. We found that the calculated NN potential at low energy has
basic features expected from the empirical NN potentials; attraction at long
and medium distances and the repulsive core at short distance. Various future
directions along this line of research are also summarized.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, version accepted for publication in
"Computational Science & Discovery" (IOP
Electron Depletion Due to Bias of a T-Shaped Field-Effect Transistor
A T-shaped field-effect transistor, made out of a pair of two-dimensional
electron gases, is modeled and studied. A simple numerical model is developed
to study the electron distribution vs. applied gate voltage for different gate
lengths. The model is then improved to account for depletion and the width of
the two-dimensional electron gases. The results are then compared to the
experimental ones and to some approximate analytical calculations and are found
to be in good agreement with them.Comment: 16 pages, LaTex (RevTex), 8 fig
Convergence of nonlocal threshold dynamics approximations to front propagation
In this note we prove that appropriately scaled threshold dynamics-type
algorithms corresponding to the fractional Laplacian of order converge to moving fronts. When the resulting interface
moves by weighted mean curvature, while for the normal velocity is
nonlocal of ``fractional-type.'' The results easily extend to general nonlocal
anisotropic threshold dynamics schemes.Comment: 19 page
High-energy magnetic excitations in overdoped LaSrCuO studied by neutron and resonant inelastic X-ray scattering
We have performed neutron inelastic scattering and resonant inelastic X-ray
scattering (RIXS) at the Cu- edge to study high-energy magnetic
excitations at energy transfers of more than 100 meV for overdoped
LaSrCuO with ( K) and
(non-superconducting) using identical single crystal samples for the two
techniques. From constant-energy slices of neutron scattering cross-sections,
we have identified magnetic excitations up to ~250 meV for . Although
the width in the momentum direction is large, the peak positions along the (pi,
pi) direction agree with the dispersion relation of the spin-wave in the
non-doped LaCuO (LCO), which is consistent with the previous RIXS
results of cuprate superconductors. Using RIXS at the Cu- edge, we have
measured the dispersion relations of the so-called paramagnon mode along both
(pi, pi) and (pi, 0) directions. Although in both directions the neutron and
RIXS data connect with each other and the paramagnon along (pi, 0) agrees well
with the LCO spin-wave dispersion, the paramagnon in the (pi, pi) direction
probed by RIXS appears to be less dispersive and the excitation energy is lower
than the spin-wave of LCO near (pi/2, pi/2). Thus, our results indicate
consistency between neutron inelastic scattering and RIXS, and elucidate the
entire magnetic excitation in the (pi, pi) direction by the complementary use
of two probes. The polarization dependence of the RIXS profiles indicates that
appreciable charge excitations exist in the same energy range of magnetic
excitations, reflecting the itinerant character of the overdoped sample. A
possible anisotropy in the charge excitation intensity might explain the
apparent differences in the paramagnon dispersion in the (pi, pi) direction as
detected by the X-ray scattering.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
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