2,480 research outputs found
Strong-coupling behaviour in discrete Kardar-Parisi-Zhang equations
We present a systematic discretization scheme for the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang
(KPZ) equation, which correctly captures the strong-coupling properties of the
continuum model. In particular we show that the scheme contains no finite-time
singularities in contrast to conventional schemes. The implications of these
results to i) previous numerical integration of the KPZ equation, and ii) the
non-trivial diversity of universality classes for discrete models of `KPZ-type'
are examined. The new scheme makes the strong-coupling physics of the KPZ
equation more transparent than the original continuum version and allows the
possibility of building new continuum models which may be easier to analyse in
the strong-coupling regime.Comment: 21 pages, revtex, 2 figures, submitted to J. Phys.
Asymptotic Capture-Number and Island-Size Distributions for One-Dimensional Irreversible Submonolayer Growth
Using a set of evolution equations [J.G. Amar {\it et al}, Phys. Rev. Lett.
{\bf 86}, 3092 (2001)] for the average gap-size between islands, we calculate
analytically the asymptotic scaled capture-number distribution (CND) for
one-dimensional irreversible submonolayer growth of point islands. The
predicted asymptotic CND is in reasonably good agreement with kinetic
Monte-Carlo (KMC) results and leads to a \textit{non-divergent asymptotic}
scaled island-size distribution (ISD). We then show that a slight modification
of our analytical form leads to an analytic expression for the asymptotic CND
and a resulting asymptotic ISD which are in excellent agreement with KMC
simulations. We also show that in the asymptotic limit the self-averaging
property of the capture zones holds exactly while the asymptotic scaled gap
distribution is equal to the scaled CND.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Observation of the Inverse Cotton-Mouton Effect
We report the observation of the Inverse Cotton-Mouton Effect (ICME) i.e. a
magnetization induced in a medium by non resonant linearly polarized light
propagating in the presence of a transverse magnetic field. We present a
detailed study of the ICME in a TGG crystal showing the dependence of the
measured effect on the light intensity, the optical polarization, and on the
external magnetic field. We derive a relation between the Cotton-Mouton and
Inverse Cotton-Mouton effects that is roughly in agreement with existing
experimental data. Our results open the way to applications of the ICME in
optical devices
A continuous non-linear shadowing model of columnar growth
We propose the first continuous model with long range screening (shadowing)
that described columnar growth in one space dimension, as observed in plasma
sputter deposition. It is based on a new continuous partial derivative equation
with non-linear diffusion and where the shadowing effects apply on all the
different processes.Comment: Fast Track Communicatio
Extending the scope of microscopic solvability: Combination of the Kruskal-Segur method with Zauderer decomposition
Successful applications of the Kruskal-Segur approach to interfacial pattern
formation have remained limited due to the necessity of an integral formulation
of the problem. This excludes nonlinear bulk equations, rendering convection
intractable. Combining the method with Zauderer's asymptotic decomposition
scheme, we are able to strongly extend its scope of applicability and solve
selection problems based on free boundary formulations in terms of partial
differential equations alone. To demonstrate the technique, we give the first
analytic solution of the problem of velocity selection for dendritic growth in
a forced potential flow.Comment: Submitted to Europhys. Letters, No figures, 5 page
Anomalous Dimension and Spatial Correlations in a Point-Island Model
We examine the island size distribution function and spatial correlation
function of a model for island growth in the submonolayer regime in both 1 and
2 dimensions. In our model the islands do not grow in shape, and a fixed number
of adatoms are added, nucleate, and are trapped at islands as they diffuse.
We study the cases of various critical island sizes for nucleation as a
function of initial coverage. We found anomalous scaling of the island size
distribution for large . Using scaling, random walk theory, a version of
mean-field theory we obtain a closed form for the spatial correlation function.
Our analytic results are verified by Monte Carlo simulations
Nested polymerase chain reaction for amplification of the Cryptosporidium oocyst wall protein gene.
We developed a sensitive nested polymerase chain reaction procedure for the Cryptosporidium oocyst wall protein (COWP) gene. Amplification and genotyping were successful in 95.2% of 1,680 fecal samples, 77.6% by the unnested and 17.6% by the nested COWP procedure. The COWP gene was amplified from 2,128 fecal samples: 71 from livestock animals and 2,057 from humans. This series included 706 cases from seven drinking water-associated outbreaks and 51 cases from five swimming pool-associated outbreaks, as well as 1,300 sporadic cases
Bleach method in comparison with NALC-NaOH specimen processing method for the detection of mycobacterium in sputum specimen
Background: Tuberculosis is an infectious disease still remains to be a foremost public health risk worldwide. Even though there is an availability of many highly sensitive diagnostic tools, early case detection plays a significant role in control of the disease which relies specially on the detection of acid-fast bacilli in clinical samples which is low sensitive. Earlier decontamination of sputum sample may improve the detection of mycobacterium.Methods: A prospective study was conducted with a total of (N=464) clinically suspected TB patient sputum samples which were collected and processed directly for AFB. From which AFB +ve samples were excluded. The direct AFB -ve (N=279) samples were processed using concentration methods (NALC, Bleach). After concentration, smears were examined under oil immersion for acid fast bacilli by ZN staining.Results: Out of 464 sputum samples, 185 direct ZN stain +ve were excluded. Among the ZN-ve (N=279) samples, n=44 (15.7%) were positive using bleach method. The positivity has improved to n=48 (17.2%) using NALC-NaOH.Conclusions: Bleach method of sputum decontamination is comparable to standard NALC-NaOH method. Therefore, we conclude that the identification of AFB using bleach concentration method can be used in resource limited health care setups especially in laboratories where mycobacterial culture is not performed which might help us in early diagnosis of tuberculosis
Universal macroscopic background formation in surface super-roughening
We study a class of super-rough growth models whose structure factor
satisfies the Family-Vicsek scaling. We demonstrate that a macroscopic
background spontaneously develops in the local surface profile, which dominates
the scaling of the local surface width and the height-difference. The shape of
the macroscopic background takes a form of a finite-order polynomial whose
order is decided from the value of the global roughness exponent. Once the
macroscopic background is subtracted, the width of the resulting local surface
profile satisfies the Family-Vicsek scaling. We show that this feature is
universal to all super-rough growth models, and we also discuss the difference
between the macroscopic background formation and the pattern formation in other
models.Comment: 5 pages, LaTex, 1 figure, minor correction
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