576 research outputs found
Dynamics of viscoelastic membranes
We determine both the in-plane and out-of-plane dynamics of viscoelastic
membranes separating two viscous fluids in order to understand microrheological
studies of such membranes. We demonstrate the general viscoelastic signatures
in the dynamics of shear, bending, and compression modes. We also find a
screening of the otherwise two-dimensional character of the response to point
forces due to the presence of solvent. Finally, we show that there is a linear,
hydrodynamic coupling between the in-plane compression modes of the membrane
and the out-of-plane bending modes in the case where the membrane separates two
different fluids or environments
Second harmonic generation and birefringence of some ternary pnictide semiconductors
A first-principles study of the birefringence and the frequency dependent
second harmonic generation (SHG) coefficients of the ternary pnictide
semiconductors with formula ABC (A = Zn, Cd; B = Si, Ge; C = As, P) with
the chalcopyrite structures was carried out. We show that a simple empirical
observation that a smaller value of the gap is correlated with larger value of
SHG is qualitatively true. However, simple inverse power scaling laws between
gaps and SHG were not found. Instead, the real value of the nonlinear response
is a result of a very delicate balance between different intraband and
interband terms.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figure
Colloque québécois : « L'écologie routière et l’adaptation aux changements climatiques : de la recherche aux actions concrètes »
Le seul colloque francophone traitant de l’écologie routière présenté au Québec s’et déroulé il y a maintenant six ans. Ce nouveau colloque visera à partager les résultats des dernières recherches et autres projets de partenariats réalisés depuis 2011, dans le but d’atténuer l’impact des routes sur la faune (terrestre et aquatique) et la connectivité écologique, et de mieux s’adapter aux changements climatiques. Ce colloque comprendra des présentations, des ateliers, des kiosques et une sortie sur le terrain, tous disponibles en français
Colloque québécois : « Les routes, la faune et l’adaptation aux changements climatiques : de la recherche aux actions concrètes »
Le seul colloque francophone traitant de l’écologie routière présenté au Québec s’et déroulé il y a maintenant six ans. Ce nouveau colloque visera à partager les résultats des dernières recherches et autres projets de partenariats réalisés depuis 2011, dans le but d’atténuer l’impact des routes sur la faune (terrestre et aquatique) et la connectivité écologique, et de mieux s’adapter aux changements climatiques. Ce colloque comprendra des présentations, des ateliers, des kiosques et une sortie sur le terrain, tous disponibles en français
Quebec Conference: Roads, Wildlife & Adaptation to Climate Change: From Research to Action
The only road ecology conference in French in Quebec took place six years ago. This upcoming conference will share results from new research and various partnership projects initiated since 2011 to mitigate the impacts of roads on (terrestrial and aquatic) wildlife and habitat connectivity, and to better adapt to climate change. The conference will include presentations, workshops, kiosks and a fieldtrip, all available in French and English
Quebec Conference: Road Ecology & Climate Change Adaptation: From Research to Action
The only road ecology conference in French in Quebec took place six years ago. This upcoming conference will share results from new research and various partnership projects initiated since 2011 to mitigate the impacts of roads on (terrestrial and aquatic) wildlife and habitat connectivity, and to better adapt to climate change. The conference will include presentations, workshops, kiosks and a fieldtrip, all available in French and English
High Temperature Electron Localization in dense He Gas
We report new accurate mesasurements of the mobility of excess electrons in
high density Helium gas in extended ranges of temperature and density to ascertain
the effect of temperature on the formation and dynamics of localized electron
states. The main result of the experiment is that the formation of localized
states essentially depends on the relative balance of fluid dilation energy,
repulsive electron-atom interaction energy, and thermal energy. As a
consequence, the onset of localization depends on the medium disorder through
gas temperature and density. It appears that the transition from delocalized to
localized states shifts to larger densities as the temperature is increased.
This behavior can be understood in terms of a simple model of electron
self-trapping in a spherically symmetric square well.Comment: 23 pages, 13 figure
Weak Localization and Integer Quantum Hall Effect in a Periodic Potential
We consider magnetotransport in a disordered two-dimensional electron gas in
the presence of a periodic modulation in one direction. Existing quasiclassical
and quantum approaches to this problem account for Weiss oscillations in the
resistivity tensor at moderate magnetic fields, as well as a strong
modulation-induced modification of the Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations at higher
magnetic fields. They do not account, however, for the operation at even higher
magnetic fields of the integer quantum Hall effect, for which quantum
interference processes are responsible. We then introduce a field-theory
approach, based on a nonlinear sigma model, which encompasses naturally both
the quasiclassical and quantum-mechanical approaches, as well as providing a
consistent means of extending them to include quantum interference corrections.
A perturbative renormalization-group analysis of the field theory shows how
weak localization corrections to the conductivity tensor may be described by a
modification of the usual one-parameter scaling, such as to accommodate the
anisotropy of the bare conductivity tensor. We also show how the two-parameter
scaling, conjectured as a model for the quantum Hall effect in unmodulated
systems, may be generalized similarly for the modulated system. Within this
model we illustrate the operation of the quantum Hall effect in modulated
systems for parameters that are realistic for current experiments.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, ReVTeX; revised version with condensed
introduction; two figures taken out; reference adde
Phonon Universal Transmission Fluctuations and Localization in Semiconductor Superlattices with a Controlled Degree of Order
We study both analytically and numerically phonon transmission fluctuations
and localization in partially ordered superlattices with correlations among
neighboring layers. In order to generate a sequence of layers with a varying
degree of order we employ a model proposed by Hendricks and Teller as well as
partially ordered versions of deterministic aperiodic superlattices. By
changing a parameter measuring the correlation among adjacent layers, the
Hendricks- Teller superlattice exhibits a transition from periodic ordering,
with alterna- ting layers, to the phase separated opposite limit; including
many intermediate arrangements and the completely random case. In the partially
ordered versions of deterministic superlattices, there is short-range order
(among any conse- cutive layers) and long range disorder, as in the N-state
Markov chains. The average and fluctuations in the transmission, the
backscattering rate, and the localization length in these multilayered systems
are calculated based on the superlattice structure factors we derive
analytically. The standard deviation of the transmission versus the average
transmission lies on a {\it universal\/} curve irrespective of the specific
type of disorder of the SL. We illustrate these general results by applying
them to several GaAs-AlAs superlattices for the proposed experimental
observation of phonon universal transmission fluctuations.Comment: 16-pages, Revte
Axial anomaly in the reduced model: Higher representations
The axial anomaly arising from the fermion sector of \U(N) or \SU(N)
reduced model is studied under a certain restriction of gauge field
configurations (the ``\U(1) embedding'' with ). We use the
overlap-Dirac operator and consider how the anomaly changes as a function of a
gauge-group representation of the fermion. A simple argument shows that the
anomaly vanishes for an irreducible representation expressed by a Young tableau
whose number of boxes is a multiple of (such as the adjoint
representation) and for a tensor-product of them. We also evaluate the anomaly
for general gauge-group representations in the large limit. The large
limit exhibits expected algebraic properties as the axial anomaly.
Nevertheless, when the gauge group is \SU(N), it does not have a structure
such as the trace of a product of traceless gauge-group generators which is
expected from the corresponding gauge field theory.Comment: 21 pages, uses JHEP.cls and amsfonts.sty, the final version to appear
in JHE
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