10,753,804 research outputs found
Fast ignition of fusion targets by laser-driven electrons
We present hybrid PIC simulations of fast electron transport and energy
deposition in pre-compressed fusion targets, taking full account of collective
magnetic effects and the hydrodynamic response of the background plasma.
Results on actual ignition of an imploded fast ignition configuration are shown
accounting for the increased beam divergence found in recent experiments [J.S.
Green et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 015003 (2008)] and the reduction of the
electron kinetic energy due to profile steepening predicted by advanced PIC
simulations [B. Chrisman et al. Phys. Plasmas 15, 056309 (2008)]. Target
ignition is studied as a function of injected electron energy, distance of
cone-tip to dense core, initial divergence and kinetic energy of the
relativistic electron beam. We found that beam collimation reduces
substantially the ignition energies of the cone-guided fuel configuration
assumed here.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures. accepted for publication in Plasma Physics and
Controlled Fusio
The frustrated spin-1/2 J1-J2 Heisenberg ferromagnet on the square lattice: Exact diagonalization and Coupled-Cluster study
We investigate the ground-state magnetic order of the spin-1/2 J1-J2
Heisenberg model on the square lattice with ferromagnetic nearest-neighbor
exchange J1<0 and frustrating antiferromagnetic next-nearest neighbor exchange
J2>0. We use the coupled-cluster method to high orders of approximation and
Lanczos exact diagonalization of finite lattices of up to N=40 sites in order
to calculate the ground-state energy, the spin-spin correlation functions, and
the magnetic order parameter. We find that the transition point at which the
ferromagnetic ground state disappears is given by J2^{c1}=0.393|J1| (exact
diagonalization) and J2^{c1}=0.394|J1| (coupled-cluster method). We compare our
results for ferromagnetic J1 with established results for the spin-1/2 J1-J2
Heisenberg model with antiferromagnetic J1. We find that both models (i.e.,
ferro- and antiferromagnetic J1) behave similarly for large J2, although
significant differences between them are observed for J2/|J1| \lesssim 0.6.
Although the semiclassical collinear magnetic long-range order breaks down at
J2^{c2} \approx 0.6J1 for antiferromagnetic J1, we do not find a similar
breakdown of this kind of long-range order until J2 \sim 0.4|J1| for the model
with ferromagnetic J1. Unlike the case for antiferromagnetic J1, if an
intermediate disordered phase does occur between the phases exhibiting
semiclassical collinear stripe order and ferromagnetic order for ferromagnetic
J1 then it is likely to be over a very small range below J2 \sim 0.4|J1|.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, 2 table
Can intrinsic noise induce various resonant peaks?
We theoretically describe how weak signals may be efficiently transmitted
throughout more than one frequency range in noisy excitable media by kind of
stochastic multiresonance. This serves us here to reinterpret recent
experiments in neuroscience, and to suggest that many other systems in nature
might be able to exhibit several resonances. In fact, the observed behavior
happens in our (network) model as a result of competition between (1) changes
in the transmitted signals as if the units were varying their activation
threshold, and (2) adaptive noise realized in the model as rapid
activity-dependent fluctuations of the connection intensities. These two
conditions are indeed known to characterize heterogeneously networked systems
of excitable units, e.g., sets of neurons and synapses in the brain. Our
results may find application also in the design of detector devices.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
- …