15,900 research outputs found

    Bifurcation analysis in a frustrated nematic cell

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    Using Landau-de Gennes theory to describe nematic order, we study a frustrated cell consisting of nematic liquid crystal confined between two parallel plates. We prove the uniqueness of equilibrium states for a small cell width. Letting the cell width grow, we study the behaviour of this unique solution. Restricting ourselves to a certain interval of temperature, we prove that this solution becomes unstable at a critical value of the cell width. Moreover, we show that this loss of stability comes with the appearance of two new solutions: there is a symmetric pitchfork bifurcation. This picture agrees with numerical simulations performed by P. Palffy-Muhorray, E.C. Gartland and J.R. Kelly. Some of the methods that we use in the present paper apply to other situations, and we present the proofs in a general setting. More precisely, the paper contains the proof of a general uniqueness result for a class of perturbed quasilinear elliptic systems, and general considerations about symmetric solutions and their stability, in the spirit of Palais' Principle of Symmetric Criticality

    The Saturnian Kilometric Radiation before the Cassini Grand Finale

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    The Saturnian Kilometric Radiation (SKR) is radiated from the auroral regions surrounding the kronian magnetic poles, above the ionosphere up to a few planetary radii. It directly compares to the auroral radio emissions emanating from other planetary magnetospheres such as the Earth and the giant planets. Our knowledge on SKR relied on remote observations of Voyager (flybys in 1980 and 1981) and Ulysses (distant observations in the 1990s) until Cassini started to orbit Saturn in 2004. Since then, it has been routinely observed from a large set of remote locations, but also in situ for the first time at a planet other than Earth. This article reviews the state of the art of SKR average remote properties, the first insights brought by in situ passes within its source region, together with some remaining questions before the Cassini Grand Finale and its close-in polar orbits.Comment: Refereed article; Proceedings of the 8th International Workshop on Planetary, Solar and Heliospheric Radio Emissions (PRE VIII), Seggauberg, Austria, Oct. 25-27, 201

    Uniaxial symmetry in nematic liquid crystals

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    Within the Landau-de Gennes theory of liquid crystals, we study theoretically the equilibrium configurations with uniaxial symmetry. We show that the uniaxial symmetry constraint is very restrictive and can in general not be satisfied, except in very symmetric situations. For one- and two-dimensional configurations, we characterize completely the uniaxial equilibria: they must have constant director. In the three dimensional case we focus on the model problem of a spherical droplet with radial anchoring, and show that any uniaxial equilibrium must be spherically symmetric. It was known before that uniaxiality can sometimes be broken by energy minimizers. Our results shed a new light on this phenomenon: we prove here that in one or two dimensions uniaxial symmetry is always broken, unless the director is constant. Moreover, our results concern all equilibrium configurations, and not merely energy minimizers.Comment: contains a new presentation of results in arXiv:1307.0295, and new result
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