6,957 research outputs found
A rheological study of glass fibers in a Newtonian oil Semiannual status report, 1 Dec. 1966 - 31 May 1967
Rheological study of glass fibers in Newtonian oi
A photonic bandgap resonator to facilitate GHz frequency conductivity experiments in pulsed magnetic fields
We describe instrumentation designed to perform millimeter-wave conductivity
measurements in pulsed high magnetic fields at low temperatures. The main
component of this system is an entirely non-metallic microwave resonator. The
resonator utilizes periodic dielectric arrays (photonic bandgap structures) to
confine the radiation, such that the resonant modes have a high Q-factor, and
the system possesses sufficient sensitivity to measure small samples within the
duration of a magnet pulse. As well as measuring the sample conductivity to
probe orbital physics in metallic systems, this technique can detect the sample
permittivity and permeability allowing measurement of spin physics in
insulating systems. We demonstrate the system performance in pulsed magnetic
fields with both electron paramagnetic resonance experiments and conductivity
measurements of correlated electron systems.Comment: Submitted to the Review of Scientific instrument
Angle Dependent Magnetoresistance of the Layered Organic Superconductor \kappa-(ET)2Cu(NCS)2: Simulation and Experiment
The angle-dependences of the magnetoresistance of two different isotopic
substitutions (deuterated and undeuterated) of the layered organic
superconductor \kappa-(ET)2Cu(NCS)2 are presented. The angle dependent
magnetoresistance oscillations (AMRO) arising from the quasi-one-dimensional
(Q1D) and quasi-two-dimensional (Q2D) Fermi surfaces in this material are often
confused. By using the Boltzman transport equation extensive simulations of the
AMRO are made that reveal the subtle differences between the different species
of oscillation. No significant differences are observed in the electronic
parameters derived from quantum oscillations and AMRO for the two isotopic
substitutions. The interlayer transfer integrals are determined for both
isotopic substitutions and a slight difference is observed which may account
for the negative isotope effect previously reported [1]. The success of the
semi-classical simulations suggests that non-Fermi liquid effects are not
required to explain the interlayer-transport in this system.Comment: 15 pages, 16 figure
Stability of nanoparticle laden aerosol liquid droplets
We develop a model for the thermodynamics and evaporation dynamics of aerosol droplets of a liquid such as water, surrounded by the gas. When the temperature and the chemical potential (or equivalently the humidity) are such that the vapour phase is the thermodynamic equilibrium state, then of course droplets of the pure liquid evaporate over a relatively short time. However, if the droplets also contain nanoparticles or any other non-volatile solute, then the droplets can become thermodynamically stable. We show that the equilibrium droplet size depends strongly on the amount and solubility of the nanoparticles within, i.e. on the nature of the particle interactions with the liquid, and of course also on the vapour temperature and chemical potential. We develop a simple thermodynamic model for such droplets and compare predictions with results from a lattice density functional theory that takes as input the same particle interaction properties, finding very good agreement. We also use dynamical density functional theory to study the evaporation/condensation dynamics of liquid from/to droplets as they equilibrate with the vapour, thereby demonstrating droplet stability
Energetic Instability Unjams Sand and Suspension
Jamming is a phenomenon occurring in systems as diverse as traffic, colloidal
suspensions and granular materials. A theory on the reversible elastic
deformation of jammed states is presented. First, an explicit granular
stress-strain relation is derived that captures many relevant features of sand,
including especially the Coulomb yield surface and a third-order jamming
transition. Then this approach is generalized, and employed to consider jammed
magneto- and electro-rheological fluids, again producing results that compare
well to experiments and simulations.Comment: 9 pages 2 fi
A Note on c=1 Virasoro Boundary States and Asymmetric Shift Orbifolds
We comment on the conformal boundary states of the c=1 free boson theory on a
circle which do not preserve the U(1) symmetry. We construct these Virasoro
boundary states at a generic radius by a simple asymmetric shift orbifold
acting on the fundamental boundary states at the self-dual radius. We further
calculate the boundary entropy and find that the Virasoro boundary states at
irrational radius have infinite boundary entropy. The corresponding open string
description of the asymmetric orbifold is given using the quotient algebra
construction. Moreover, we find that the quotient algebra associated with a
non-fundamental boundary state contains the noncommutative Weyl algebra.Comment: 21 pages, harvmac; v2: minor clarification in section 3.4; v3: a
discussion on cocycles added in section 2, and low energy limit mistake
removed and clarifications added in section 4.
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