27,912 research outputs found
Active Matter on Asymmetric Substrates
For collections of particles in a thermal bath interacting with an asymmetric
substrate, it is possible for a ratchet effect to occur where the particles
undergo a net dc motion in response to an ac forcing. Ratchet effects have been
demonstrated in a variety of systems including colloids as well as magnetic
vortices in type-II superconductors. Here we examine the case of active matter
or self-driven particles interacting with asymmetric substrates. Active matter
systems include self-motile colloidal particles undergoing catalysis, swimming
bacteria, artificial swimmers, crawling cells, and motor proteins. We show that
a ratchet effect can arise in this type of system even in the absence of ac
forcing. The directed motion occurs for certain particle-substrate interaction
rules and its magnitude depends on the amount of time the particles spend
swimming in one direction before turning and swimming in a new direction. For
strictly Brownian particles there is no ratchet effect. If the particles
reflect off the barriers or scatter from the barriers according to Snell's law
there is no ratchet effect; however, if the particles can align with the
barriers or move along the barriers, directed motion arises. We also find that
under certain motion rules, particles accumulate along the walls of the
container in agreement with experiment. We also examine pattern formation for
synchronized particle motion. We discuss possible applications of this system
for self-assembly, extracting work, and sorting as well as future directions
such as considering collective interactions and flocking models.Comment: 13 pages, 11 postscript figures. Minor correction adde
Global Cosmological Parameters Determined Using Classical Double Radio Galaxies
A sample of 20 powerful extended radio galaxies with redshifts between zero
and two were used to determine constraints on global cosmological parameters.
Data for six radio sources were obtained from the VLA archive, analyzed, and
combined with the sample of 14 radio galaxies used previously by Guerra & Daly
to determine cosmological parameters. The results are consistent with our
previous results, and indicate that the current value of the mean mass density
of the universe is significantly less than the critical value. A universe with
of unity is ruled out at 99.0% confidence, and the best fitting
values of in matter are and
assuming zero space curvature and zero cosmological
constant, respectively. Note that identical results obtain when the low
redshift bin, which includes Cygnus A, is excluded; these results are
independent of whether the radio source Cygnus A is included. The method does
not rely on a zero-redshift normalization.
The radio properties of each source are also used to determine the density of
the gas in the vicinity of the source, and the beam power of the source. The
six new radio sources have physical characteristics similar to those found for
the original 14 sources. The density of the gas around these radio sources is
typical of gas in present day clusters of galaxies. The beam powers are
typically about .Comment: 39 pages includes 21 figures, accepted to Ap
Heat current and spin current through a carbon-nanotube-based molecular quantum pump
We investigate the heat current and spin current through a carbon-nanotube-based molecular quantum pump. We have derived a general expression for the heat current at finite frequency so that the heat current can be calculated order by order in pumping amplitudes. We have applied our theory to a carbon-nanotube-based quantum pump. The heat current generated during the parametric pumping has been calculated at small frequencies for finite pumping amplitude. At finite frequencies, we have calculated the heat current to the second order in pumping amplitudes. The photon assisted process is clearly observed in the heat current. In the presence of magnetic field, the carbon-nanotube-based quantum pump can function as a spin pump, a molecular device by which a dc pure spin current without accompanying charge current is generated at zero bias voltage via a cyclic deformation of two device parameters. The pure spin current is achieved when the Fermi energy is near the resonant level of the quantum pump. We find that the pure spin current is sensitive to system parameters such as pumping amplitude, external magnetic field, and gate voltage.published_or_final_versio
Simulation of transition dynamics to high confinement in fusion plasmas
The transition dynamics from the low (L) to the high (H) confinement mode in
magnetically confined plasmas is investigated using a first-principles
four-field fluid model. Numerical results are in close agreement with
measurements from the Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak - EAST.
Particularly, the slow transition with an intermediate dithering phase is well
reproduced by the numerical solutions. Additionally, the model reproduces the
experimentally determined L-H transition power threshold scaling that the ion
power threshold increases with increasing particle density. The results hold
promise for developing predictive models of the transition, essential for
understanding and optimizing future fusion power reactors
Phonon Life-times from first principles self consistent lattice dynamics
Phonon lifetime calculations from first principles usually rely on time
consuming molecular dynamics calculations, or density functional perturbation
theory (DFPT) where the zero temperature crystal structure is assumed to be
dynamically stable. Here a new and effective method for calculating phonon
lifetimes from first principles is presented, not limited to crystal structures
stable at 0 K, and potentially much more effective than most corresponding
molecular dynamics calculations. The method is based on the recently developed
self consistent lattice dynamical method and is here tested by calculating the
bcc phase phonon lifetimes of Li, Na, Ti and Zr, as representative examples.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figur
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