7,394 research outputs found
Post-injection normal closure of fractures as a mechanism for induced seismicity
Understanding the controlling mechanisms underlying injection-induced
seismicity is important for optimizing reservoir productivity and addressing
seismicity-related concerns related to hydraulic stimulation in Enhanced
Geothermal Systems. Hydraulic stimulation enhances permeability through
elevated pressures, which cause normal deformations, and the shear slip of
pre-existing fractures. Previous experiments indicate that fracture deformation
in the normal direction reverses as the pressure decreases, e.g., at the end of
stimulation. We hypothesize that this normal closure of fractures enhances
pressure propagation away from the injection region and significantly increases
the potential for post-injection seismicity. To test this hypothesis, hydraulic
stimulation is modeled by numerically coupling fracture deformation, pressure
diffusion and stress alterations for a synthetic geothermal reservoir in which
the flow and mechanics are strongly affected by a complex three-dimensional
fracture network. The role of the normal closure of fractures is verified by
comparing simulations conducted with and without the normal closure effect
Dynamics of axial separation in long rotating drums
We propose a continuum description for the axial separation of granular
materials in a long rotating drum. The model, operating with two local
variables, concentration difference and the dynamic angle of repose, describes
both initial transient traveling wave dynamics and long-term segregation of the
binary mixture. Segregation proceeds through ultra-slow logarithmic coarsening.Comment: 4 pages, 3 Postscript figures; submitted to PR
Velocity Distributions of Granular Gases with Drag and with Long-Range Interactions
We study velocity statistics of electrostatically driven granular gases. For
two different experiments: (i) non-magnetic particles in a viscous fluid and
(ii) magnetic particles in air, the velocity distribution is non-Maxwellian,
and its high-energy tail is exponential, P(v) ~ exp(-|v|). This behavior is
consistent with kinetic theory of driven dissipative particles. For particles
immersed in a fluid, viscous damping is responsible for the exponential tail,
while for magnetic particles, long-range interactions cause the exponential
tail. We conclude that velocity statistics of dissipative gases are sensitive
to the fluid environment and to the form of the particle interaction.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Knots and Random Walks in Vibrated Granular Chains
We study experimentally statistical properties of the opening times of knots
in vertically vibrated granular chains. Our measurements are in good
qualitative and quantitative agreement with a theoretical model involving three
random walks interacting via hard core exclusion in one spatial dimension. In
particular, the knot survival probability follows a universal scaling function
which is independent of the chain length, with a corresponding diffusive
characteristic time scale. Both the large-exit-time and the small-exit-time
tails of the distribution are suppressed exponentially, and the corresponding
decay coefficients are in excellent agreement with the theoretical values.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Estimating good discrete partitions from observed data: symbolic false nearest neighbors
A symbolic analysis of observed time series data requires making a discrete
partition of a continuous state space containing observations of the dynamics.
A particular kind of partition, called ``generating'', preserves all dynamical
information of a deterministic map in the symbolic representation, but such
partitions are not obvious beyond one dimension, and existing methods to find
them require significant knowledge of the dynamical evolution operator or the
spectrum of unstable periodic orbits. We introduce a statistic and algorithm to
refine empirical partitions for symbolic state reconstruction. This method
optimizes an essential property of a generating partition: avoiding topological
degeneracies. It requires only the observed time series and is sensible even in
the presence of noise when no truly generating partition is possible. Because
of its resemblance to a geometrical statistic frequently used for
reconstructing valid time-delay embeddings, we call the algorithm ``symbolic
false nearest neighbors''
Nearest pattern interaction and global pattern formation
We studied the effect of nearest pattern interaction on a globally pattern
formation in a 2-dimensional space, where patterns are to grow initially from a
noise in the presence of periodic supply of energy. Although our approach is
general, we found that this study is relevant in particular to the pattern
formation on a periodically vibrated granular layer, as it gives a unified
perspective of the experimentally observed pattern dynamics such as oscillon
and stripe formations, skew-varicose and crossroll instabilities, and also a
kink formation and decoration
Demonstration of the Complementarity of One- and Two-Photon Interference
The visibilities of second-order (single-photon) and fourth-order
(two-photon) interference have been observed in a Young's double-slit
experiment using light generated by spontaneous parametric down-conversion and
a photon-counting intensified CCD camera. Coherence and entanglement underlie
one-and two-photon interference, respectively. As the effective source size is
increased, coherence is diminished while entanglement is enhanced, so that the
visibility of single-photon interference decreases while that of two-photon
interference increases. This is the first experimental demonstration of the
complementarity between single- and two-photon interference (coherence and
entanglement) in the spatial domain.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figure
A Model for Force Fluctuations in Bead Packs
We study theoretically the complex network of forces that is responsible for
the static structure and properties of granular materials. We present detailed
calculations for a model in which the fluctuations in the force distribution
arise because of variations in the contact angles and the constraints imposed
by the force balance on each bead of the pile. We compare our results for force
distribution function for this model, including exact results for certain
contact angle probability distributions, with numerical simulations of force
distributions in random sphere packings. This model reproduces many aspects of
the force distribution observed both in experiment and in numerical simulations
of sphere packings
Inelastic Collapse of Three Particles
A system of three particles undergoing inelastic collisions in arbitrary
spatial dimensions is studied with the aim of establishing the domain of
``inelastic collapse''---an infinite number of collisions which take place in a
finite time. Analytic and simulation results show that for a sufficiently small
restitution coefficient, , collapse can
occur. In one dimension, such a collapse is stable against small perturbations
within this entire range. In higher dimensions, the collapse can be stable
against small variations of initial conditions, within a smaller range,
.Comment: 6 pages, figures on request, accepted by PR
Entanglement, Mixedness, and Spin-Flip Symmetry in Multiple-Qubit Systems
A relationship between a recently introduced multipartite entanglement
measure, state mixedness, and spin-flip symmetry is established for any finite
number of qubits. It is also shown that, within those classes of states
invariant under the spin-flip transformation, there is a complementarity
relation between multipartite entanglement and mixedness. A number of example
classes of multiple-qubit systems are studied in light of this relationship.Comment: To appear in Physical Review A; submitted 14 May 200
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