7,275 research outputs found
Etching of random solids: hardening dynamics and self-organized fractality
When a finite volume of an etching solution comes in contact with a
disordered solid, a complex dynamics of the solid-solution interface develops.
Since only the weak parts are corroded, the solid surface hardens
progressively. If the etchant is consumed in the chemical reaction, the
corrosion dynamics slows down and stops spontaneously leaving a fractal solid
surface, which reveals the latent percolation criticality hidden in any random
system. Here we introduce and study, both analytically and numerically, a
simple model for this phenomenon. In this way we obtain a detailed description
of the process in terms of percolation theory. In particular we explain the
mechanism of hardening of the surface and connect it to Gradient Percolation.Comment: Latex, aipproc, 6 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings of 6th Granada
Seminar on Computational Physic
Peaks in the CMBR power spectrum. I. Mathematical analysis of the associated real space features
The purpose of our study is to understand the mathematical origin in real
space of modulated and damped sinusoidal peaks observed in cosmic microwave
background radiation anisotropies. We use the theory of the Fourier transform
to connect localized features of the two-point correlation function in real
space to oscillations in the power spectrum. We also illustrate analytically
and by means of Monte Carlo simulations the angular correlation function for
distributions of filled disks with fixed or variable radii capable of
generating oscillations in the power spectrum. While the power spectrum shows
repeated information in the form of multiple peaks and oscillations, the
angular correlation function offers a more compact presentation that condenses
all the information of the multiple peaks into a localized real space feature.
We have seen that oscillations in the power spectrum arise when there is a
discontinuity in a given derivative of the angular correlation function at a
given angular distance. These kinds of discontinuities do not need to be abrupt
in an infinitesimal range of angular distances but may also be smooth, and can
be generated by simply distributing excesses of antenna temperature in filled
disks of fixed or variable radii on the sky, provided that there is a non-null
minimum radius and/or the maximum radius is constrained.Comment: accepted to be published in Physica
Looking for anomalous gamma-gamma-H and Z-gamma-H couplings at future linear collider
We consider the possibility of studying anomalous contributions to the
gamma-gamma-H and Z-gamma-H vertices through the process e-gamma--> e-H at
future e-gamma linear colliders, with Sqrt(S)=500-1500 GeV. We make a model
independent analysis based on SU(2)xU(1) invariant effective operators of dim=6
added to the standard model lagrangian. We consider a light Higgs boson (mostly
decaying in bar(b)-b pairs), and include all the relevant backgrounds. Initial
e-beam polarization effects are also analyzed. We find that the process
e-gamma--> e-H provides an excellent opportunity to strongly constrain both the
CP-even and the CP-odd anomalous contributions to the gamma-gamma-H and
Z-gamma-H vertices.Comment: LaTeX, 33 pages, 16 eps figures, extended section
1-d gravity in infinite point distributions
The dynamics of infinite, asymptotically uniform, distributions of
self-gravitating particles in one spatial dimension provides a simple toy model
for the analogous three dimensional problem. We focus here on a limitation of
such models as treated so far in the literature: the force, as it has been
specified, is well defined in infinite point distributions only if there is a
centre of symmetry (i.e. the definition requires explicitly the breaking of
statistical translational invariance). The problem arises because naive
background subtraction (due to expansion, or by "Jeans' swindle" for the static
case), applied as in three dimensions, leaves an unregulated contribution to
the force due to surface mass fluctuations. Following a discussion by
Kiessling, we show that the problem may be resolved by defining the force in
infinite point distributions as the limit of an exponentially screened pair
interaction. We show that this prescription gives a well defined (finite) force
acting on particles in a class of perturbed infinite lattices, which are the
point processes relevant to cosmological N-body simulations. For identical
particles the dynamics of the simplest toy model is equivalent to that of an
infinite set of points with inverted harmonic oscillator potentials which
bounce elastically when they collide. We discuss previous results in the
literature, and present new results for the specific case of this simplest
(static) model starting from "shuffled lattice" initial conditions. These show
qualitative properties (notably its "self-similarity") of the evolution very
similar to those in the analogous simulations in three dimensions, which in
turn resemble those in the expanding universe.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, small changes (section II shortened, added
discussion in section IV), matches final version to appear in PR
N=1 Supersymmetric Yang-Mills on the lattice at strong coupling
We study N=1 supersymmetric SU(N) Yang-Mills theory on the lattice at strong
coupling. Our method is based on the hopping parameter expansion in terms of
random walks, resummed for any value of the Wilson parameter r in the small
hopping parameter region. Results are given for the mesonic (2-gluino) and
fermionic (3-gluino) propagators and spectrum.Comment: Latex file. 43 pages. Minor additional comments, references added,
typos corrected. Accepted for publication in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
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