1,094 research outputs found
Resale Issues in Telecommunications Regulation: An Economic Perspective
The purpose of this Article is to evaluate proposed resale policies from an economic perspective. Specifically, this Article evaluates whether mandated resale can be expected to lead to the benefits ascribed to it by its proponents. In addition, this Article identifies issues which must be addressed before an economically sound local service resale policy may be put into place
Resale Issues in Telecommunications Regulation: An Economic Perspective
The purpose of this Article is to evaluate proposed resale policies from an economic perspective. Specifically, this Article evaluates whether mandated resale can be expected to lead to the benefits ascribed to it by its proponents. In addition, this Article identifies issues which must be addressed before an economically sound local service resale policy may be put into place
Non-axisymmetric instability of shear-banded Taylor-Couette flow
Recent experiments show that shear-banded flows of semi-dilute worm-like
micelles in Taylor-Couette geometry exhibit a flow instability in the form of
Taylor-like vortices. Here we perform the non-axisymmetric linear stability
analysis of the diffusive Johnson-Segalman model of shear banding and show that
the nature of this instability depends on the applied shear rate. For the
experimentally relevant parameters, we find that at the beginning of the stress
plateau the instability is driven by the interface between the bands, while
most of the stress plateau is occupied by the bulk instability of the
high-shear-rate band. Our work significantly alters the recently proposed
stability diagram of shear-banded flows based on axisymmetric analysis.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, main text and supplementary material; accepted to
Phys. Rev. Let
Chaos-driven dynamics in spin-orbit coupled atomic gases
The dynamics, appearing after a quantum quench, of a trapped, spin-orbit
coupled, dilute atomic gas is studied. The characteristics of the evolution is
greatly influenced by the symmetries of the system, and we especially compare
evolution for an isotropic Rashba coupling and for an anisotropic spin-orbit
coupling. As we make the spin-orbit coupling anisotropic, we break the
rotational symmetry and the underlying classical model becomes chaotic; the
quantum dynamics is affected accordingly. Within experimentally relevant
time-scales and parameters, the system thermalizes in a quantum sense. The
corresponding equilibration time is found to agree with the Ehrenfest time,
i.e. we numerically verify a ~log(1/h) scaling. Upon thermalization, we find
the equilibrated distributions show examples of quantum scars distinguished by
accumulation of atomic density for certain energies. At shorter time-scales we
discuss non-adiabatic effects deriving from the spin-orbit coupled induced
Dirac point. In the vicinity of the Dirac point, spin fluctuations are large
and, even at short times, a semi-classical analysis fails.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure
Velocity oscillations in confined channel flows of concentrated colloidal suspensions
We study the pressure-driven flow of concentrated colloids confined in glass
micro-channels at the single particle level using fast confocal microscopy. For
channel to particle size ratios , the flow rate of the
suspended particles shows fluctuations. These turn into regular oscillations
for higher confinements (). We present evidence to link
these oscillations with the relative flow of solvent and particles (permeation)
and the effect of confinement on shear thickening.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Solitary vortex couples in viscoelastic Couette flow
We report experimental observation of a localized structure, which is of a
new type for dissipative systems. It appears as a solitary vortex couple
("diwhirl") in Couette flow with highly elastic polymer solutions. A unique
property of the diwhirls is that they are stationary, in contrast to the usual
localized wave structures in both Hamiltonian and dissipative systems which are
stabilized by wave dispersion. It is also a new object in fluid dynamics - a
couple of vortices that build a single entity somewhat similar to a magnetic
dipole. The diwhirls arise as a result of a purely elastic instability through
a hysteretic transition at negligible Reynolds numbers. It is suggested that
the vortex flow is driven by the same forces that cause the Weissenberg effect.
The diwhirls have a striking asymmetry between the inflow and outflow, which is
also an essential feature of the suggested elastic instability mechanism.Comment: 9 pages (LaTeX), 5 Postscript figures, submitte
Redshift-Space Enhancement of Line-of-Sight Baryon Acoustic Oscillations in the SDSS Main-Galaxy Sample
We show that redshift-space distortions of galaxy correlations have a strong
effect on correlation functions with distinct, localized features, like the
signature of the baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO). Near the line of sight,
the features become sharper as a result of redshift-space distortions. We
demonstrate this effect by measuring the correlation function in Gaussian
simulations and the Millennium Simulation. We also analyze the SDSS DR7
main-galaxy sample (MGS), splitting the sample into slices 2.5 degrees on the
sky in various rotations. Measuring 2D correlation functions in each slice, we
do see a sharp bump along the line of sight. Using Mexican-hat wavelets, we
localize it to (110 +/- 10) Mpc/h. Averaging only along the line of sight, we
estimate its significance at a particular wavelet scale and location at 2.2
sigma. In a flat angular weighting in the (pi,r_p) coordinate system, the noise
level is suppressed, pushing the bump's significance to 4 sigma. We estimate
that there is about a 0.2% chance of getting such a signal anywhere in the
vicinity of the BAO scale from a power spectrum lacking a BAO feature. However,
these estimates of the significances make some use of idealized Gaussian
simulations, and thus are likely a bit optimistic.Comment: 17 pages, 27 figures. Minor changes to match final version accepted
to Ap
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