13,889 research outputs found
Force chains and contact network topology in packings of elongated particles
By means of contact dynamic simulations, we investigate the contact network
topology and force chains in two-dimensional packings of elongated particles
modeled by rounded-cap rectangles. The morphology of large packings of
elongated particles in quasistatic equilibrium is complex due to the combined
effects of local nematic ordering of the particles and orientations of contacts
between particles. We show that particle elongation affects force distributions
and force/fabric anisotropy via various local structures allowed by steric
exclusions and the requirement of force balance. As a result, the force
distributions become increasingly broader as particles become more elongated.
Interestingly, the weak force network transforms from a passive stabilizing
agent with respect to strong force chains to an active force-transmitting
network for the whole system. The strongest force chains are carried by
side/side contacts oriented along the principal stress direction.Comment: Soumis a Physical Review
Growth, mortality and recruitment of Nile perch Lates niloticus (L. Centropomidae) in the Nyanza Gulf of Lake Victoria: an evaluation update
A reassessment of the estimates of growth, mortality and recruitment patterns of Nile Perch, Lates niloticus was made based on data from commercial landings collected during the Catch Assessment Survey Programme. Two sets of length frequency data, one each from beach seining and hook and line fisheries, were analyzed. Values of L8 = 169 and 230 (cm TL) and K= 0.18 yr-1 and 0.195 yr-1 were obtained. The total mortality estimates from the catch curve analysis were Z = 0.72 yr-1 and 0.94 yr-1, respectively, with a natural mortality M of about 0.35 for a mean environmental temperature of 27oC. The highest peak for recruitment was in November, December and January with a minor one in June, indicating recruitment of two cohorts per year. These results are discussed and compared to previously available information on L. niloticus in Lake Victoria
Growth, mortality and recruitment of Nile perch Lates niloticus (L. Centropomidae) in the Nyanza Gulf of Lake Victoria: an evaluation update
A reassessment of the estimates of growth, mortality and recruitment patterns of Nile Perch, Lates niloticus was made based on data from commercial landings collected during the Catch Assessment Survey Programme. Two sets of length frequency data, one each from beach seining and hook and line fisheries, were analyzed. Values of L8 = 169 and 230 (cm TL) and K= 0.18 yr-1 and 0.195 yr-1 were obtained. The total mortality estimates from the catch curve analysis were Z = 0.72 yr-1 and 0.94 yr-1, respectively, with a natural mortality M of about 0.35 for a mean environmental temperature of 27oC. The highest peak for recruitment was in November, December and January with a minor one in June, indicating recruitment of two cohorts per year. These results are discussed and compared to previously available information on L. niloticus in Lake Victoria.Growth, Mortality, Recruitment, Kenya, Victoria L., Nyanza Gulf, Lates niloticus
Indeterminacy, Memory, and Motion in a Simple Granular Packing
We apply two theoretical and two numerical methods to the problem of a disk
placed in a groove and subjected to gravity and a torque. Methods assuming
rigid particles are indeterminate -- certain combinations of forces cannot be
calculated, but only constrained by inequalities. In methods assuming
deformable particles, these combinations of forces are determined by the
history of the packing. Thus indeterminacy in rigid particles becomes memory in
deformable ones. Furthermore, the torque needed to rotate the particle was
calculated. Two different paths to motion were identified. In the first,
contact forces change slowly, and the indeterminacy decreases continuously to
zero, and vanishes precisely at the onset of motion, and the torque needed to
rotate the disk is independent of method and packing history. In the second
way, this torque depends on method and on the history of the packing, and the
forces jump discontinuously at the onset of motion.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys Rev
The Electronic Ground State Energy Problem: a New Reduced Density Matrix Approach
We present here a formulation of the electronic ground-state energy in terms
of the second order reduced density matrix, using a duality argument. It is
shown that the computation of the ground-state energy reduces to the search of
the projection of some two-electron reduced Hamiltonian on the dual cone of
-representability conditions. Some numerical results validate the approach,
both for equilibrium geometries and for the dissociation curve of N
Geometrical statistics and vortex structures in helical and nonhelical turbulences
In this paper we conduct an analysis of the geometrical and vortical statistics in the small scales of helical and nonhelical turbulences generated with direct numerical simulations. Using a filtering approach, the helicity flux from large scales to small scales is represented by the subgrid-scale (SGS) helicity dissipation. The SGS helicity dissipation is proportional to the product between the SGS stress tensor and the symmetric part of the filtered vorticity gradient, a tensor we refer to as the vorticity strain rate. We document the statistics of the vorticity strain rate, the vorticity gradient, and the dual vector corresponding to the antisymmetric part of the vorticity gradient. These results provide new insights into the local structures of the vorticity field. We also study the relations between these quantities and vorticity, SGS helicity dissipation, SGS stress tensor, and other quantities. We observe the following in both helical and nonhelical turbulences: (1) there is a high probability to find the dual vector aligned with the intermediate eigenvector of the vorticity strain rate tensor; (2) vorticity tends to make an angle of 45 with both the most contractive and the most extensive eigendirections of the vorticity strain rate tensor; (3) the vorticity strain rate shows a preferred alignment configuration with the SGS stress tensor; (4) in regions with strong straining of the vortex lines, there is a negative correlation between the third order invariant of the vorticity gradient tensor and SGS helicity dissipation fluctuations. The correlation is qualitatively explained in terms of the self-induced motions of local vortex structures, which tend to wind up the vortex lines and generate SGS helicity dissipation. In helical turbulence, we observe that the joint probability density function of the second and third tensor invariants of the vorticity gradient displays skewed distributions, with the direction of skewness depending on the sign of helicity input. We also observe that the intermediate eigenvalue of the vorticity strain rate tensor is more probable to take negative values. These interesting observations, reported for the first time, call for further studies into their dynamical origins and implications. (C) 2010 American Institute of Physics. [doi: 10.1063/1.3336012
On the MHD load and the MHD metage
In analogy with the load and the metage in hydrodynamics, we define
magnetohydrodynamic load and magnetohydrodynamic metage in the case of
magnetofluids. They can be used to write the magnetic field in MHD in Clebsch's
form. We show how these two concepts can be utilised to derive the magnetic
analogue of the Ertel's theorem and also, how in the presence of non-trivial
topology of the magnetic field in the magnetofluid one may associate the
linking number of the magnetic field lines with the invariant MHD loads. The
paper illustrates that the symmetry translation of the MHD metage in the
corresponding label space generates the conservation of cross helicity.Comment: Some issues in the paper are yet to be addressed. Constructive
critisicms are most welcom
An On-the-fly Provenance Tracking Mechanism for Stream Processing Systems
Applications that operate over streaming data withhigh-volume and real-time processing requirements are becomingincreasingly important. These applications process streamingdata in real-time and deliver instantaneous responses to supportprecise and on-time decisions. In such systems, traceability -the ability to verify and investigate the source of a particularoutput - in real-time is extremely important. This ability allowsraw streaming data to be checked and processing steps to beverified and validated in timely manner. Therefore, it is crucialthat stream systems have a mechanism for dynamically trackingprovenance - the process that produced result data - at executiontime, which we refer to as on-the-fly stream provenance tracking.In this paper, we propose a novel on-the-fly provenance trackingmechanism that enables provenance queries to be performeddynamically without requiring provenance assertions to be storedpersistently. We demonstrate how our provenance mechanismworks by means of an on-the-fly provenance tracking algorithm.The experimental evaluation shows that our provenance solutiondoes not have a significant effect on the normal processing ofstream systems given a 7% overhead. Moreover, our provenancesolution offers low-latency processing (0.3 ms per additionalcomponent) with reasonable memory consumption.<br/
Neutrino Mass Patterns within the See-saw Model from Multi-localization along Extra Dimensions
We study a multi-localization model for charged leptons and neutrinos,
including the possibility of a see-saw mechanism. This framework offers the
opportunity to allow for realistic solutions in a consistent model without
fine-tuning of parameters, even if quarks are also considered. Those solutions
predict that the large Majorana mass eigenvalues for right-handed neutrinos are
of the same order of magnitude, although this almost common mass can span a
large range (bounded from above by ). The model also
predicts Majorana masses between and $\sim 5 \
10^{-2}{\rm eV}\beta\theta_{13}10^{-2} \lesssim
\sin \theta_{13} \lesssim 10^{-1}$, but smaller values are not totally excluded
by the model.Comment: 36 pages, 8 figure
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