3,841 research outputs found
Logarithmic temperature profiles in the ultimate regime of thermal convection
We report on the theory of logarithmic temperature profiles in very strongly
developed thermal convection in the geometry of a Rayleigh-Benard cell with
aspect ratio one and discuss the degree of agreement with the recently measured
profiles in the ultimate state of very large Rayleigh number flow. The
parameters of the log-profile are calculated and compared with the measure
ones. Their physical interpretation as well as their dependence on the radial
position are discussed.Comment: 14 pages, no figur
Spectra of Harmonium in a magnetic field using an initial value representation of the semiclassical propagator
For two Coulombically interacting electrons in a quantum dot with harmonic
confinement and a constant magnetic field, we show that time-dependent
semiclassical calculations using the Herman-Kluk initial value representation
of the propagator lead to eigenvalues of the same accuracy as WKB calculations
with Langer correction. The latter are restricted to integrable systems,
however, whereas the time-dependent initial value approach allows for
applications to high-dimensional, possibly chaotic dynamics and is extendable
to arbitrary shapes of the potential.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur
Velocity profiles in strongly turbulent Taylor-Couette flow
We derive the velocity profiles in strongly turbulent Taylor-Couette flow for
the general case of independently rotating cylinders. The theory is based on
the Navier-Stokes equations in the appropriate (cylinder) geometry. In
particular, we derive the axial and the angular velocity profiles as functions
of distance from the cylinder walls and find that both follow a logarithmic
profile, with downwards-bending curvature corrections, which are more
pronounced for the angular velocity profile as compared to the axial velocity
profile, and which strongly increase with decreasing ratio between inner
and outer cylinder radius. In contrast, the azimuthal velocity does not follow
a log-law. We then compare the angular and azimuthal velocity profiles with the
recently measured profiles in the ultimate state of (very) large Taylor
numbers. Though the {\em qualitative} trends are the same -- down-bending for
large wall distances and (properly shifted and non-dimensionalized) angular
velocity profile being closer to a log-law than (properly shifted
and non-dimensionalized) azimuthal velocity profile -- {\em
quantitative} deviations are found for large wall distances. We attribute these
differences to the Taylor rolls and the height dependence of the profiles,
neither of which are considered in the theoretical approach
Hidden Extra U(1) at the Electroweak/TeV Scale
We propose a simple extension of the Standard Model (SM) by adding an extra
U(1) symmetry which is hidden from the SM sector. Such a hidden U(1) has not
been considered before, and its existence at the TeV scale can be explored at
the LHC. This hidden U(1) does not couple directly to the SM particles, and
couples only to new SU(2)_L singlet exotic quarks and singlet Higgs bosons, and
is broken at the TeV scale. The dominant signals at the high energy hadron
colliders are multi lepton and multi b-jet final states with or without missing
energy. We calculate the signal rates as well as the corresponding Standard
Model background for these final states. A very distinctive signal is 6 high
p_T b-jets in the final state with no missing energy. For a wide range of the
exotic quarks masses the signals are observable above the background at the
LHC.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure
Finite size corrections to scaling in high Reynolds number turbulence
We study analytically and numerically the corrections to scaling in
turbulence which arise due to the finite ratio of the outer scale of
turbulence to the viscous scale , i.e., they are due to finite size
effects as anisotropic forcing or boundary conditions at large scales. We find
that the deviations \dzm from the classical Kolmogorov scaling of the velocity moments \langle |\u(\k)|^m\rangle \propto k^{-\zeta_m}
decrease like . Our numerics employ a
reduced wave vector set approximation for which the small scale structures are
not fully resolved. Within this approximation we do not find independent
anomalous scaling within the inertial subrange. If anomalous scaling in the
inertial subrange can be verified in the large limit, this supports the
suggestion that small scale structures should be responsible, originating from
viscosity either in the bulk (vortex tubes or sheets) or from the boundary
layers (plumes or swirls)
Maximum Resilience of Artificial Neural Networks
The deployment of Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) in safety-critical
applications poses a number of new verification and certification challenges.
In particular, for ANN-enabled self-driving vehicles it is important to
establish properties about the resilience of ANNs to noisy or even maliciously
manipulated sensory input. We are addressing these challenges by defining
resilience properties of ANN-based classifiers as the maximal amount of input
or sensor perturbation which is still tolerated. This problem of computing
maximal perturbation bounds for ANNs is then reduced to solving mixed integer
optimization problems (MIP). A number of MIP encoding heuristics are developed
for drastically reducing MIP-solver runtimes, and using parallelization of
MIP-solvers results in an almost linear speed-up in the number (up to a certain
limit) of computing cores in our experiments. We demonstrate the effectiveness
and scalability of our approach by means of computing maximal resilience bounds
for a number of ANN benchmark sets ranging from typical image recognition
scenarios to the autonomous maneuvering of robots.Comment: Timestamp research work conducted in the project. version 2: fix some
typos, rephrase the definition, and add some more existing wor
Classification of phase transitions of finite Bose-Einstein condensates in power law traps by Fisher zeros
We present a detailed description of a classification scheme for phase
transitions in finite systems based on the distribution of Fisher zeros of the
canonical partition function in the complex temperature plane. We apply this
scheme to finite Bose-systems in power law traps within a semi-analytic
approach with a continuous one-particle density of states for different values of and to a three dimensional harmonically
confined ideal Bose-gas with discrete energy levels. Our results indicate that
the order of the Bose-Einstein condensation phase transition sensitively
depends on the confining potential.Comment: 7 pages, 9 eps-figures, For recent information on physics of small
systems see "http://www.smallsystems.de
Universality in fully developed turbulence
We extend the numerical simulations of She et al. [Phys.\ Rev.\ Lett.\ 70,
3251 (1993)] of highly turbulent flow with Taylor-Reynolds number
up to , employing a reduced wave
vector set method (introduced earlier) to approximately solve the Navier-Stokes
equation. First, also for these extremely high Reynolds numbers ,
the energy spectra as well as the higher moments -- when scaled by the spectral
intensity at the wave number of peak dissipation -- can be described by
{\it one universal} function of for all . Second, the ISR
scaling exponents of this universal function are in agreement with
the 1941 Kolmogorov theory (the better, the large is), as is the
dependence of . Only around viscous damping leads to
slight energy pileup in the spectra, as in the experimental data (bottleneck
phenomenon).Comment: 14 pages, Latex, 5 figures (on request), 3 tables, submitted to Phys.
Rev.
Dynamics of the Forest Sector: Problems and Policies
The dynamic behaviors of the forest sector are generated by the acting together of economic, ecological, social, and biological parts, characteristics and by geographical distribution such as of the forest industrial complexes, of the resources, and of the customers. These dynamics are influenced by and in turn are influencing factors such as wood availability, possible uses of wood, processing technologies, and economic activities. The first chapter of this paper deals with how to depict and how to evaluate such interrelationships and changes causing both problems and opportunities for the forest sector.
In the discussion of the uncertainties in the future of the forest sector and of possible actions, it is necessary to specify different possible future dynamic developments for the above mentioned factors. This is done in some scenarios in the second chapter. The impacts of these factors and their future dynamics impacts can be evaluated with respect to cost competitiveness and wood availability for the individual company as well as for the structural change of the whole sector, for example, with respect to the location of the forest industry and the characteristics and distribution of the forest resources.
A set of scenarios as a base for discussions with representatives of the sector can serve to find out the desirability of those developments and to help specify actions to change the undesired developments. At the end of the paper some actions are listed to deal with poor cost competitiveness and shortage of wood
Critical temperature of Bose-Einstein condensation in trapped atomic Bose-Fermi mixtures
We calculate the shift in the critical temperature of Bose-Einstein
condensation for a dilute Bose-Fermi mixture confined by a harmonic potential
to lowest order in both the Bose-Bose and Bose-Fermi coupling constants. The
relative importance of the effect on the critical temperature of the
boson-boson and boson-fermion interactions is investigated as a function of the
parameters of the mixture. The possible relevance of the shift of the
transition temperature in current experiments on trapped Bose-Fermi mixtures is
discussed.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figures, submitted to J. Phys.
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