39,227 research outputs found
Relaxation time of the topological T1 process in a two-dimensional foam
The elementary topological T1 process in a two-dimensional foam corresponds
to the "flip" of one soap film with respect to the geometrical constraints.
From a mechanical point of view, this T1 process is an elementary relaxation
process through which the entire structure of an out-of-equilibrium foam
evolves. The dynamics of this elementary relaxation process has been poorly
investigated and is generally neglected during simulations of foams. We study
both experimentally and theoretically the T1 dynamics in a dry two-dimensional
foam. We show that the dynamics is controlled by the surface viscoelastic
properties of the soap films (surface shear plus dilatational viscosity, ms+k,
and Gibbs elasticity e), and is independent of the shear viscosity of the bulk
liquid. Moreover, our approach illustrates that the dynamics of T1 relaxation
process provides a convenient tool for measuring the surface rheological
properties: we obtained e = 32+/-8 mN/m and ms+k = 1.3+/-0.7 mPa.m.s for SDS,
and e = 65+/-12 mN/m and ms+k = 31+/-12 mPa.m.s for BSA, in good agreement with
values reported in the literature
Quantum coherence in a ferromagnetic metal: time-dependent conductance fluctuations
Quantum coherence of electrons in ferromagnetic metals is difficult to assess
experimentally. We report the first measurements of time-dependent universal
conductance fluctuations in ferromagnetic metal (NiFe)
nanostructures as a function of temperature and magnetic field strength and
orientation. We find that the cooperon contribution to this quantum correction
is suppressed, and that domain wall motion can be a source of
coherence-enhanced conductance fluctuations. The fluctuations are more strongly
temperature dependent than those in normal metals, hinting that an unusual
dephasing mechanism may be at work.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Fundamental and harmonic emission in interplanetary type 2 radio bursts
Three interplanetary type II radio bursts which show two prominent and long duration bands in their dynamic spectra were analyzed in detail and compared to similar bands in meter wavelength type II events. These bands, which differ by a factor of about two in frequency, were interpreted in terms of fundamental and harmonic emission. The fundamental component has a greater average intensity than the harmonic, due largely to short intense brightenings. The fundamental spectral profile is more narrow than that of the harmonic, with harmonic band typically exhibiting a larger bandwidth to frequency ratio than the fundamental by a factor of two. The fundamental has a larger source size than the harmonic, 160 degrees versus 110 degrees, on average, as viewed from the Sun. Two of the events have source positions which correlate well with the associated flare positions
Advanced composite aileron for L-1011 transport aircraft, task 1
Structural design and maintainability criteria were established and used as a guideline for evaluating a variety of configurations and materials for each of the major subcomponents. From this array of subcomponent designs, several aileron assemblies were formulated and analyzed. The selected design is a multirib configuration with sheet skin covers mechanically fastened to channel section ribs and spars. Qualitative analysis of currently available composite material systems led to the selection of three candidate materials on which comparative structural tests were conducted to measure the effects of environment and impact damage on mechanical property retention. In addition, each system was evaluated for producibility characteristics. From these tests, Thornel 300/5208 unidirectional tape was selected for the front spar and covers, and Thornel 300 fabric/5208 was chosen for the ribs
Electron Transport through Disordered Domain Walls: Coherent and Incoherent Regimes
We study electron transport through a domain wall in a ferromagnetic nanowire
subject to spin-dependent scattering. A scattering matrix formalism is
developed to address both coherent and incoherent transport properties. The
coherent case corresponds to elastic scattering by static defects, which is
dominant at low temperatures, while the incoherent case provides a
phenomenological description of the inelastic scattering present in real
physical systems at room temperature. It is found that disorder scattering
increases the amount of spin-mixing of transmitted electrons, reducing the
adiabaticity. This leads, in the incoherent case, to a reduction of conductance
through the domain wall as compared to a uniformly magnetized region which is
similar to the giant magnetoresistance effect. In the coherent case, a
reduction of weak localization, together with a suppression of spin-reversing
scattering amplitudes, leads to an enhancement of conductance due to the domain
wall in the regime of strong disorder. The total effect of a domain wall on the
conductance of a nanowire is studied by incorporating the disordered regions on
either side of the wall. It is found that spin-dependent scattering in these
regions increases the domain wall magnetoconductance as compared to the effect
found by considering only the scattering inside the wall. This increase is most
dramatic in the narrow wall limit, but remains significant for wide walls.Comment: 23 pages, 12 figure
RANDOM MATRIX THEORY APPROACH TO THE INTENSITY DISTRIBUTIONS OF WAVES PROPAGATING IN A RANDOM MEDIUM
Statistical properties of coherent radiation propagating in a quasi - 1D
random media is studied in the framework of random matrix theory. Distribution
functions for the total transmission coefficient and the angular transmission
coefficient are obtained.Comment: 8 pages, latex, no figures. Submitted to Phys.Rev.
Bohr-Sommerfeld quantization of spin Hamiltonians
The Bohr-Sommerfeld rule for a spin system is obtained, including the first
quantum corrections. The rule applies to both integer and half-integer spin,
and respects Kramers degeneracy for time-reversal invariant systems. It is
tested for various models, in particular the Lipkin-Meshkov-Glick model, and
found to agree very well with exact results.Comment: Revtex 4, no figures, 1 tabl
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