10,474 research outputs found
The role of pinning and instability in a class of non-equilibrium growth models
We study the dynamics of a growing crystalline facet where the growth
mechanism is controlled by the geometry of the local curvature. A continuum
model, in (2+1) dimensions, is developed in analogy with the
Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) model is considered for the purpose. Following
standard coarse graining procedures, it is shown that in the large time, long
distance limit, the continuum model predicts a curvature independent KPZ phase,
thereby suppressing all explicit effects of curvature and local pinning in the
system, in the "perturbative" limit. A direct numerical integration of this
growth equation, in 1+1 dimensions, supports this observation below a critical
parametric range, above which generic instabilities, in the form of isolated
pillared structures lead to deviations from standard scaling behavior.
Possibilities of controlling this instability by introducing statistically
"irrelevant" (in the sense of renormalization groups) higher ordered
nonlinearities have also been discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, references updated and minor changes in the
text, to appear in Euro. Phys. J.
Dynamics of Pulsed Flow in an Elastic Tube
Internal haemorrhage, often leading to cardio-vascular arrest happens to be
one of the prime sources of high fatality rates in mammals. We propose a
simplistic model of fluid flow to specify the location of the haemorrhagic
spots, which, if located accurately, could be operated upon leading to a
possible cure. The model we employ for the purpose is inspired by fluid
mechanics and consists of a viscous fluid, pumped by a periodic force and
flowing through an elastic tube. The analogy is with that of blood, pumped from
the heart and flowing through an arte ry or vein. Our results, aided by
graphical illustrations, match reasonably well with experimental observations.Comment: 6 pages and 4 figure
On Radiative Acceleration of Jets and Outflows from Advective Disks
Jets and outflows are known to form out of advective accretion flows around
black holes. Hard photons from the centrifugal barrier directly hit the
electrons and deposit momentum on them. For optically thick flows such
deposition is not efficient, but for optically thin flows matter could be
accelerated to relativistic speed. In fact, even bound matter could be made
free through successive deposition. We discuss these possibilities.Comment: AIP Publication, Macro include
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