5,160 research outputs found
Vortex line representation for flows of ideal and viscous fluids
It is shown that the Euler hydrodynamics for vortical flows of an ideal fluid
coincides with the equations of motion of a charged {\it compressible} fluid
moving due to a self-consistent electromagnetic field. Transition to the
Lagrangian description in a new hydrodynamics is equivalent for the original
Euler equations to the mixed Lagrangian-Eulerian description - the vortex line
representation (VLR). Due to compressibility of a "new" fluid the collapse of
vortex lines can happen as the result of breaking (or overturning) of vortex
lines. It is found that the Navier-Stokes equation in the vortex line
representation can be reduced to the equation of the diffusive type for the
Cauchy invariant with the diffusion tensor given by the metric of the VLR
LOFAR observations of fine spectral structure dynamics in type IIIb radio bursts
Solar radio emission features a large number of fine structures demonstrating
great variability in frequency and time. We present spatially resolved spectral
radio observations of type IIIb bursts in the MHz range made by the Low
Frequency Array (LOFAR). The bursts show well-defined fine frequency
structuring called "stria" bursts. The spatial characteristics of the stria
sources are determined by the propagation effects of radio waves; their
movement and expansion speeds are in the range of 0.1-0.6c. Analysis of the
dynamic spectra reveals that both the spectral bandwidth and the frequency
drift rate of the striae increase with an increase of their central frequency;
the striae bandwidths are in the range of ~20-100 kHz and the striae drift
rates vary from zero to ~0.3 MHz s^-1. The observed spectral characteristics of
the stria bursts are consistent with the model involving modulation of the type
III burst emission mechanism by small-amplitude fluctuations of the plasma
density along the electron beam path. We estimate that the relative amplitude
of the density fluctuations is of dn/n~10^-3, their characteristic length scale
is less than 1000 km, and the characteristic propagation speed is in the range
of 400-800 km/s. These parameters indicate that the observed fine spectral
structures could be produced by propagating magnetohydrodynamic waves
Interaction of a vortex ring with the free surface of ideal fluid
The interaction of a small vortex ring with the free surface of a perfect
fluid is considered. In the frame of the point ring approximation the
asymptotic expression for the Fourier-components of radiated surface waves is
obtained in the case when the vortex ring comes from infinity and has both
horizontal and vertical components of the velocity. The non-conservative
corrections to the equations of motion of the ring, due to Cherenkov radiation,
are derived.Comment: LaTeX, 15 pages, 1 eps figur
Formation of singularities on the surface of a liquid metal in a strong electric field
The nonlinear dynamics of the free surface of an ideal conducting liquid in a
strong external electric field is studied. It is establish that the equations
of motion for such a liquid can be solved in the approximation in which the
surface deviates from a plane by small angles. This makes it possible to show
that on an initially smooth surface for almost any initial conditions points
with an infinite curvature corresponding to branch points of the root type can
form in a finite time.Comment: 14 page
New boundary conditions for integrable lattices
New boundary conditions for integrable nonlinear lattices of the XXX type,
such as the Heisenberg chain and the Toda lattice are presented. These
integrable extensions are formulated in terms of a generic XXX Heisenberg
magnet interacting with two additional spins at each end of the chain. The
construction uses the most general rank 1 ansatz for the 2x2 L-operator
satisfying the reflection equation algebra with rational r-matrix. The
associated quadratic algebra is shown to be the one of dynamical symmetry for
the A1 and BC2 Calogero-Moser problems. Other physical realizations of our
quadratic algebra are also considered.Comment: 22 pages, latex, no figure
Zipf's Law in Gene Expression
Using data from gene expression databases on various organisms and tissues,
including yeast, nematodes, human normal and cancer tissues, and embryonic stem
cells, we found that the abundances of expressed genes exhibit a power-law
distribution with an exponent close to -1, i.e., they obey Zipf's law.
Furthermore, by simulations of a simple model with an intra-cellular reaction
network, we found that Zipf's law of chemical abundance is a universal feature
of cells where such a network optimizes the efficiency and faithfulness of
self-reproduction. These findings provide novel insights into the nature of the
organization of reaction dynamics in living cells.Comment: revtex, 11 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Dynamical boundary conditions for integrable lattices
Some special solutions to the reflection equation are considered. These
boundary matrices are defined on the common quantum space with the other
operators in the chain. The relations with the Drinfeld twist are discussed.Comment: LaTeX, 12page
The Exact Electron Propagator in a Magnetic Field as the Sum over Landau Levels on a Basis of the Dirac Equation Exact Solutions
The exact propagator for an electron in a constant uniform magnetic field as
the sum over Landau levels is obtained by the direct derivation by standard
methods of quantum field theory from exact solutions of the Dirac equation in
the magnetic field. The result can be useful for further development of the
calculation technique of quantum processes in an external active medium,
particularly in the conditions of moderately large field strengths when it is
insufficient to take into account only the ground Landau level contribution.Comment: 9 pages, LaTeX; v2: 3 misprints corrected, a note and 1 reference
added; to appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
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