16,734 research outputs found
Covariant statistical mechanics and the stress-energy tensor
After recapitulating the covariant formalism of equilibrium statistical
mechanics in special relativity and extending it to the case of a non-vanishing
spin tensor, we show that the relativistic stress-energy tensor at
thermodynamical equilibrium can be obtained from a functional derivative of the
partition function with respect to the inverse temperature four-vector \beta.
For usual thermodynamical equilibrium, the stress-energy tensor turns out to be
the derivative of the relativistic thermodynamic potential current with respect
to the four-vector \beta, i.e. T^{\mu \nu} = - \partial \Phi^\mu/\partial
\beta_\nu. This formula establishes a relation between stress-energy tensor and
entropy current at equilibrium possibly extendable to non-equilibrium
hydrodynamics.Comment: 4 pages. Final version accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let
Agglomeration externalities, innovation and regional growth: Theoretical perspectives and meta-analysis
Technological change and innovation and are central to the quest for regional development. In the globally-connected knowledge-driven economy, the relevance of agglomeration forces that rely on proximity continues to increase, paradoxically despite declining real costs of information, communication and transportation. Globally, the proportion of the population living in cities continues to grow and sprawling cities remain the engines of regional economic transformation. The growth of cities results from a complex chain that starts with scale, density and geography, which then combine with industrial structure characterised by its extent of specialisation, competition and diversity, to yield innovation and productivity growth that encourages employment expansion, and further urban growth through inward migration. This paper revisits the central part of this virtuous circle, namely the Marshall-Arrow-Romer externalities (specialisation), Jacobs externalities (diversity) and Porter externalities (competition) that have provided alternative explanations for innovation and urban growth. The paper evaluates the statistical robustness of evidence for such externalities presented in 31 scientific articles, all building on the seminal work of Glaeser et al. (1992). We aim to explain variation in estimation results using study characteristics by means of ordered probit analysis. Among the results, we find that the impact of diversity depends on how it is measured and that diversity is important for the high-tech sector. High population density increases the chance of finding positive effects of specialisation on growth. More recent data find more positive results for both specialization and diversity, suggesting that agglomeration externalities become more important over time. Finally, primary study results depend on whether or not the externalities are considered jointly and on other features of the regression model specification
Synthesis and viscosity behavior of poly(Îł-p-biphenylmethyl-L-glutamate) in benzene/dichloroacetic acid mixtures, a comparison with poly(Îł-benzyl-L-glutamate)
The synthesis of poly(γ-p-biphenylmethyl-L-glutamate), PBPLG, (poly{L-imino-1-[2-(4-biphenylylmethoxycarbonyl)ethyl]-2-oxoethylene}), (1d) is described. The viscosity behavior of this polymer in benzene/dichloroacetic acid mixtures (c=0,2.10 -3 - 1,4.10 -3 g/cm3) at 25°CC is investigated. The results are compared with measurements on poly(γ-benzyl-L-glutamate), PBLG, (poly[L-imino-1-(2-benzyloxycarbonylethyl)-2-oxoethylene]), (1c) under the same conditions. A transition from a rigid hydrogen bonded helix to a random solvated coil occurs in two stages for both: PBPLG (first stage 0-55%, second stage 55-100% dichloroacetic acid) and PBLG (first stage 0-70%, second stage 70-100% dichloroacetic acid). \ud
Therefore, the introduction of a p-phenyl substituent in PBLG leads to a less stable helix in benzene/dichloroacetic acid mixtures. \ud
The stability and viscosity behavior of PBLG in benzene/dichloroacetic acid mixtures (c=0,2.10 - 3 - 1,4.10 - 3g/cm3) is quite similar to the behavior of PBLG in m-cresol/dichloroacetic acid mixtures (c=1,0.10 - 3 - 4,0.10 - 3 g/cm3)
Nonpolar resistive switching in Cu/SiC/Au non-volatile resistive memory devices
Amorphous silicon carbide (a-SiC) based resistive memory (RM) Cu/a-SiC/Au devices were fabricated and their resistive switching characteristics investigated. All four possible modes of nonpolar resistive switching were achieved with ON/OFF ratio in the range 10 6-10 8. Detailed current-voltage I-V characteristics analysis suggests that the conduction mechanism in low resistance state is due to the formation of metallic filaments. Schottky emission is proven to be the dominant conduction mechanism in high resistance state which results from the Schottky contacts between the metal electrodes and SiC. ON/OFF ratios exceeding 10 7 over 10 years were also predicted from state retention characterizations. These results suggest promising application potentials for Cu/a-SiC/Au RM
Speed limits for quantum gates in multi-qubit systems
We use analytical and numerical calculations to obtain speed limits for
various unitary quantum operations in multiqubit systems under typical
experimental conditions. The operations that we consider include single-, two-,
and three-qubit gates, as well as quantum-state transfer in a chain of qubits.
We find in particular that simple methods for implementing two-qubit gates
generally provide the fastest possible implementations of these gates. We also
find that the three-qubit Toffoli gate time varies greatly depending on the
type of interactions and the system's geometry, taking only slightly longer
than a two-qubit controlled-NOT (CNOT) gate for a triangle geometry. The speed
limit for quantum-state transfer across a qubit chain is set by the maximum
spin-wave speed in the chain.Comment: 7 pages (two-column), 2 figures, 2 table
Relativistic viscoelastic fluid mechanics
A detailed study is carried out for the relativistic theory of
viscoelasticity which was recently constructed on the basis of Onsager's linear
nonequilibrium thermodynamics. After rederiving the theory using a local
argument with the entropy current, we show that this theory universally reduces
to the standard relativistic Navier-Stokes fluid mechanics in the long time
limit. Since effects of elasticity are taken into account, the dynamics at
short time scales is modified from that given by the Navier-Stokes equations,
so that acausal problems intrinsic to relativistic Navier-Stokes fluids are
significantly remedied. We in particular show that the wave equations for the
propagation of disturbance around a hydrostatic equilibrium in Minkowski
spacetime become symmetric hyperbolic for some range of parameters, so that the
model is free of acausality problems. This observation suggests that the
relativistic viscoelastic model with such parameters can be regarded as a
causal completion of relativistic Navier-Stokes fluid mechanics. By adjusting
parameters to various values, this theory can treat a wide variety of materials
including elastic materials, Maxwell materials, Kelvin-Voigt materials, and (a
nonlinearly generalized version of) simplified Israel-Stewart fluids, and thus
we expect the theory to be the most universal description of single-component
relativistic continuum materials. We also show that the presence of strains and
the corresponding change in temperature are naturally unified through the
Tolman law in a generally covariant description of continuum mechanics.Comment: 52pages, 11figures; v2: minor corrections; v3: minor corrections, to
appear in Physical Review E; v4: minor change
- âŠ