25,312 research outputs found

    Geometrically nonlinear static and dynamic analysis of arbitrarily loaded shells of revolution

    Get PDF
    Computer program on axisymmetric response of shells with other meridional geometries and response of shells subjected to asymmetric loads is described. Description of theory, method of solution, instructions for preparing input data, and two sample problems to illustrate data preparation and output format are included

    The Regularization of the Fermion Determinant in Chiral Quark Models

    Full text link
    The momentum dependence of the quark self energy gives a physically motivated and consistent regularization of both the real and imaginary parts of the quark loop contribution to the meson action. We show that the amplitudes for anomalous processes are always reproduced correctly.Comment: 12/8 pages (b/l), plain TeX with harvmac, SphT93/13

    Mode-matching analysis of a shielded rectangular dielectric-rod waveguide

    Get PDF
    Rectangular cross-section dielectric waveguides are widely used at millimeter wavelengths. In addition, shielded dielectric resonators having a square cross-section are often used as filter elements, however there is almost no information available on the effect of the shield. Rectangular or square dielectric waveguide is notoriously difficult to analyze, because of the singular behaviour of the fields at the corners. Most published analyses are for materials with a low dielectric constant, and do not include the effects of a shield. This paper describes a numerically efficient mode matching method for the analysis of shielded dielectric rod waveguide, which is applicable to both low and high dielectric constant materials. The effect of the shield on the propagation behaviour is studied. The shield dimensions may be selected such that the shield has a negligible effect, so that results can be compared with free space data. The results are verified by comparison with several sets of published data, and have been confirmed by measurement for a nominal 'e' r of 37.4

    Incompatible sets of gradients and metastability

    Full text link
    We give a mathematical analysis of a concept of metastability induced by incompatibility. The physical setting is a single parent phase, just about to undergo transformation to a product phase of lower energy density. Under certain conditions of incompatibility of the energy wells of this energy density, we show that the parent phase is metastable in a strong sense, namely it is a local minimizer of the free energy in an L1L^1 neighbourhood of its deformation. The reason behind this result is that, due to the incompatibility of the energy wells, a small nucleus of the product phase is necessarily accompanied by a stressed transition layer whose energetic cost exceeds the energy lowering capacity of the nucleus. We define and characterize incompatible sets of matrices, in terms of which the transition layer estimate at the heart of the proof of metastability is expressed. Finally we discuss connections with experiment and place this concept of metastability in the wider context of recent theoretical and experimental research on metastability and hysteresis.Comment: Archive for Rational Mechanics and Analysis, to appea

    Parametrizing the time-variation of the "surface term" of stellar p-mode frequencies: application to helioseismic data

    Get PDF
    The solar-cyle variation of acoustic mode frequencies has a frequency dependence related to the inverse mode inertia. The discrepancy between model predictions and measured oscillation frequencies for solar and solar-type stellar acoustic modes includes a significant frequency-dependent term known as the surface term that is also related to the inverse mode inertia. We parametrize both the surface term and the frequency variations for low-degree solar data from Birmingham Solar-Oscillations Network (BiSON) and medium-degree data from the Global Oscillations Network Group (GONG) using the mode inertia together with cubic and inverse frequency terms. We find that for the central frequency of rotationally split multiplets the cubic term dominates both the average surface term and the temporal variation, but for the medium-degree case the inverse term improves the fit to the temporal variation. We also examine the variation of the even-order splitting coefficients for the medium-degree data and find that, as for the central frequency, the latitude-dependent frequency variation, which reflects the changing latitudinal distribution of magnetic activity over the solar cycle, can be described by the combination of a cubic and an inverse function of frequency scaled by inverse mode inertia. The results suggest that this simple parametrization could be used to assess the activity-related frequency variation in solar-like asteroseismic targets.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures. Accepted by MNRAS 13 October 201

    Pore-blockade Times for Field-Driven Polymer Translocation

    Get PDF
    We study pore blockade times for a translocating polymer of length NN, driven by a field EE across the pore in three dimensions. The polymer performs Rouse dynamics, i.e., we consider polymer dynamics in the absence of hydrodynamical interactions. We find that the typical time the pore remains blocked during a translocation event scales as N(1+2ν)/(1+ν)/E\sim N^{(1+2\nu)/(1+\nu)}/E, where ν0.588\nu\simeq0.588 is the Flory exponent for the polymer. In line with our previous work, we show that this scaling behaviour stems from the polymer dynamics at the immediate vicinity of the pore -- in particular, the memory effects in the polymer chain tension imbalance across the pore. This result, along with the numerical results by several other groups, violates the lower bound N1+ν/E\sim N^{1+\nu}/E suggested earlier in the literature. We discuss why this lower bound is incorrect and show, based on conservation of energy, that the correct lower bound for the pore-blockade time for field-driven translocation is given by ηN2ν/E\eta N^{2\nu}/E, where η\eta is the viscosity of the medium surrounding the polymer.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, slightly shorter than the previous version; to appear in J. Phys.: Cond. Ma
    corecore