34,596 research outputs found
An interplanetary magnetic field ensemble at 1 AU
A method for calculation ensemble averages from magnetic field data is described. A data set comprising approximately 16 months of nearly continuous ISEE-3 magnetic field data is used in this study. Individual subintervals of this data, ranging from 15 hours to 15.6 days comprise the ensemble. The sole condition for including each subinterval in the averages is the degree to which it represents a weakly time-stationary process. Averages obtained by this method are appropriate for a turbulence description of the interplanetary medium. The ensemble average correlation length obtained from all subintervals is found to be 4.9 x 10 to the 11th cm. The average value of the variances of the magnetic field components are in the approximate ratio 8:9:10, where the third component is the local mean field direction. The correlation lengths and variances are found to have a systematic variation with subinterval duration, reflecting the important role of low-frequency fluctuations in the interplanetary medium
Equivalence of the Ehrenfest Theorem and the Fluid-rotor Model for Mixed Quantum/Classical Theory of Collisional Energy Transfer
The theory of two seemingly different quantum/classical approaches to collisional energy transfer and ro-vibrational energy flow is reviewed: a heuristic fluid-rotor method, introduced earlier to treat recombination reactions[M. Ivanov and D. Babikov, J. Chem. Phys.134, 144107 (Year: 2011)10.1063/1.3576103], and a more rigorous method based on the Ehrenfest theorem. It is shown analytically that for the case of a diatomic molecule + quencher these two methods are entirely equivalent. Notably, they both make use of the average moment of inertia computed as inverse of average of inverse of the distributed moment of inertia. Despite this equivalence, each of the two formulations has its own advantages, and is interesting on its own. Numerical results presented here illustrate energy and momentum conservation in the mixed quantum/classical approach and open opportunities for computationally affordable treatment of collisional energy transfer
The motion of the freely falling chain tip
The dynamics of the tip of the falling chain is analyzed. Results of
laboratory experiments are presented and compared with results of numerical
simulations. Time dependences of the velocity and the acceleration of the chain
tip for a number of different initial conformations of the chain are
determined. A simple analytical model of the system is also considered.Comment: 29 pages, 13 figure
Particle acceleration by turbulent magnetohydro-dynamic reconnection
Test particles in a two dimensional, turbulent MHD simulation are found to undergo significant acceleration. The magnetic field configuration is a periodic sheet pinch which undergoes reconnection. The test particles are trapped in the reconnection region for times of order an Alfven transit time in the large electric fields that characterize the turbulent reconnection process at the relatively large magnetic Reynolds number used in the simulation. The maximum speed attained by these particles is consistent with an analytic estimate which depends on the reconnection electric field, the Alfven speed, and the ratio of Larmor period to the Alfven transit time
Methods of calculation of a friction coefficient: Application to the nanotubes
In this work we develop theoretical and numerical methods of calculation of a
dynamic friction coefficient. The theoretical method is based on an adiabatic
approximation which allows us to express the dynamic friction coefficient in
terms of the time integral of the autocorrelation function of the force between
both sliding objects. The motion of the objects and the autocorrelation
function can be numerically calculated by molecular-dynamics simulations. We
have successfully applied these methods to the evaluation of the dynamic
friction coefficient of the relative motion of two concentric carbon nanotubes.
The dynamic friction coefficient is shown to increase with the temperature.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
A comparison of A-level performance in economics and business studies: how much more difficult is economics?
This paper uses ALIS data to compare academic performance in two subjects often viewed as relatively close substitutes for one another at A-level. The important role of GCSE achievement is confirmed for both subjects. There is evidence of strong gender effects and variation in outcomes across Examination Boards. A counterfactual exercise suggests that if the sample of Business Studies candidates had studied Economics nearly 40% of those who obtained a grade C or better in the former subject would not have done so in the latter. The opposite exercise uggests that 12% more Economics candidates would have achieved a grade C or better if they had taken Business Studies. In order to render a Business Studies A-level grade comparable to an Economics one in terms of relative difficulty, we estimate that a downward adjustment of 1.5 UCAS points should be applied to the former subject. This adjustment is lower than that suggested by correction factors based on conventional subject pair analysis for these two subjects
Collective chemotactic dynamics in the presence of self-generated fluid flows
In micro-swimmer suspensions locomotion necessarily generates fluid motion,
and it is known that such flows can lead to collective behavior from unbiased
swimming. We examine the complementary problem of how chemotaxis is affected by
self-generated flows. A kinetic theory coupling run-and-tumble chemotaxis to
the flows of collective swimming shows separate branches of chemotactic and
hydrodynamic instabilities for isotropic suspensions, the first driving
aggregation, the second producing increased orientational order in suspensions
of "pushers" and maximal disorder in suspensions of "pullers". Nonlinear
simulations show that hydrodynamic interactions can limit and modify
chemotactically-driven aggregation dynamics. In puller suspensions the dynamics
form aggregates that are mutually-repelling due to the non-trivial flows. In
pusher suspensions chemotactic aggregation can lead to destabilizing flows that
fragment the regions of aggregation.Comment: 4 page
The TWINS exospheric neutral H-density distribution under solar minimum conditions
Terrestrial exospheric atomic hydrogen (H) resonantly
scatters solar Lyman-α (121.567 nm) radiation, observed as the glow of the
H-geocorona. The Two Wide-angle Imaging Neutral-atom Spectrometers (TWINS)
satellites are equiped with two Lyman-α line-of-sight Detectors (LADs) each.
Since during the past solar minimum conditions the relevant solar control
parameters practically did not vary, we are using LAD data between June and
September 2008 to create a time averaged hydrogen geocorona model
representative for these solar minimum conditions. In this averaged model we
assume that the H-geocorona is longitudinally symmetric with respect to the
earth-sun line. We find a 3-dimensional H-density distribution in the range
from 3 to 8 earth radii which with some caution can also be extrapolated to
larger distances. For lower geocentric distances than 3 earth radii a best
fitting r-dependent Chamberlain (1963)-like model is adapted. Main findings
are larger than conventionally expected H-densities at heights above 5 <I>R</I><sub>E</sub> and a pronounced day-to-night side H-density asymmetry. The
H-geocorona presented here should serve as a reference H-atmosphere for the
earth during solar minimum conditions
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