31 research outputs found
FAST: A multi-processed environment for visualization of computational fluid dynamics
Three-dimensional, unsteady, multi-zoned fluid dynamics simulations over full scale aircraft are typical of the problems being investigated at NASA Ames' Numerical Aerodynamic Simulation (NAS) facility on CRAY2 and CRAY-YMP supercomputers. With multiple processor workstations available in the 10-30 Mflop range, we feel that these new developments in scientific computing warrant a new approach to the design and implementation of analysis tools. These larger, more complex problems create a need for new visualization techniques not possible with the existing software or systems available as of this writing. The visualization techniques will change as the supercomputing environment, and hence the scientific methods employed, evolves even further. The Flow Analysis Software Toolkit (FAST), an implementation of a software system for fluid mechanics analysis, is discussed
FAST: A multi-processed environment for visualization of computational fluid
Three dimensional, unsteady, multizoned fluid dynamics simulations over full scale aircraft is typical of problems being computed at NASA-Ames on CRAY2 and CRAY-YMP supercomputers. With multiple processor workstations available in the 10 to 30 Mflop range, it is felt that these new developments in scientific computing warrant a new approach to the design and implementation of analysis tools. These large, more complex problems create a need for new visualization techniques not possible with the existing software or systems available as of this time. These visualization techniques will change as the supercomputing environment, and hence the scientific methods used, evolve ever further. Visualization of computational aerodynamics require flexible, extensible, and adaptable software tools for performing analysis tasks. FAST (Flow Analysis Software Toolkit), an implementation of a software system for fluid mechanics analysis that is based on this approach is discussed
Scientific Visualization Using the Flow Analysis Software Toolkit (FAST)
Over the past few years the Flow Analysis Software Toolkit (FAST) has matured into a useful tool for visualizing and analyzing scientific data on high-performance graphics workstations. Originally designed for visualizing the results of fluid dynamics research, FAST has demonstrated its flexibility by being used in several other areas of scientific research. These research areas include earth and space sciences, acid rain and ozone modelling, and automotive design, just to name a few. This paper describes the current status of FAST, including the basic concepts, architecture, existing functionality and features, and some of the known applications for which FAST is being used. A few of the applications, by both NASA and non-NASA agencies, are outlined in more detail. Described in the Outlines are the goals of each visualization project, the techniques or 'tricks' used lo produce the desired results, and custom modifications to FAST, if any, done to further enhance the analysis. Some of the future directions for FAST are also described
YbRh2Si2: Quantum tricritical behavior in itinerant electron systems
We propose that proximity of the first-order transition manifested by the
quantum tricritical point (QTCP) explains non-Fermi-liquid properties of
YbRh2Si2. Here, at the QTCP, a continuous phase transition changes into first
order at zero temperature. The non-Fermi-liquid behaviors of YbRh2Si2 are
puzzling in two aspects; diverging ferromagnetic susceptibility at the
antiferromagnetic transition and unconventional power-law dependence in
thermodynamic quantities. These puzzles are solved by an unconventional
criticality derived from our spin fluctuation theory for the QTCP.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Divergence of the Grueneisen Ratio at Quantum Critical Points in Heavy Fermion Metals
We present low-temperature volume thermal expansion, , and specific
heat, , measurements on high-quality single crystals of CeNi2Ge2 and
YbRh2(SiGe) which are located very near to quantum
critical points. For both systems, shows a more singular temperature
dependence than , and thus the Grueneisen ratio
diverges as T --> 0. For CeNi2Ge2, our results are in accordance with the
spin-density wave (SDW) scenario for three-dimensional critical
spin-fluctuations. By contrast, the observed singularity in
YbRh2_{0.95}_{0.05}_2$ cannot be explained by the itinerant SDW
theory but is qualitatively consistent with a locally quantum critical picture.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
The break up of heavy electrons at a quantum critical point
The point at absolute zero where matter becomes unstable to new forms of
order is called a quantum critical point (QCP). The quantum fluctuations
between order and disorder that develop at this point induce profound
transformations in the finite temperature electronic properties of the
material. Magnetic fields are ideal for tuning a material as close as possible
to a QCP, where the most intense effects of criticality can be studied. A
previous study on theheavy-electron material found that near a
field-induced quantum critical point electrons move ever more slowly and
scatter off one-another with ever increasing probability, as indicated by a
divergence to infinity of the electron effective mass and cross-section. These
studies could not shed light on whether these properties were an artifact of
the applied field, or a more general feature of field-free QCPs. Here we report
that when Germanium-doped is tuned away from a chemically induced
quantum critical point by magnetic fields there is a universal behavior in the
temperature dependence of the specific heat and resistivity: the characteristic
kinetic energy of electrons is directly proportional to the strength of the
applied field. We infer that all ballistic motion of electrons vanishes at a
QCP, forming a new class of conductor in which individual electrons decay into
collective current carrying motions of the electron fluid.Comment: Pdf files of article available at
http://www.physics.rutgers.edu/~coleman/online/breakup.pdf, pdf file of news
and views article available at
http://www.physics.rutgers.edu/~coleman/online/nvbreakup.pd
Pressure driven collapse of the magnetism in the Kondo insulator UNiSn
The effect of pressure on the electronic and magnetic properties of the antiferromagnetic (TN~43 K) narrow gap semiconductor UNiSn has been investigated by 119Sn Mössbauer spectroscopy and nuclear forward scattering of synchrotron radiation, electrical resistance, and x-ray diffraction. We show that the decrease of the semiconducting gap which leads to a metallic state at p~9 GPa is associated with an enhancement of TN. At higher pressures, both TN and the transferred magnetic hyperfine field decrease, with a collapse of magnetism at ~18.5 GPa. The results are explained by a volume-dependent competition between indirect Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida interaction and the 5f-ligand hybridization
Spin Fluctuation Theory for Quantum Tricritical Point Arising in Proximity to First-Order Phase Transitions: Applications to Heavy-Fermion Systems, YbRh2Si2, CeRu2Si2, and beta-YbAlB4
We propose a phenomenological spin fluctuation theory for antiferromagnetic
quantum tricritical point (QTCP), where the first-order phase transition
changes into the continuous one at zero temperature. Under magnetic fields,
ferromagnetic quantum critical fluctuations develop around the
antiferromagnetic QTCP in addition to antiferromagnetic ones, which is in sharp
contrast with the conventional antiferromagnetic quantum critical point. For
itinerant electron systems,} we show that the temperature dependence of
critical magnetic fluctuations around the QTCP are given as chiQ \propto
T^{-3/2} (chi0\propto T^{-3/4}) at the antiferromagnetic ordering
(ferromagnetic) wave number q=Q (q=0). The convex temperature dependence of
chi0^{-1} is the characteristic feature of the QTCP, which is never seen in the
conventional spin fluctuation theory. We propose that the general theory of
quantum tricriticality that has nothing to do with the specific Kondo physics
itself, solves puzzles of quantum criticalities widely observed in
heavy-fermion systems such as YbRh2Si2, CeRu2Si2, and beta-YbAlB4. For
YbRh2Si2, our theory successfully reproduces quantitative behaviors of the
experimental ferromagnetic susceptibility and the magnetization curve by
choosing the phenomenological parameters properly. The quantum tricriticality
is also consistent with singularities of other physical properties such as
specific heat, nuclear magnetic relaxation time 1/T_1T, and Hall coefficient.
For CeRu2Si2 and beta-YbAlB4, we point out that the quantum tricriticality is a
possible origin of the anomalous diverging enhancement of the uniform
susceptibility observed in these materials.Comment: 17 pages, 10 fugures, to appear in Journal of the Physical Society of
Japan Vol.78 No.
The divergent eukaryote Trichomonas vaginalis has an m7G cap methyltransferase capable of a single N2 methylation
Eukaryotic RNAs typically contain 5′ cap structures that have been primarily studied in yeast and metazoa. The only known RNA cap structure in unicellular protists is the unusual Cap4 on Trypanosoma brucei mRNAs. We have found that T. vaginalis mRNAs are protected by a 5′ cap structure, however, contrary to that typical for eukaryotes, T. vaginalis spliceosomal snRNAs lack a cap and may contain 5′ monophophates. The distinctive 2,2,7-trimethylguanosine (TMG) cap structure usually found on snRNAs and snoRNAs is produced by hypermethylation of an m7G cap catalyzed by the enzyme trimethylguanosine synthase (Tgs). Here, we biochemically characterize the single T. vaginalis Tgs (TvTgs) encoded in its genome and demonstrate that TvTgs exhibits substrate specificity and amino acid requirements typical of an RNA cap-specific, m7G-dependent N2 methyltransferase. However, recombinant TvTgs is capable of catalysing only a single round of N2 methylation forming a 2,7-dimethylguanosine cap (DMG) as observed previously for Giardia lamblia. In contrast, recombinant Entamoeba histolytica and Trypanosoma brucei Tgs are capable of catalysing the formation of a TMG cap. These data suggest the presence of RNAs with a distinctive 5′ DMG cap in Trichomonas and Giardia lineages that are absent in other protist lineages