22,362 research outputs found
Theory of ice premelting in porous media
Premelting describes the confluence of phenomena that are responsible for the
stable existence of the liquid phase of matter in the solid region of its bulk
phase diagram. Here we develop a theoretical description of the premelting of
water ice contained in a porous matrix, made of a material with a melting
temperature substantially larger than ice itself, to predict the amount of
liquid water in the matrix at temperatures below its bulk freezing point. Our
theory combines the interfacial premelting of ice in contact with the matrix,
grain boundary melting in the ice, and impurity and curvature induced
premelting, the latter occurring in regions which force the ice-liquid
interface into a high curvature configuration. These regions are typically
found at points where the matrix surface is concave, along contact lines of a
grain boundary with the matrix, and in liquid veins. Both interfacial
premelting and curvature induced premelting depend on the concentration of
impurities in the liquid, which, due to the small segregation coefficient of
impurities in ice are treated as homogeneously distributed in the premelted
liquid. Our principal result is an equation for the fraction of liquid in the
porous medium as a function of the undercooling, which embodies the combined
effects of interfacial premelting, curvature induced premelting, and
impurities. The result is analyzed in detail and applied to a range of
experimentally relevant settings.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Ambiguities in statistical calculations of nuclear fragmentation
The concept of freeze out volume used in many statistical approaches for
disassembly of hot nuclei leads to ambiguities. The fragmentation pattern and
the momentum distribution (temperature) of the emanated fragments are
determined by the phase space at the freeze-out volume where the interaction
among the fragments is supposedly frozen out. However, to get coherence with
the experimental momentum distribution of the charged particles, one introduces
Coulomb acceleration beyond this freeze-out. To be consistent, we investigate
the effect of the attractive nuclear force beyond this volume and find that the
possible recombination of the fragments alters the physical observables
significantly casting doubt on the consistency of the statistical model.Comment: 11 pages+3 figure
Quark-Antiquark Bound States in the Relativistic Spectator Formalism
The quark-antiquark bound states are discussed using the relativistic
spectator (Gross) equations. A relativistic covariant framework for analyzing
confined bound states is developed. The relativistic linear potential developed
in an earlier work is proven to give vanishing meson decay
amplitudes, as required by confinement. The regularization of the singularities
in the linear potential that are associated with nonzero energy transfers (i.e.
) is improved. Quark mass functions that build chiral
symmetry into the theory and explain the connection between the current quark
and constituent quark masses are introduced. The formalism is applied to the
description of pions and kaons with reasonable results.Comment: 31 pages, 16 figure
Nuclear Quasi-Elastic Electron Scattering Limits Nucleon Off-Mass Shell Properties
The use of quasi-elastic electron nucleus scattering is shown to provide
significant constraints on models of the proton electromagnetic form factor of
off-shell nucleons. Such models can be constructed to be consistent with
constraints from current conservation and low-energy theorems, while also
providing a contribution to the Lamb shift that might potentially resolve the
proton radius puzzle in muonic hydrogen. However, observations of quasi-elastic
scattering limit the overall strength of the off-shell form factors to values
that correspond to small contributions to the Lamb shift.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures. Resubmission to improve the clarity, and correct
possible misconception
Evaluation of the Free Energy of Two-Dimensional Yang-Mills Theory
The free energy in the weak-coupling phase of two-dimensional Yang-Mills
theory on a sphere for SO(N) and Sp(N) is evaluated in the 1/N expansion using
the techniques of Gross and Matytsin. Many features of Yang-Mills theory are
universal among different gauge groups in the large N limit, but significant
differences arise in subleading order in 1/N.Comment: 10 pages; no figures; LaTe
Gravitational coupling to two-particle bound states and momentum conservation in deep inelastic scattering
The momentum conservation sum rule for deep inelastic scattering (DIS) from
composite particles is investigated using the general theory of relativity. For
two 1+1 dimensional examples, it shown that covariant theories automatically
satisy the DIS momentum conservation sum rule provided the bound state is
covariantilly normalized. Therefore, in these cases the two DIS sum rules for
baryon conservation and momentum conservation are equivalent
The rigidity of periodic body-bar frameworks on the three-dimensional fixed torus
We present necessary and sufficient conditions for the generic rigidity of
body-bar frameworks on the three-dimensional fixed torus. These frameworks
correspond to infinite periodic body-bar frameworks in with a
fixed periodic lattice.Comment: 31 pages, 12 figure
Ab initio Quantum and ab initio Molecular Dynamics of the Dissociative Adsorption of Hydrogen on Pd(100)
The dissociative adsorption of hydrogen on Pd(100) has been studied by ab
initio quantum dynamics and ab initio molecular dynamics calculations. Treating
all hydrogen degrees of freedom as dynamical coordinates implies a high
dimensionality and requires statistical averages over thousands of
trajectories. An efficient and accurate treatment of such extensive statistics
is achieved in two steps: In a first step we evaluate the ab initio potential
energy surface (PES) and determine an analytical representation. Then, in an
independent second step dynamical calculations are performed on the analytical
representation of the PES. Thus the dissociation dynamics is investigated
without any crucial assumption except for the Born-Oppenheimer approximation
which is anyhow employed when density-functional theory calculations are
performed. The ab initio molecular dynamics is compared to detailed quantum
dynamical calculations on exactly the same ab initio PES. The occurence of
quantum oscillations in the sticking probability as a function of kinetic
energy is addressed. They turn out to be very sensitive to the symmetry of the
initial conditions. At low kinetic energies sticking is dominated by the
steering effect which is illustrated using classical trajectories. The steering
effects depends on the kinetic energy, but not on the mass of the molecules.
Zero-point effects lead to strong differences between quantum and classical
calculations of the sticking probability. The dependence of the sticking
probability on the angle of incidence is analysed; it is found to be in good
agreement with experimental data. The results show that the determination of
the potential energy surface combined with high-dimensional dynamical
calculations, in which all relevant degrees of freedon are taken into account,
leads to a detailed understanding of the dissociation dynamics of hydrogen at a
transition metal surface.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, subm. to Phys. Rev.
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