2,376 research outputs found
The shape of a moving fluxon in stacked Josephson junctions
We study numerically and analytically the shape of a single fluxon moving in
a double stacked Josephson junctions (SJJ's) for various junction parameters.
We show that the fluxon in a double SJJ's consists of two components, which are
characterized by different Swihart velocities and Josephson penetration depths.
The weight coefficients of the two components depend on the parameters of the
junctions and the velocity of the fluxon. It is shown that the fluxon in SJJ's
may have an unusual shape with an inverted magnetic field in the second
junction when the velocity of the fluxon is approaching the lower Swihart
velocity. Finally, we study the influence of fluxon shape on flux-flow
current-voltage characteristics and analyze the spectrum of Cherenkov radiation
for fluxon velocity above the lower Swihart velocity. Analytic expression for
the wavelength of Cherenkov radiation is derived.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figure
In-plane fluxon in layered superconductors with arbitrary number of layers
I derive an approximate analytic solution for the in-plane vortex (fluxon) in
layered superconductors and stacked Josephson junctions (SJJ's) with arbitrary
number of layers. The validity of the solution is verified by numerical
simulation. It is shown that in SJJ's with large number of thin layers,
phase/current and magnetic field of the fluxon are decoupled from each other.
The variation of phase/current is confined within the Josephson penetration
depth, , along the layers, while magnetic field decays at the
effective London penetration depth, . For comparison
with real high- superconducting samples, large scale numerical simulations
with up to 600 SJJ's and with in-plane length up to 4000 %, are
presented. It is shown, that the most striking feature of the fluxon is a
Josephson core, manifesting itself as a sharp peak in magnetic induction at the
fluxon center.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Was presented in part at the First Euroconference
on Vortex Matter in Superconductors (Crete, September 1999
Self-trapping transition for nonlinear impurities embedded in a Cayley tree
The self-trapping transition due to a single and a dimer nonlinear impurity
embedded in a Cayley tree is studied. In particular, the effect of a perfectly
nonlinear Cayley tree is considered. A sharp self-trapping transition is
observed in each case. It is also observed that the transition is much sharper
compared to the case of one-dimensional lattices. For each system, the critical
values of for the self-trapping transitions are found to obey a
power-law behavior as a function of the connectivity of the Cayley tree.Comment: 6 pages, 7 fig
Predictive Ability of QCD Sum Rules for Excited Baryons
The masses of octet baryons are calculated by the method of QCD sum rules.
Using generalized interpolating fields, three independent sets of QCD sum rules
are derived which allow the extraction of low-lying N* states with spin-parity
1/2+, 1/2- and 3/2- in both the non-strange and strange channels. The
predictive ability of the sum rules is examined by a Monte-Carlo based analysis
procedure in which the three phenomenological parameters (mass, coupling,
threshold) are treated as free parameters simultaneously. Realistic
uncertainties in these parameters are obtained by simultaneously exploring all
uncertainties in the QCD input parameters. Those sum rules with good predictive
power are identified and their predictions are compared with experiment where
available.Comment: 33 pages, 2 figure
Lattice Boltzmann for Binary Fluids with Suspended Colloids
A new description of the binary fluid problem via the lattice Boltzmann
method is presented which highlights the use of the moments in constructing two
equilibrium distribution functions. This offers a number of benefits, including
better isotropy, and a more natural route to the inclusion of multiple
relaxation times for the binary fluid problem. In addition, the implementation
of solid colloidal particles suspended in the binary mixture is addressed,
which extends the solid-fluid boundary conditions for mass and momentum to
include a single conserved compositional order parameter. A number of simple
benchmark problems involving a single particle at or near a fluid-fluid
interface are undertaken and show good agreement with available theoretical or
numerical results.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, ICMMES 200
Phase of the Wilson Line at High Temperature in the Standard Model
We compute the effective potential for the phase of the Wilson line at high
temperature in the standard model to one loop order. Besides the trivial vacua,
there are metastable states in the direction of hypercharge. Assuming
that the universe starts out in such a metastable state at the Planck scale, it
easily persists to the time of the electroweak phase transition, which then
proceeds by an unusual mechanism. All remnants of the metastable state
evaporate about the time of the phase transition.Comment: 4 pages in ReVTeX plus 1 figure; Columbia Univ. preprint CU-TP-63
Exclusive processes in position space and the pion distribution amplitude
We suggest to carry out lattice calculations of current correlators in
position space, sandwiched between the vacuum and a hadron state (e.g. pion),
in order to access hadronic light-cone distribution amplitudes (DAs). In this
way the renormalization problem for composite lattice operators is avoided
altogether, and the connection to the DA is done using perturbation theory in
the continuum. As an example, the correlation function of two electromagnetic
currents is calculated to the next-to-next-to-leading order accuracy in
perturbation theory and including the twist-4 corrections. We argue that this
strategy is fully competitive with direct lattice measurements of the moments
of the DA, defined as matrix elements of local operators, and offers new
insight in the space-time picture of hard exclusive reactions.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figure
Tissue Formation and Vascularization in Anatomically Shaped Human Joint Condyle Ectopically in Vivo
Scale-up of bioengineered grafts toward clinical applications is a challenge in regenerative medicine. Here, we report tissue formation and vascularization of anatomically shaped human tibial condyles ectopically with a dimension of 20 15 15mm3. A composite of poly-É›-caprolactone and hydroxyapatite was fabricated using layer deposition of three-dimensional interlaid strands with interconnecting microchannels (400ÎĽm) and seeded with human bone marrow stem cells (hMSCs) with or without osteogenic differentiation. An overlaying layer (1mm deep) of poly(ethylene glycol)-based hydrogel encapsulating hMSCs or hMSC-derived chondrocytes was molded into anatomic shape and anchored into microchannels by gel infusion. After 6 weeks of subcutaneous implantation in athymic rats, hMSCs generated not only significantly more blood vessels, but also significantly larger-diameter vessels than hMSC-derived osteoblasts, although hMSC-derived osteoblasts yielded mineralized tissue in microchannels. Chondrocytes in safranin-O-positive glycosaminoglycan matrix were present in the cartilage layer seeded with hMSC-derived chondrogenic cells, although significantly more cells were present in the cartilage layer seeded with hMSCs than hMSC-derived chondrocytes. Together, MSCs elaborate substantially more angiogenesis, whereas their progenies yield corresponding differentiated tissue phenotypes. Scale up is probable by incorporating a combination of stem cells and their progenies in repeating modules of internal microchannels.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/78100/1/ten.tea.2008.0653.pd
Magnetic field dependence of the critical current in stacked Josephson junctions. Evidence for fluxon modes in Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x mesas
Modulation of the critical current across layers, Ic(H), of stacked Josephson
junctions (SJJs) as a function of an applied magnetic field parallel to the
junction planes is studied theoretically and experimentally for different
junction lengths and coupling parameters. It is shown that the Ic(H) patterns
of long SJJs are very complicated without periodicity in H. This is due to
interaction between junctions in the stack. This, in turn, gives rise to the
existence of multiple quasi-equilibrium Josephson fluxon modes and submodes
which are different with respect to the symmetry of the phase and the fluxon
sequence in SJJs. The critical current of long SJJs is multiple valued and is
governed by switching between energetically close fluxon modes/submodes. Due to
this, the probability distribution of the critical current may become wide and
may consist of multiple maxima each representing a particular mode/submode.
Experimentally, multiple branched Ic(H) patterns and multiple maxima in the Ic
probability distribution were observed for Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x intrinsic SJJs,
which are in a good agreement with numerical simulations and support the idea
of having different quasi-equilibrium fluxon modes/submodes in intrinsic SJJs.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Resonantly damped surface and body MHD waves in a solar coronal slab with oblique propagation
The theory of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) waves in solar coronal slabs in a
zero- configuration and for parallel propagation of waves does not allow
the existence of surface waves. When oblique propagation of perturbations is
considered both surface and body waves are able to propagate. When the
perpendicular wave number is larger than a certain value, the body kink mode
becomes a surface wave. In addition, a sausage surface mode is found below the
internal cut-off frequency. When non-uniformity in the equilibrium is included,
surface and body modes are damped due to resonant absorption. In this paper,
first, a normal-mode analysis is performed and the period, the damping rate,
and the spatial structure of eigenfunctions are obtained. Then, the
time-dependent problem is solved, and the conditions under which one or the
other type of mode is excited are investigated.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Solar Physic
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