2,095 research outputs found
Computational modelling and experimental characterisation of heterogeneous materials
Heterogeneous materials can exhibit behaviour under load that cannot be described by classical continuum elasticity. Beams in bending can show a relative stiffening as the beam depth tends to zero, a size effect. Size effects are recognised in higher order continuum elastic theories such as micropolar elasticity. The drawback of higher order theories is the requirement of addition constitutive relations and associated properties that are often difficult to establish experimentally. Furthermore the finite element method, of great benefit in classical elasticity, has shown limitations when applied to micropolar elasticity. The determination of additional constitutive properties and the computational modelling of micropolar elasticity will be discussed in the context of a model heterogeneous material loaded in simple 3 point bending. The model material was created by drilling holes in aluminium bar in a regular pattern, with the hole axis normal to the plane of bending. The bending tests show that a size effect is present. These results are compared against modelling the detailed beam geometries in the finite element package ANSYS, which again shows the size effect. These two bending test are used to extract the additional micropolar elastic material properties. A comparison is then made against analytical solutions,numerical solutions using a micropolar beam finite element and a micropolar plane stress control volume method.It will be shown that the need for extensive experimental testing to determine the additional constitutive properties may not be necessary with the appropriate use of numerical methods
Variational approach to a class of nonlinear oscillators with several limit cycles
We study limit cycles of nonlinear oscillators described by the equation
. Depending on the nonlinearity this equation
may exhibit different number of limit cycles.
We show that limit cycles correspond to relative extrema of a certain
functional. Analytical results in the limits and are
in agreement with previously known criteria. For intermediate numerical
determination of the limit cycles can be obtained.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
CP violation in the effective action of the Standard Model
Following a suggestion by Smit, the CP odd terms of the effective action of
the Standard Model, obtained by integration of quarks and leptons, are computed
to sixth order within a strict covariant derivative expansion approach. No
other approximations are made. The final result so derived includes all
Standard Model gauge fields and Higgs. Remarkably, at the order considered in
this work, all parity violating contributions turn out to be zero. Non
vanishing CP violating terms are obtained in the C-odd P-even sector. These are
several orders of magnitude larger than perturbative estimates. Various
unexpected regularities in the final result are noted.Comment: 32 pages, no figures. Section added. To appear in JHE
Muon Anomalous Magnetic Moment and Lepton Flavor Violation
A non-universal interaction, which involves only the third family leptons
induces lepton flavor violating couplings and contributes to the anomalous
magnetic moment of muon. In this paper, we study the effects of non-universal
interaction on muon (g-2) and rare decay by using an
effective lagrangian technique, and a phenomenological model where
couples only to the third family lepton. We find that the deviation
from the theory can be explained and the induced rate
could be very close to the current experimental limit. In the model,
has to be lighter than 2.6 TeV.Comment: references added, the version to appear in PR
Massive quark propagator and competition between chiral and diquark condensate
The Green-function approach has been extended to the moderate baryon density
region in the framework of an extended Nambu--Jona-Lasinio model, and the
thermodynamic potential with both chiral and diquark condensates has been
evaluated by using the massive quark propagator. The phase structure along the
chemical potential direction has been investigated and the strong competition
between the chiral and diquark condensate has been analyzed by investigating
the influence of the diquark condensate on the sharp Fermi surface. The
influence of the diquark condensate on the quark properties has been
investigated, even though the quarks in the color breaking phase are very
different from that in the chiral breaking phase, the difference between quarks
in different colors is very small.Comment: Revtex, 34 pages, 7 figures, section V revised, accepted by PR
Spin 3/2 Pentaquarks
We investigate the possible existence of the spin 3/2 pentaquark states using
interpolating currents with K-N color-octet structure in the framework of QCD
finite energy sum rule (FESR). We pay special attention to the convergence of
the operator product expansion
Spectroscopy of vibrational modes in metal nanoshells
We study the spectrum of vibrational modes in metal nanoparticles with a
dielectric core. Vibrational modes are excited by the rapid heating of the
particle lattice that takes place after laser excitation, and can be monitored
by means of pump-probe spectroscopy as coherent oscillations of transient
optical spectra. In nanoshells, the presence of two metal surfaces results in a
substantially different energy spectrum of acoustic vibrations than for solid
particles. We calculated the energy spectrum as well as the damping of
nanoshell vibrational modes. The oscillator strength of fundamental breathing
mode is larger than that in solid nanoparticles. At the same time, in very thin
nanoshells, the fundamental mode is overdamped due to instantaneous energy
transfer to the surrounding medium
Theory of ac electrokinetic behavior of spheroidal cell suspensions with an intrinsic dispersion
The dielectric dispersion, dielectrophoretic (DEP) and electrorotational (ER)
spectra of spheroidal biological cell suspensions with an intrinsic dispersion
in the constituent dielectric constants are investigated. By means of the
spectral representation method, we express analytically the characteristic
frequencies and dispersion strengths both for the effective dielectric constant
and the Clausius-Mossotti factor (CMF). We identify four and six characteristic
frequencies for the effective dielectric spectra and CMF respectively, all of
them being dependent on the depolarization factor (or the cell shape). The
analytical results allow us to examine the effects of the cell shape, the
dispersion strength and the intrinsic frequency on the dielectric dispersion,
DEP and ER spectra. Furthermore, we include the local-field effects due to the
mutual interactions between cells in a dense suspension, and study the
dependence of co-field or anti-field dispersion peaks on the volume fractions.Comment: accepted by Phys. Rev.
Anomalous Pseudoscalar-Photon Vertex In and Out of Equilibrium
The anomalous pseudoscalar-photon vertex is studied in real time in and out
of equilibrium in a constituent quark model. The goal is to understand the
in-medium modifications of this vertex, exploring the possibility of enhanced
isospin breaking by electromagnetic effects as well as the formation of neutral
pion condensates in a rapid chiral phase transition in peripheral,
ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions. In equilibrium the effective vertex is
afflicted by infrared and collinear singularities that require hard thermal
loop (HTL) and width corrections of the quark propagator. The resummed
effective equilibrium vertex vanishes near the chiral transition in the chiral
limit. In a strongly out of equilibrium chiral phase transition we find that
the chiral condensate drastically modifies the quark propagators and the
effective vertex. The ensuing dynamics for the neutral pion results in a
potential enhancement of isospin breaking and the formation of
condensates. While the anomaly equation and the axial Ward identity are not
modified by the medium in or out of equilibrium, the effective real-time
pseudoscalar-photon vertex is sensitive to low energy physics.Comment: Revised version to appear in Phys. Rev. D. 42 pages, 4 figures, uses
Revte
Large N_c, chiral approach to M_eta' at finite temperature
We study the temperature dependence of the eta and eta' meson masses within
the framework of U(3)_L x U(3)_R chiral perturbation theory, up to
next-to-leading order in a simultaneous expansion in momenta, quark masses and
number of colours. We find that both masses decrease at low temperatures, but
only very slightly. We analyze higher order corrections and argue that large
N_c suggests a discontinuous drop of M_eta' at the critical temperature of
deconfinement T_c, consistent with a first order transition to a phase with
approximate U(1)_A symmetry.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures. 2 footnotes added, 1 reference changed and 1
typo corrected. To be published in Phys. Rev.
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