722 research outputs found
Effects of leading-edge devices on the low-speed aerodynamic characteristics of a highly-swept arrow-wing
An investigation was conducted in the Texas A&M University 7 by 10 foot Low Speed Wind Tunnel to provide a direct comparison of the effect of several leading edge devices on the aerodynamic performance of a highly swept wing configuration. Analysis of the data indicates that for the configuration with undeflected leading edges, vortex separation first occurs on the outboard wing panel for angles of attack of approximately 2, and wing apex vorticies become apparent for alpha or = 4 deg. However, the occurrence of the leading edge vortex flow may be postponed with leading edge devices. Of the devices considered, the most promising were a simple leading edge deflection of 30 deg and a leading edge slat system. The trailing edge flap effectiveness was found to be essentially the same for the configuration employing either of these more promising leading edge devices. Analysis of the lateral directional data showed that for all of the concepts considered, deflecting leading edge downward in an attempt to postpone leading edge vortex flows, has the favorable effect of reducing the effective dihedral
Critical temperature and density of spin-flips in the anisotropic random field Ising model
We present analytical results for the strongly anisotropic random field Ising
model, consisting of weakly interacting spin chains. We combine the mean-field
treatment of interchain interactions with an analytical calculation of the
average chain free energy (``chain mean-field'' approach). The free energy is
found using a mapping on a Brownian motion model. We calculate the order
parameter and give expressions for the critical random magnetic field strength
below which the ground state exhibits long range order and for the critical
temperature as a function of the random magnetic field strength. In the limit
of vanishing interchain interactions, we obtain corrections to the
zero-temperature estimate by Imry and Ma [Phys. Rev. Lett. 35, 1399 (1975)] of
the ground state density of domain walls (spin-flips) in the one-dimensional
random field Ising model. One of the problems to which our model has direct
relevance is the lattice dimerization in disordered quasi-one-dimensional
Peierls materials, such as the conjugated polymer trans-polyacetylene.Comment: 28 pages, revtex, 4 postscript figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Dimensional Reduction for Directed Branched Polymers
Dimensional reduction occurs when the critical behavior of one system can be
related to that of another system in a lower dimension. We show that this
occurs for directed branched polymers (DBP) by giving an exact relationship
between DBP models in D+1 dimensions and repulsive gases at negative activity
in D dimensions. This implies relations between exponents of the two models:
(the exponent describing the singularity of the
pressure), and (the correlation length exponent of
the repulsive gas). It also leads to the relation ,
where is the Yang-Lee edge exponent. We derive exact expressions
for the number of DBP of size N in two dimensions.Comment: 7 pages, 1 eps figure, ref 24 correcte
Ice Age Epochs and the Sun's Path Through the Galaxy
We present a calculation of the Sun's motion through the Milky Way Galaxy
over the last 500 million years. The integration is based upon estimates of the
Sun's current position and speed from measurements with Hipparcos and upon a
realistic model for the Galactic gravitational potential. We estimate the times
of the Sun's past spiral arm crossings for a range in assumed values of the
spiral pattern angular speed. We find that for a difference between the mean
solar and pattern speed of Omega_Sun - Omega_p = 11.9 +/- 0.7 km/s/kpc the Sun
has traversed four spiral arms at times that appear to correspond well with
long duration cold periods on Earth. This supports the idea that extended
exposure to the higher cosmic ray flux associated with spiral arms can lead to
increased cloud cover and long ice age epochs on Earth.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Numerical study of the transition of the four dimensional Random Field Ising Model
We study numerically the region above the critical temperature of the four
dimensional Random Field Ising Model. Using a cluster dynamic we measure the
connected and disconnected magnetic susceptibility and the connected and
disconnected overlap susceptibility. We use a bimodal distribution of the field
with for all temperatures and a lattice size L=16. Through a
least-square fit we determine the critical exponents and . We find the magnetic susceptibility and the overlap
susceptibility diverge at two different temperatures. This is coherent with the
existence of a glassy phase above . Accordingly with other simulations
we find . In this case we have a scaling theory with
two indipendet critical exponentsComment: 10 pages, 2 figures, Late
Real-space renormalization group for the random-field Ising model
We present real--space renormalization group (RG) calculations of the
critical properties of the random--field Ising model on a cubic lattice in
three dimensions. We calculate the RG flows in a two--parameter truncation of
the Hamiltonian space. As predicted, the transition at finite randomness is
controlled by a zero temperature, disordered critical fixed point, and we
exhibit the universal crossover trajectory from the pure Ising critical point.
We extract scaling fields and critical exponents, and study the distribution of
barrier heights between states as a function of length scale.Comment: 12 pages, CU-MSC-757
On the thermodynamics of first-order phase transition smeared by frozen disorder
The simplified model of first-order transition in a media with frozen
long-range transition-temperature disorder is considered. It exhibits the
smearing of the transition due to appearance of the intermediate inhomogeneous
phase with thermodynamics described by the ground state of the short-range
random-field Ising model. Thus the model correctly reproduce the persistence of
first-order transition only in dimensions d > 2, which is found in more
realistic models. It also allows to estimate the behavior of thermodynamic
parameters near the boundaries of the inhomogeneous phase.Comment: 4 page
Criticality in one dimension with inverse square-law potentials
It is demonstrated that the scaled order parameter for ferromagnetic Ising
and three-state Potts chains with inverse-square interactions exhibits a
universal critical jump, in analogy with the superfluid density in helium
films. Renormalization-group arguments are combined with numerical simulations
of systems containing up to one million lattice sites to accurately determine
the critical properties of these models. In strong contrast with earlier work,
compelling quantitative evidence for the Kosterlitz--Thouless-like character of
the phase transition is provided.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Monte Carlo study of the random-field Ising model
Using a cluster-flipping Monte Carlo algorithm combined with a generalization
of the histogram reweighting scheme of Ferrenberg and Swendsen, we have studied
the equilibrium properties of the thermal random-field Ising model on a cubic
lattice in three dimensions. We have equilibrated systems of LxLxL spins, with
values of L up to 32, and for these systems the cluster-flipping method appears
to a large extent to overcome the slow equilibration seen in single-spin-flip
methods. From the results of our simulations we have extracted values for the
critical exponents and the critical temperature and randomness of the model by
finite size scaling. For the exponents we find nu = 1.02 +/- 0.06, beta = 0.06
+/- 0.07, gamma = 1.9 +/- 0.2, and gammabar = 2.9 +/- 0.2.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, self-expanding uuencoded compressed PostScript
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