5,146 research outputs found
Global Diffusion in a Realistic Three-Dimensional Time-Dependent Nonturbulent Fluid Flow
We introduce and study the first model of an experimentally realizable
three-dimensional time-dependent nonturbulent fluid flow to display the
phenomenon of global diffusion of passive-scalar particles at arbitrarily small
values of the nonintegrable perturbation. This type of chaotic advection,
termed {\it resonance-induced diffusion\/}, is generic for a large class of
flows.Comment: 4 pages, uuencoded compressed postscript file, to appear in Phys.
Rev. Lett. Also available on the WWW from http://formentor.uib.es/~julyan/,
or on paper by reques
Dynamics of Elastic Excitable Media
The Burridge-Knopoff model of earthquake faults with viscous friction is
equivalent to a van der Pol-FitzHugh-Nagumo model for excitable media with
elastic coupling. The lubricated creep-slip friction law we use in the
Burridge-Knopoff model describes the frictional sliding dynamics of a range of
real materials. Low-dimensional structures including synchronized oscillations
and propagating fronts are dominant, in agreement with the results of
laboratory friction experiments. Here we explore the dynamics of fronts in
elastic excitable media.Comment: Int. J. Bifurcation and Chaos, to appear (1999
Causation, Measurement Relevance and No-conspiracy in EPR
In this paper I assess the adequacy of no-conspiracy conditions employed in
the usual derivations of the Bell inequality in the context of EPR
correlations. First, I look at the EPR correlations from a purely
phenomenological point of view and claim that common cause explanations of
these cannot be ruled out. I argue that an appropriate common cause explanation
requires that no-conspiracy conditions are re-interpreted as mere common
cause-measurement independence conditions. In the right circumstances then,
violations of measurement independence need not entail any kind of conspiracy
(nor backwards in time causation). To the contrary, if measurement operations
in the EPR context are taken to be causally relevant in a specific way to the
experiment outcomes, their explicit causal role provides the grounds for a
common cause explanation of the corresponding correlations.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figur
Emergent global oscillations in heterogeneous excitable media: The example of pancreatic beta cells
Using the standard van der Pol-FitzHugh-Nagumo excitable medium model I
demonstrate a novel generic mechanism, diversity, that provokes the emergence
of global oscillations from individually quiescent elements in heterogeneous
excitable media. This mechanism may be operating in the mammalian pancreas,
where excitable beta cells, quiescent when isolated, are found to oscillate
when coupled despite the absence of a pacemaker region.Comment: See home page http://lec.ugr.es/~julya
Bailout Embeddings and Neutrally Buoyant Particles in Three-Dimensional Flows
We use the bailout embeddings of three-dimensional volume-preserving maps to
study qualitatively the dy- namics of small spherical neutrally buoyant
impurities suspended in a time-periodic incompressible fluid flow. The
accumulation of impurities in tubular vortical structures, the detachment of
particles from fluid trajectories near hyperbolic invariant lines, and the
formation of nontrivial three-dimensional structures in the distribution of
particles are predicted.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Nonlinear Dynamics of the Perceived Pitch of Complex Sounds
We apply results from nonlinear dynamics to an old problem in acoustical
physics: the mechanism of the perception of the pitch of sounds, especially the
sounds known as complex tones that are important for music and speech
intelligibility
Self-Assembling Ice Membranes on Europa: Brinicle Properties, Field Examples, and Possible Energetic Systems in Icy Ocean Worlds
Brinicles are self-assembling tubular ice membrane structures, centimeters to
meters in length, found beneath sea ice in the polar regions of Earth. We
discuss how the properties of brinicles make them of possible importance for
chemistry in cold environments-including that of life's emergence-and we
consider their formation in icy ocean world. We argue that the non-ice
composition of the ice on Europa and Enceladus will vary spatially due to
thermodynamic and mechanical properties that serve to separate and fractionate
brines and solid materials. The specifics of the composition and dynamics of
both the ice and the ocean in these worlds remain poorly constrained. We
demonstrate through calculations using FREZCHEM that sulfate likely
fractionates out of accreting ice in Europa and Enceladus, and thus that an
exogenous origin of sulfate observed on Europa's surface need not preclude
additional endogenous sulfate in Europa's ocean. We suggest that, like
hydrothermal vents on Earth, brinicles in icy ocean worlds constitute ideal
places where ecosystems of organisms might be found
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