5,131 research outputs found
Large-time Behavior of Solutions to the Inflow Problem of Full Compressible Navier-Stokes Equations
Large-time behavior of solutions to the inflow problem of full compressible
Navier-Stokes equations is investigated on the half line .
The wave structure which contains four waves: the transonic(or degenerate)
boundary layer solution, 1-rarefaction wave, viscous 2-contact wave and
3-rarefaction wave to the inflow problem is described and the asymptotic
stability of the superposition of the above four wave patterns to the inflow
problem of full compressible Navier-Stokes equations is proven under some
smallness conditions. The proof is given by the elementary energy analysis
based on the underlying wave structure. The main points in the proof are the
degeneracies of the transonic boundary layer solution and the wave interactions
in the superposition wave.Comment: 27 page
Stable Existence of Phase IV inside Phase II under Pressure in CeLaB
We investigate the pressure effect of the electrical resistivity and
magnetization of CeLaB. The situation in which phase IV
stably exists inside phase II at H=0 T could be realized by applying a pressure
above GPa. This originates from the fact that the stability of
phase II under pressure is larger than those of phases IV and III. The results
seem to be difficult to reproduce by taking the four interactions of
-type AFO, -type AFQ, -type AFO, and AF
exchange into account within a mean-field calculation framework.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, to appear in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 79 (2010) No.
An Avoidance Principle with an Application to the Asymptotic Behaviour of Graded Local Cohomology
We present an Avoidance Principle for certain graded rings. As an application
we fill a gap in the proof of a result by Brodmann, Rohrer and Sazeedeh about
the antipolynomiality of the Hilbert-Samuel multiplicity of the graded
components of the local cohomology modules of a finitely generated module over
a Noetherian homogeneous ring with two-dimensional local base ring.Comment: 6 pages; to appear in Journal of Pure and Applied Algebra; corrected
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On two theorems for flat, affine group schemes over a discrete valuation ring
We include short and elementary proofs of two theorems characterizing
reductive group schemes over a discrete valuation ring, in a slightly more
general context.Comment: 10 pages. To appear in C. E. J.
Numerical Simulations of N=(1,1) SYM{1+1} with Large Supersymmetry Breaking
We consider the SYM theory that is obtained by dimensionally
reducing SYM theory in 2+1 dimensions to 1+1 dimensions and discuss soft
supersymmetry breaking. We discuss the numerical simulation of this theory
using SDLCQ when either the boson or the fermion has a large mass. We compare
our result to the pure adjoint fermion theory and pure adjoint boson DLCQ
calculations of Klebanov, Demeterfi, and Bhanot and of Kutasov. With a large
boson mass we find that it is necessary to add additional operators to the
theory to obtain sensible results. When a large fermion mass is added to the
theory we find that it is not necessary to add operators to obtain a sensible
theory. The theory of the adjoint boson is a theory that has stringy bound
states similar to the full SYM theory. We also discuss another theory of
adjoint bosons with a spectrum similar to that obtained by Klebanov, Demeterfi,
and Bhanot.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
The Origin of Jovian Planets in Protostellar Disks: The Role of Dead Zones
The final masses of Jovian planets are attained when the tidal torques that
they exert on their surrounding protostellar disks are sufficient to open gaps
in the face of disk viscosity, thereby shutting off any further accretion. In
sufficiently well-ionized disks, the predominant form of disk viscosity
originates from the Magneto-Rotational Instability (MRI) that drives
hydromagnetic disk turbulence. In the region of sufficiently low ionization
rate -- the so-called dead zone -- turbulence is damped and we show that lower
mass planets will be formed. We considered three ionization sources (X-rays,
cosmic rays, and radioactive elements) and determined the size of a dead zone
for the total ionization rate by using a radiative, hydrostatic equilibrium
disk model developed by Chiang et al. (2001). We studied a range of surface
mass density (Sigma_{0}=10^3 - 10^5 g cm^{-2}) and X-ray energy (kT_{x}=1 - 10
keV). We also compared the ionization rate of such a disk by X-rays with cosmic
rays and find that the latter dominate X-rays in ionizing protostellar disks
unless the X-ray energy is very high (5 - 10 keV). Among our major conclusions
are that for typical conditions, dead zones encompass a region extending out to
several AU -- the region in which terrestrial planets are found in our solar
system. Our results suggest that the division between low and high mass planets
in exosolar planetary systems is a consequence of the presence of a dead zone
in their natal protoplanetary disks. We also find that the extent of a dead
zone is mainly dependent on the disk's surface mass density. Our results
provide further support for the idea that Jovian planets in exosolar systems
must have migrated substantially inwards from their points of origin.Comment: 28 pages, 10 figures, accepted by Ap
The influence of oscillations on energy estimates for damped wave models with time-dependent propagation speed and dissipation
The aim of this paper is to derive higher order energy estimates for
solutions to the Cauchy problem for damped wave models with time-dependent
propagation speed and dissipation. The model of interest is \begin{equation*}
u_{tt}-\lambda^2(t)\omega^2(t)\Delta u +\rho(t)\omega(t)u_t=0, \quad
u(0,x)=u_0(x), \,\, u_t(0,x)=u_1(x). \end{equation*} The coefficients
and are shape functions and
is an oscillating function. If and
is an "effective" dissipation term, then energy
estimates are proved in [2]. In contrast, the main goal of the present paper is
to generalize the previous results to coefficients including an oscillating
function in the time-dependent coefficients. We will explain how the interplay
between the shape functions and oscillating behavior of the coefficient will
influence energy estimates.Comment: 37 pages, 2 figure
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