223 research outputs found
Universal long-wavelength nonlinear optical response of noble gases
We demonstrate numerically that the long-wavelength nonlinear dipole moment
and ionization rate versus electric field strength for different noble
gases can be scaled onto each other, revealing universal functions that
characterize the form of the nonlinear response. We elucidate the physical
origin of the universality by using a metastable state analysis of the
light-atom interaction in combination with a scaling analysis. Our results also
provide a powerful new means of characterizing the nonlinear response in the
mid-infrared and long-wave infrared for optical filamentation studies.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure
ON THE LOW-TEMPERATURE ORDERING OF THE 3D ATIFERROMAGNETIC THREE-STATE POTTS MODEL
The antiferromagnetic three-state Potts model on the simple-cubic lattice is
studied using Monte Carlo simulations. The ordering in a medium temperature
range below the critical point is investigated in detail. Two different regimes
have been observed: The so-called broken sublattice-symmetry phase dominates at
sufficiently low temperatures, while the phase just below the critical point is
characterized by an effectively continuous order parameter and by a fully
restored rotational symmetry. However, the later phase is not the
permutationally sublattice symmetric phase recently predicted by the cluster
variation method.Comment: 20 pages with 9 figures in a single postscript file (compressed and
uuencoded by uufiles -gz -9) plus two big figures in postscript file
Magnetization Switching in Single-Domain Ferromagnets
A model for single-domain uniaxial ferromagnetic particles with high
anisotropy, the Ising model, is studied. Recent experimental observations have
been made of the probability that the magnetization has not switched. Here an
approach is described in which it is emphasized that a ferromagnetic particle
in an unfavorable field is in fact a metastable system, and the switching is
accomplished through the nucleation and subsequent growth of localized
droplets. Nucleation theory is applied to finite systems to determine the
coercivity as a function of particle size and to calculate the probability of
not switching. Both of these quantities are modified by different boundary
conditions, magnetostatic interactions, and quenched disorder.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX, 2 figures, documentstyle{elsart} More fits and
Mathematica notebook at http://www.scri.fsu.edu/~novotny/magnetism.html To
appear in J.Mag.Mag.Mater. Conference Proceedings of 7th International
Conference on Magnetism Cairns, Australia, August, 199
Slow Forcing in the Projective Dynamics Method
We provide a proof that when there is no forcing the recently introduced
projective dynamics Monte Carlo algorithm gives the exact lifetime of the
metastable state, within statistical uncertainties. We also show numerical
evidence illustrating that for slow forcing the approach to the zero-forcing
limit is rather rapid. The model studied numerically is the 3-dimensional
3-state Potts ferromagnet.Comment: 1 figure, invited submission to CCP'98 conference, submitted to
Computer Physics Communication
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