416 research outputs found
Spectral responses in granular compaction
The slow compaction of a gently tapped granular packing is reminiscent of the
low-temperature dynamics of structural and spin glasses. Here, I probe the
dynamical spectrum of granular compaction by measuring a complex
(frequency-dependent) volumetric susceptibility . While the
packing density displays glass-like slow relaxations (aging) and
history-dependence (memory) at low tapping amplitudes, the susceptibility
displays very weak aging effects, and its spectrum shows no
sign of a rapidly growing timescale. These features place in
sharp contrast to its dielectric and magnetic counterparts in structural and
spin glasses; instead, bears close similarities to the complex
specific heat of spin glasses. This, I suggest, indicates the glass-like
dynamics in granular compaction are governed by statistically rare relaxation
processes that become increasingly separated in timescale from the typical
relaxations of the system. Finally, I examine the effect of finite system size
on the spectrum of compaction dynamics. Starting from the ansatz that low
frequency processes correspond to large scale particle rearrangements, I
suggest the observed finite size effects are consistent with the suppression of
large-scale collective rearrangements in small systems.Comment: 18 pages, 17 figures. Submitted to PR
Structural Order in Glassy Water
We investigate structural order in glassy water by performing classical
molecular dynamics simulations using the extended simple point charge (SPC/E)
model of water. We perform isochoric cooling simulations across the glass
transition temperature at different cooling rates and densities. We quantify
structural order by orientational and translational order metrics. Upon cooling
the liquid into the glassy state, both the orientational order parameter
and translational order parameter increase. At T=0 K, the glasses fall
on a line in the - plane or {\it order map}.
The position of this line depends only on density and coincides with the
location in the order map of the inherent structures (IS) sampled upon cooling.
We evaluate the energy of the IS, , and find that both order
parameters for the IS are proportional to . We also study the
structural order during the transformation of low-density amorphous ice (LDA)
to high-density amorphous ice (HDA) upon isothermal compression and are able to
identify distinct regions in the order map corresponding to these glasses.
Comparison of the order parameters for LDA and HDA with those obtained upon
isochoric cooling indicates major structural differences between glasses
obtained by cooling and glasses obtained by compression. These structural
differences are only weakly reflected in the pair correlation function. We also
characterize the evolution of structural order upon isobaric annealing, leading
at high pressure to very-high density amorphous ice (VHDA).Comment: submitte
Density of States for a Specified Correlation Function and the Energy Landscape
The degeneracy of two-phase disordered microstructures consistent with a
specified correlation function is analyzed by mapping it to a ground-state
degeneracy. We determine for the first time the associated density of states
via a Monte Carlo algorithm. Our results are described in terms of the
roughness of the energy landscape, defined on a hypercubic configuration space.
The use of a Hamming distance in this space enables us to define a roughness
metric, which is calculated from the correlation function alone and related
quantitatively to the structural degeneracy. This relation is validated for a
wide variety of disordered systems.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter
Electronic and phononic properties of cinnabar: ab initio calculations and some experimental results
We report ab initio calculations of the electronic band structure, the
corresponding optical spectra, and the phonon dispersion relations of trigonal
alpha-HgS (cinnabar). The calculated dielectric functions are compared with
unpublished optical measurements by Zallen and coworkers. The phonon dispersion
relations are used to calculate the temperature and isotopic mass dependence of
the specific heat which has been compared with experimental data obtained on
samples with the natural isotope abundances of the elements Hg and S (natural
minerals and vapor phase grown samples) and on samples prepared from isotope
enriched elements by vapor phase transport. Comparison of the calculated
vibrational frequencies with Raman and ir data is also presented. Contrary to
the case of cubic beta-HgS (metacinnabar), the spin-orbit splitting of the top
valence bands at the Gamma-point of the Brillouin zone (Delta_0) is positive,
because of a smaller admixture of 5d core electrons of Hg. Calculations of the
lattice parameters, and the pressure dependence of Delta_0 and the
corresponding direct gap E_0~2eV are also presented. The lowest absorption edge
is confirmed to be indirect.Comment: 13 pages, 15 figure
Analytic solution of the fractional advection diffusion equation for the time-of-flight experiment in a finite geometry
A general analytic solution to the fractional advection diffusion equation is
obtained in plane parallel geometry. The result is an infinite series of
spatial Fourier modes which decay according to the Mittag-Leffler function,
which is cast into a simple closed form expression in Laplace space using the
Poisson summation theorem. An analytic expression for the current measured in a
time-of-flight experiment is derived, and the sum of the slopes of the two
respective time regimes on logarithmic axes is demonstrated to be -2, in
agreement with the well known result for a continuous time random walk model.
The sensitivity of current and particle number density to variation of
experimentally controlled parameters is investigated in general, and the
results applied to analyze selected experimental data.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Phase Transitions in a Two-Component Site-Bond Percolation Model
A method to treat a N-component percolation model as effective one component
model is presented by introducing a scaled control variable . In Monte
Carlo simulations on , , and simple cubic
lattices the percolation threshold in terms of is determined for N=2.
Phase transitions are reported in two limits for the bond existence
probabilities and . In the same limits, empirical formulas
for the percolation threshold as function of one
component-concentration, , are proposed. In the limit a new
site percolation threshold, , is reported.Comment: RevTeX, 5 pages, 5 eps-figure
Classical Spin Models with Broken Continuous Symmetry: Random Field Induced Order and Persistence of Spontaneous Magnetization
We consider a classical spin model, of two-dimensional spins, with continuous
symmetry, and investigate the effect of a symmetry breaking unidirectional
quenched disorder on the magnetization of the system. We work in the mean field
regime. We show, by numerical simulations and by perturbative calculations in
the low as well as in the high temperature limits, that although the continuous
symmetry of the magnetization is lost, the system still magnetizes, albeit with
a lower value as compared to the case without disorder. The critical
temperature at which the system starts magnetizing, also decreases with the
introduction of disorder. However, with the introduction of an additional
constant magnetic field, the component of magnetization in the direction that
is transverse to the disorder field increases with the introduction of the
quenched disorder. We discuss the same effects also for three-dimensional
spins.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures, RevTeX
Topologically disordered systems at the glass transition
The thermodynamic approach to the viscosity and fragility of amorphous oxides was used to determine the topological characteristics of the disordered network-forming systems. Instead of the disordered system of atoms we considered the congruent disordered system of interconnecting bonds. The Gibbs free energy of network-breaking defects (configurons) was found based on available viscosity data. Amorphous silica and germania were used as reference disordered systems for which we found an excellent agreement of calculated and measured glass transition temperatures. We reveal that the Hausdorff dimension of the system of bonds changes from Euclidian three-dimensional below to fractal 2.55 ± 0.05-dimensional geometry above the glass transition temperature
Regular packings on periodic lattices
We investigate the problem of packing identical hard objects on regular
lattices in d dimensions. Restricting configuration space to parallel alignment
of the objects, we study the densest packing at a given aspect ratio X. For
rectangles and ellipses on the square lattice as well as for biaxial ellipsoids
on a simple cubic lattice, we calculate the maximum packing fraction \phi_d(X).
It is proved to be continuous with an infinite number of singular points X^{\rm
min}_\nu, X^{\rm max}_\nu, \nu=0, \pm 1, \pm 2,... In two dimensions, all
maxima have the same height, whereas there is a unique global maximum for the
case of ellipsoids. The form of \phi_d(X) is discussed in the context of
geometrical frustration effects, transitions in the contact numbers and number
theoretical properties. Implications and generalizations for more general
packing problems are outlined.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Letter
Multi-Gap Superconductivity in MgB2: Magneto-Raman Spectroscopy
Electronic Raman scattering studies on MgB2 single crystals as a function of
excitation and polarization have revealed three distinct superconducting
features: a clean gap below 37 cm-1 and two coherence peaks at 109 cm-1 and 78
cm-1 which we identify as the superconducting gaps in \pi- and \sigma-bands and
as the Leggett's collective mode arising from the fluctuation in the relative
phase between two superconducting condensates residing on corresponding bands.
The temperature and field dependencies of the superconducting features have
been established. A phononic Raman scattering study of the E2g boron stretching
mode anharmonicity and of superconductivity induced self-energy effects is
presented. We show that anharmonic two phonon decay is mainly responsible for
the unusually large linewidth of the E2g mode. We observe ~2.5% hardening of
the E2g phonon frequency upon cooling into the superconducting state and
estimate the electron-phonon coupling strength associated with this
renormalization.Comment: Invited review in a special issue "Superconductivity in MgB_2:
Physics and Applications
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