6,974 research outputs found
Magnetoresistance of a two-dimensional electron gas in a parallel magnetic field
The conductivity of a two-dimensional electron gas in a parallel magnetic
field is calculated. We take into account the magnetic field induced
spin-splitting, which changes the density of states, the Fermi momentum and the
screening behavior of the electron gas. For impurity scattering we predict a
positive magnetoresistance for low electron density and a negative
magnetoresistance for high electron density. The theory is in qualitative
agreement with recent experimental results found for Si inversion layers and Si
quantum wells.Comment: 4 pages, figures included, PDF onl
Relativistic Poynting Jets from Accretion Disks
A model is developed for relativistic Poynting jets from the inner region of
a disk around a rotating black hole. The disk is initially threaded by a
dipole-like magnetic field. The model is derived from the special relativistic
equation for a force-free electromagnetic field. The ``head'' of the Poynting
jet is found to propagate outward with a velocity which may be relativistic.
The Lorentz factor of the head (Gamma) is found to be dependent on the magnetic
field strength close to the black hole, B_0, the density of the external medium
n_ext, and on the ratio R=r_0/r_g >1, where r_g is the gravitational radius of
the black hole, and r_0 is the radius of the O-point of the initial dipole
field threading the disk. For conditions pertinent to an active galactic
nuclei, Gamma is approximately equal to 8 (10/R)^(1/3) (B_0/10^3 Gauss)^(1/3)
(1/cm^3/n_ext)^(1/6). This model offers an explanation for the observed Lorentz
factors which are of the order of 10 for the parsec-scale radio jets measured
with very long baseline interferometry.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
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Simulation and Measurement of Transient Fluid Phenomena within Diesel Injection
Rail pressures of modern diesel fuel injection systems have increased significantly over recent years, greatly improving atomisation of the main fuel injection event and air utilisation of the combustion process. Continued improvement in controlling the process of introducing fuel into the cylinder has led to focussing on fluid phenomena related to transient response. High-speed microscopy has been employed to visualise the detailed fluid dynamics around the near nozzle region of an automotive diesel fuel injector, during the opening, closing and post injection events. Complementary computational fluid dynamic (CFD) simulations have been undertaken to elucidate the interaction of the liquid and gas phases during these highly transient events, including an assessment of close-coupled injections. Microscopic imaging shows the development of a plug flow in the initial stages of injection, with rapid transition into a primary breakup regime, transitioning to a finely atomised spray and subsequent vaporisation of the fuel. During closuring of the injector the spray collapses, with evidence of swirling breakup structures together with unstable ligaments of fuel breaking into large slow-moving droplets. This leads to sub-optimal combustion in the developing flame fronts established by the earlier, more fully-developed spray. The simulation results predict these observed phenomena, including injector surface wetting as a result of large slow-moving droplets and post-injection discharge of liquid fuel. This work suggests that post-injection discharges of fuel play a part in the mechanism of the initial formation, and subsequent accumulation of deposits on the exterior surface of the injector. For multiple injections, opening events are influenced by the dynamics of the previous injection closure; these phenomena have been investigated within the simulations
Analysis of the resistance in p-SiGe over a wide temperature range
The temperature dependence of a system exhibiting a `metal-insulator
transition in two dimensions at zero magnetic field' (MIT) is studied up to
90K. Using a classical scattering model we are able to simulate the
non-monotonic temperature dependence of the resistivity in the metallic high
density regime. We show that the temperature dependence arises from a complex
interplay of metallic and insulating contributions contained in the calculation
of the scattering rate 1/\td(E,T), each dominating in a limited temperature
range.Comment: 4 pages with 5 figure
Evolution of Quantum Criticality in CeNi_{9-x}Cu_xGe_4
Crystal structure, specific heat, thermal expansion, magnetic susceptibility
and electrical resistivity studies of the heavy fermion system
CeNi_{9-x}Cu_xGe_4 (0 <= x <= 1) reveal a continuous tuning of the ground state
by Ni/Cu substitution from an effectively fourfold degenerate non-magnetic
Kondo ground state of CeNi_9Ge_4 (with pronounced non-Fermi-liquid features)
towards a magnetically ordered, effectively twofold degenerate ground state in
CeNi_8CuGe_4 with T_N = 175 +- 5 mK. Quantum critical behavior, C/T ~ \chi ~
-ln(T), is observed for x about 0.4. Hitherto, CeNi_{9-x}Cu_xGe_4 represents
the first system where a substitution-driven quantum phase transition is
connected not only with changes of the relative strength of Kondo effect and
RKKY interaction, but also with a reduction of the effective crystal field
ground state degeneracy.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
Hitting all Maximal Independent Sets of a Bipartite Graph
We prove that given a bipartite graph G with vertex set V and an integer k,
deciding whether there exists a subset of V of size k hitting all maximal
independent sets of G is complete for the class Sigma_2^P.Comment: v3: minor chang
"Propeller" Regime of Disk Accretion to Rapidly Rotating Stars
We present results of axisymmetic magnetohydrodynamic simulations of the
interaction of a rapidly-rotating, magnetized star with an accretion disk. The
disk is considered to have a finite viscosity and magnetic diffusivity. The
main parameters of the system are the star's angular velocity and magnetic
moment, and the disk's viscosity, diffusivity. We focus on the "propeller"
regime where the inner radius of the disk is larger than the corotation radius.
Two types of magnetohydrodynamic flows have been found as a result of
simulations: "weak" and "strong" propellers. The strong propeller is
characterized by a powerful disk wind and a collimated magnetically dominated
outflow or jet from the star. The weak propeller have only weak outflows. We
investigated the time-averaged characteristics of the interaction between the
main elements of the system, the star, the disk, the wind from the disk, and
the jet. Rates of exchange of mass and angular momentum between the elements of
the system are derived as a function of the main parameters. The propeller
mechanism may be responsible for the fast spinning-down of the classical T
Tauri stars in the initial stages of their evolution, and for the spinning-down
of accreting millisecond pulsars.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures, ApJ (accepted), added references, corrected
typos; see animation at
http://astrosun2.astro.cornell.edu/us-rus/disk_prop.ht
Metal-insulator transition at B=0 in a dilute two dimensional GaAs-AlGaAs hole gas
We report the observation of a metal insulator transition at B=0 in a high
mobility two dimensional hole gas in a GaAs-AlGaAs heterostructure. A clear
critical point separates the insulating phase from the metallic phase,
demonstrating the existence of a well defined minimum metallic conductivity
sigma(min)=2e/h. The sigma(T) data either side of the transition can be
`scaled' on to one curve with a single parameter (To). The application of a
parallel magnetic field increases sigma(min) and broadens the transition. We
argue that strong electron-electron interactions (rs = 10) destroy phase
coherence, removing quantum intereference corrections to the conductivity.Comment: 4 pages RevTex + 4 figures. Submitted to PRL. Originally posted 22
September 1997. Revised 12 October 1997 - minor changes to referencing,
figure cations and figure
Do correlations create an energy gap in electronic bilayers? Critical analysis of different approaches
This paper investigates the effect of correlations in electronic bilayers on
the longitudinal collective mode structure. We employ the dielectric
permeability constructed by means of the classical theory of moments. It is
shown that the neglection of damping processes overestimates the role of
correlations. We conclude that the correct account of damping processes leads
to an absence of an energy gap.Comment: 4 page
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