644 research outputs found
Anomalous Fourier's law and long range correlations in a 1D non-momentum conserving mechanical model
We study by means of numerical simulations the velocity reversal model, a
one-dimensional mechanical model of heat transport introduced in 1985 by Ianiro
and Lebowitz. Our numerical results indicate that this model, although it does
not conserve momentum, exhibits an anomalous Fourier's law similar to the ones
previously observed in momentum-conserving models. This is contrary to what is
obtained from the solution of the Boltzmann equation (BE) for this system. The
pair correlation velocity field also looks very different from the correlations
usually seen in diffusive systems, and shares some similarity with those of
momentum-conserving heat transport models.Comment: 7 pages, 11 figure
Fluctuations of the heat flux of a one-dimensional hard particle gas
Momentum-conserving one-dimensional models are known to exhibit anomalous
Fourier's law, with a thermal conductivity varying as a power law of the system
size. Here we measure, by numerical simulations, several cumulants of the heat
flux of a one-dimensional hard particle gas. We find that the cumulants, like
the conductivity, vary as power laws of the system size. Our results also
indicate that cumulants higher than the second follow different power laws when
one compares the ring geometry at equilibrium and the linear case in contact
with two heat baths (at equal or unequal temperatures). keywords: current
fluctuations, anomalous Fourier law, hard particle gasComment: 5 figure
System thermal-hydraulic modelling of the phénix dissymmetric test benchmark
Phénix is a French pool-type sodium-cooled prototype reactor; before the definitive shutdown, occurred in 2009, a final set of experimental tests are carried out in order to increase the knowledge on the operation and the safety aspect of the pool-type liquid metal-cooled reactors. One of the experiments was the Dissymmetric End-of-Life Test which was selected for the validation benchmark activity in the frame of SESAME project. The computer code validation plays a key role in the safety assessment of the innovative nuclear reactors and the Phénix dissymmetric test provides useful experimental data to verify the computer codes capability in the asymmetric thermal-hydraulic behaviour into a pool-type liquid metal-cooled reactor. This paper shows the comparison of the outcomes obtained with six different System Thermal-Hydraulic (STH) codes: RELAP5-3D©, SPECTRA, ATHLET, SAS4A/SASSYS-1, ASTEC-Na and CATHARE. The nodalization scheme of the reactor was individually achieved by the participants; during the development of the thermal-hydraulic model, the pool nodalization methodology had a special attention in order to investigate the capability of the STH codes to reproduce the dissymmetric effects which occur in each loop and into pools, caused by the azimuthal asymmetry of the boundary conditions. The modelling methodology of the participants is discussed and the main results are compared in this paper to obtain useful guide lines for the future modelling of innovative liquid metal pool-type reactors
Criticality in diluted ferromagnet
We perform a detailed study of the critical behavior of the mean field
diluted Ising ferromagnet by analytical and numerical tools. We obtain
self-averaging for the magnetization and write down an expansion for the free
energy close to the critical line. The scaling of the magnetization is also
rigorously obtained and compared with extensive Monte Carlo simulations. We
explain the transition from an ergodic region to a non trivial phase by
commutativity breaking of the infinite volume limit and a suitable vanishing
field. We find full agreement among theory, simulations and previous results.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figure
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