36,889 research outputs found
Computerized polar plots by a cathode ray tube/grid overlay method
Overlay is aligned with four calibration dots so it is not affected by CRT drift or changes in vertical or horizontal gain when producing Nyquist /frequency-response phase/amplitude/ plots. Method produces over 50 plots per hour
Fourier Path Integral Monte Carlo Method for the Calculation of the Microcanonical Density of States
Using a Hubbard-Stratonovich transformation coupled with Fourier path
integral methods, expressions are derived for the numerical evaluation of the
microcanonical density of states for quantum particles obeying Boltzmann
statistics. A numerical algorithmis suggested to evaluate the quantum density
of states and illustrated on a one-dimensional model system.Comment: Journal of Chemical Physic
A computer model of solar panel-plasma interactions
High power solar arrays for satellite power systems are presently being planned with dimensions of kilometers, and with tens of kilovolts distributed over their surface. Such systems face many plasma interaction problems, such as power leakage to the plasma, particle focusing, and anomalous arcing. These effects cannot be adequately modeled without detailed knowledge of the plasma sheath structure and space charge effects. Laboratory studies of 1 by 10 meter solar array in a simulated low Earth orbit plasma are discussed. The plasma screening process is discussed, program theory is outlined, and a series of calibration models is presented. These models are designed to demonstrate that PANEL is capable of accurate self consistant space charge calculations. Such models include PANEL predictions for the Child-Langmuir diode problem
Computational Study of the Structure and Thermodynamic Properties of Ammonium Chloride Clusters Using a Parallel J-Walking Approach
The thermodynamic and structural properties of (NHCl) clusters,
n=3-10 are studied. Using the method of simulated annealing, the geometries of
several isomers for each cluster size are examined. Jump-walking Monte Carlo
simulations are then used to compute the constant-volume heat capacity for each
cluster size over a wide temperature range. To carry out these simulations a
new parallel algorithm is developed using the Parallel Virtual Machine (PVM)
software package. Features of the cluster potential energy surfaces, such as
energy differences among isomers and rotational barriers of the ammonium ions,
are found to play important roles in determining the shape of the heat capacity
curves.Comment: Journal of Chemical Physics, accepted for publicatio
Taming the rugged landscape: production, reordering, and stabilization of selected cluster inherent structures in the X_(13-n)Y_n system
We present studies of the potential energy landscape of selected binary
Lennard-Jones thirteen atom clusters. The effect of adding selected impurity
atoms to a homogeneous cluster is explored. We analyze the energy landscapes of
the studied systems using disconnectivity graphs. The required inherent
structures and transition states for the construction of disconnectivity graphs
are found by combination of conjugate gradient and eigenvector-following
methods. We show that it is possible to controllably induce new structures as
well as reorder and stabilize existing structures that are characteristic of
higher-lying minima. Moreover, it is shown that the selected structures can
have experimentally relevant lifetimes.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figures, submitted to J. Chem. Phys. Reasons for
replacing a paper: figures 2, 3, 7 and 11 did not show up correctl
Locating transition states using double-ended classical trajectories
In this paper we present a method for locating transition states and
higher-order saddles on potential energy surfaces using double-ended classical
trajectories. We then apply this method to 7- and 8-atom Lennard-Jones
clusters, finding one previously unreported transition state for the 7-atom
cluster and two for the 8-atom cluster.Comment: Journal of Chemical Physics, 13 page
Phase changes in 38 atom Lennard-Jones clusters. II: A parallel tempering study of equilibrium and dynamic properties in the molecular dynamics and microcanonical
We study the 38-atom Lennard-Jones cluster with parallel tempering Monte
Carlo methods in the microcanonical and molecular dynamics ensembles. A new
Monte Carlo algorithm is presented that samples rigorously the molecular
dynamics ensemble for a system at constant total energy, linear and angular
momenta. By combining the parallel tempering technique with molecular dynamics
methods, we develop a hybrid method to overcome quasi-ergodicity and to extract
both equilibrium and dynamical properties from Monte Carlo and molecular
dynamics simulations. Several thermodynamic, structural and dynamical
properties are investigated for LJ, including the caloric curve, the
diffusion constant and the largest Lyapunov exponent. The importance of
insuring ergodicity in molecular dynamics simulations is illustrated by
comparing the results of ergodic simulations with earlier molecular dynamics
simulations.Comment: Journal of Chemical Physics, accepte
Energy estimators for random series path-integral methods
We perform a thorough analysis on the choice of estimators for random series
path integral methods. In particular, we show that both the thermodynamic
(T-method) and the direct (H-method) energy estimators have finite variances
and are straightforward to implement. It is demonstrated that the agreement
between the T-method and the H-method estimators provides an important
consistency check on the quality of the path integral simulations. We
illustrate the behavior of the various estimators by computing the total,
kinetic, and potential energies of a molecular hydrogen cluster using three
different path integral techniques. Statistical tests are employed to validate
the sampling strategy adopted as well as to measure the performance of the
parallel random number generator utilized in the Monte Carlo simulation. Some
issues raised by previous simulations of the hydrogen cluster are clarified.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure, 3 table
Heat capacity estimators for random series path-integral methods by finite-difference schemes
Previous heat capacity estimators used in path integral simulations either
have large variances that grow to infinity with the number of path variables or
require the evaluation of first and second order derivatives of the potential.
In the present paper, we show that the evaluation of the total energy by the
T-method estimator and of the heat capacity by the TT-method estimator can be
implemented by a finite difference scheme in a stable fashion. As such, the
variances of the resulting estimators are finite and the evaluation of the
estimators requires the potential function only. By comparison with the task of
computing the partition function, the evaluation of the estimators requires k +
1 times more calls to the potential, where k is the order of the difference
scheme employed. Quantum Monte Carlo simulations for the Ne_13 cluster
demonstrate that a second order central-difference scheme should suffice for
most applications.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Radiolysis of Macromolecular Organic Material in Mars-Relevant Mineral Matrices
The fate of organic material on Mars after deposition is crucial to interpreting the source of these molecules. Previous work has addressed how various organic compounds at millimeter depths in sediments respond to ultraviolet radiation. In contrast, this study addressed how highenergy particle radiation (200MeV protons, simulating the effect of galactic cosmic rays and solar wind at depths of <45 cm) inuences organic macromolecules in sediments. Specically, we report the generation of organicacid radiolysis products after exposure to radiation doses equivalent to geological time scales (17 Myr). We found that formate and oxalate were produced from a variety of organic starting materials and mineral matrices. Unlike ultravioletdriven reactions that can invoke Fenton chemistry to produce organic acids, our work suggests that irradiation of semiconductor surfaces, such as TiO2 or possible clay minerals found on Mars, forms oxygen and hydroxyl radical species, which can break down macromolecules into organic acids. We also investigated the metastability of benzoate in multiple mineral matrices. Benzoate was added to samples prior to irradiation and persisted up to 500 kGys of exposure. Our ndings suggest that organic acids are likely a major component of organic material buried at depth on Mars
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