6,138 research outputs found
Existence of global strong solutions in critical spaces for barotropic viscous fluids
This paper is dedicated to the study of viscous compressible barotropic
fluids in dimension . We address the question of the global existence
of strong solutions for initial data close from a constant state having
critical Besov regularity. In a first time, this article show the recent
results of \cite{CD} and \cite{CMZ} with a new proof. Our result relies on a
new a priori estimate for the velocity, where we introduce a new structure to
\textit{kill} the coupling between the density and the velocity as in
\cite{H2}. We study so a new variable that we call effective velocity. In a
second time we improve the results of \cite{CD} and \cite{CMZ} by adding some
regularity on the initial data in particular is in . In this
case we obtain global strong solutions for a class of large initial data on the
density and the velocity which in particular improve the results of D. Hoff in
\cite{5H4}. We conclude by generalizing these results for general viscosity
coefficients
Some remarks on the attractor behaviour in ELKO cosmology
Recent results on the dynamical stability of a system involving the
interaction of the ELKO spinor field with standard matter in the universe have
been reanalysed, and the conclusion is that such system does not exhibit
isolated stable points that could alleviate the cosmic coincidence problem.
When a constant parameter related to the potential of the ELKO field
is introduced in the system however, stable fixed points are found for some
specific types of interaction between the ELKO field and matter. Although the
parameter is related to an unknown potential, in order to satisfy the
stability conditions and also that the fixed points are real, the range of the
constant parameter can be constrained for the present time and the
coincidence problem can be alleviated for some specific interactions. Such
restriction on the ELKO potential opens possibility to apply the ELKO field as
a candidate to dark energy in the universe, and so explain the present phase of
acceleration of the universe through the decay of the ELKO field into matter.Comment: 17 pages, section III with minor changes and section IV rewritten
with a new analysi
Calculation of the Voronoi boundary for lens-shaped particles and spherocylinders
We have recently developed a mean-field theory to estimate the packing
fraction of non-spherical particles [A. Baule et al., Nature Commun. (2013)].
The central quantity in this framework is the Voronoi excluded volume, which
generalizes the standard hard-core excluded volume appearing in Onsager's
theory. The Voronoi excluded volume is defined from an exclusion condition for
the Voronoi boundary between two particles, which is usually not tractable
analytically. Here, we show how the technical difficulties in calculating the
Voronoi boundary can be overcome for lens-shaped particles and spherocylinders,
two standard prolate and oblate shapes with rotational symmetry. By decomposing
these shapes into unions and intersections of spheres analytical expressions
can be obtained.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figure
The color of polarization in cuprate superconductors
A technique for the identification of individual anisotropic grains in a heterogeneous and opaque material involves the observation of grain color in reflected light through crossed polarizers (color of polarization). Such colors are generally characteristic of particular phases. When grains of many members of the class of hole carrier cuprate superconductors are so viewed, using a xenon light source (600 K color temperature), a characteristic color of polarization is observed. This color was studied in many of these cuprate superconductors and a strong correlation was found between color and the existence of superconductivity. One of the members of the electron carrier cuprate superconductors (Nd(1.85)Ce(.15)CuO(4-x) was examined and found that it possesses the same color of polarization as all the electron hole carrier cuprate superconductors so far examined. The commonality of the characteristic color in the cuprate superconductors indicated that the presence of this color is independent of the nature of charge carriers. The correlation of this color with existence of superconductivity suggests that the origin of the color relates to the origin of superconductivity in the cuprate superconductors. Photometric techniques are also discussed
Spectral diffusion and 14N quadrupole splittings in absorption detected magnetic resonance hole burning spectra of photosynthetic reaction centers
Zero field absorption detected magnetic resonance hole burning measurements were performed on photosynthetic reaction centers of the bacteria Rhodobacter sphaeroides R26 and Rhodopseudomonas viridis. Extrapolation to zero microwave power yielded pseudohomogeneous linewidths of 2.0 MHz for Rhodopseudomonas viridis, 1.0 and 0.9 MHz for the protonated forms of Rhodobacter sphaeroides R26 with and without monomer bacteriochlorophyll exchanged, and 0.25 MHz as an upper limit for fully deuterated reaction centers of Rhodobacter sphaeroides R26. The measured linewidths were interpreted as being due to unresolved hyperfine interaction between the nuclear spins and the triplet electron spin, the line shape being determined by spectral diffusion among the nuclei. The difference in linewidths between Rhodobacter sphaeroides R26 and Rhodopseudomonas viridis is then explained by triplet delocalization on the special pair in the former, and localization on one dimer half on the latter. In the fully deuterated sample, four quadrupole satellites were observed in the hole spectra arising from the eight 14N nitrogens in the special pair. The quadrupole parameters seem to be very similar for all nitrogens and were determined to =1.25±0.1 MHz and =0.9±0.1 MHz. The Journal of Chemical Physics is copyrighted by The American Institute of Physics
Refactoring, reengineering and evolution: paths to Geant4 uncertainty quantification and performance improvement
Ongoing investigations for the improvement of Geant4 accuracy and
computational performance resulting by refactoring and reengineering parts of
the code are discussed. Issues in refactoring that are specific to the domain
of physics simulation are identified and their impact is elucidated.
Preliminary quantitative results are reported.Comment: To be published in the Proc. CHEP (Computing in High Energy Physics)
201
Monitoramento do ciclo de videiras pelo Índice de Vegetação por Diferença Normalizada obtido de imagens Landsat 8 no município de Veranópolis-RS, Brasil.
O objetivo deste trabalho foi monitorar o ciclo de videiras (Vitis vinifera) em diferentes sistemas de condução na Serra Gaúcha-RS por meio do Índice de Vegetação por Diferença Normalizada (NDVI) obtido de imagens Landsat8/OLI
Quantifying the unknown: issues in simulation validation and their experimental impact
The assessment of the reliability of Monte Carlo simulations is discussed,
with emphasis on uncertainty quantification and the related impact on
experimental results. Methods and techniques to account for epistemic
uncertainties, i.e. for intrinsic knowledge gaps in physics modeling, are
discussed with the support of applications to concrete experimental scenarios.
Ongoing projects regarding the investigation of epistemic uncertainties in the
Geant4 simulation toolkit are reported.Comment: To be published in the Proceedings of the 13th ICATPP Conference on
Astroparticle, Particle, Space Physics and Detectors for Physics
Applications, Villa Olmo, Como, 3-7 October 201
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