5,802 research outputs found
Program computes equilibrium normal shock and stagnation point solutions for arbitrary gas mixtures
Program computes solutions for flow parameters in arbitrary gas mixtures behind a normal and a reflected normal shock, for in-flight and shock-tube stagnation conditions. Equilibrium flow calculations are made by a free-energy minimization technique coupled with the steady-flow conservation equations and a modified Newton-Raphson iterative scheme
General principles for the non-equilibrium relaxation of populations in quantum materials
We examine the problem of how excited populations of electrons relax after
they have been excited by a pump. We include three of the most important
relaxation processes: (i) impurity scattering; (ii) Coulomb scattering; and
(iii) electron-phonon scattering. The relaxation of an excited population of
electrons is one of the most fundamental processes measured in pump/probe
experiments, but its interpretation remains under debate. We show how several
common assumptions about non-equilibrium relaxation that are pervasive in the
field may not hold under quite general conditions. The analysis shows that
non-equilibrium relaxation is more complex than previously thought, but it
yields to recently developed theoretical methods in non-equilibrium theory. In
this work, we show how one can use many-body theory to properly interpret and
analyze these complex systems. We focus much of the discussion on implications
of these results for experiment.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figure
Lightcone renormalization and quantum quenches in one-dimensional Hubbard models
The Lieb-Robinson bound implies that the unitary time evolution of an
operator can be restricted to an effective light cone for any Hamiltonian with
short-range interactions. Here we present a very efficient renormalization
group algorithm based on this light cone structure to study the time evolution
of prepared initial states in the thermodynamic limit in one-dimensional
quantum systems. The algorithm does not require translational invariance and
allows for an easy implementation of local conservation laws. We use the
algorithm to investigate the relaxation dynamics of double occupancies in
fermionic Hubbard models as well as a possible thermalization. For the
integrable Hubbard model we find a pure power-law decay of the number of doubly
occupied sites towards the value in the long-time limit while the decay becomes
exponential when adding a nearest neighbor interaction. In accordance with the
eigenstate thermalization hypothesis, the long-time limit is reasonably well
described by a thermal average. We point out though that such a description
naturally requires the use of negative temperatures. Finally, we study a
doublon impurity in a N\'eel background and find that the excess charge and
spin spread at different velocities, providing an example of spin-charge
separation in a highly excited state.Comment: published versio
Determining the forsterite abundance of the dust around Asymptotic Giant Branch stars
Aims. We present a diagnostic tool to determine the abundance of the
crystalline silicate forsterite in AGB stars surrounded by a thick shell of
silicate dust. Using six infrared spectra of high mass-loss oxygen rich AGB
stars we obtain the forsterite abundance of their dust shells.
Methods. We use a monte carlo radiative transfer code to calculate infrared
spectra of dust enshrouded AGB stars. We vary the dust composition, mass-loss
rate and outer radius. We focus on the strength of the 11.3 and the 33.6 \mu m
forsterite bands, that probe the most recent (11.3 \mu m) and older (33.6 \mu
m) mass-loss history of the star. Simple diagnostic diagrams are derived,
allowing direct comparison to observed band strengths.
Results. Our analysis shows that the 11.3 \mu m forsterite band is a robust
indicator for the forsterite abundance of the current mass-loss period for AGB
stars with an optically thick dust shell. The 33.6 \mu m band of forsterite is
sensitive to changes in the density and the geometry of the emitting dust
shell, and so a less robust indicator. Applying our method to six high
mass-loss rate AGB stars shows that AGB stars can have forsterite abundances of
12% by mass and higher, which is more than the previously found maximum
abundance of 5%.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
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