1,948 research outputs found
Global well-posedness of the Kirchhoff equation and Kirchhoff systems
This article is devoted to review the known results on global well-posedness
for the Cauchy problem to the Kirchhoff equation and Kirchhoff systems with
small data. Similar results will be obtained for the initial-boundary value
problems in exterior domains with compact boundary. Also, the known results on
large data problems will be reviewed together with open problems.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1211.300
Anyons as quon particles
The momentum operator representation of nonrelativistic anyons is developed
in the Chern - Simons formulation of fractional statistics. The connection
between anyons and the q-deformed bosonic algebra is established.Comment: 10 pages,Late
Quasiperiodic Tip Splitting in Directional Solidification
We report experimental results on the tip splitting dynamics of seaweed
growth in directional solidification of succinonitrile alloys with
poly(ethylene oxide) or acetone as solutes. The seaweed or dense branching
morphology was selected by solidifying grains which are oriented close to the
{111} plane. Despite the random appearance of the growth, a quasiperiodic tip
splitting morphology was observed in which the tip alternately splits to the
left and to the right. The tip splitting frequency f was found to be related to
the growth velocity V as a power law f V^{1.5}. This finding
is consistent with the predictions of a tip splitting model that is also
presented. Small anisotropies are shown to lead to different kinds of seaweed
morphologies.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letter
Unstable Planetary Systems Emerging Out Of Gas Disks
The discovery of over 400 extrasolar planets allows us to statistically test
our understanding of formation and dynamics of planetary systems via numerical
simulations. Traditional N-body simulations of multiple-planet systems without
gas disks have successfully reproduced the eccentricity (e) distribution of the
observed systems, by assuming that the planetary systems are relatively closely
packed when the gas disk dissipates, so that they become dynamically unstable
within the stellar lifetime. However, such studies cannot explain the small
semi-major axes (a) of extrasolar planetary systems, if planets are formed, as
the standard planet formation theory suggests, beyond the ice line.
In this paper, we numerically study the evolution of three-planet systems in
dissipating gas disks, and constrain the initial conditions that reproduce the
observed semi-major axis and eccentricity distributions simultaneously. We
adopt the initial conditions that are motivated by the standard planet
formation theory, and self-consistently simulate the disk evolution, and planet
migration by using a hybrid N-body and 1D gas disk code. We also take account
of eccentricity damping, and investigate the effect of saturation of corotation
resonances on the evolution of planetary systems. We find that the semi-major
axis distribution is largely determined in a gas disk, while the eccentricity
distribution is determined after the disk dissipation. We also find that there
may be an optimum disk mass which leads to the observed a-e distribution. Our
simulations generate a larger fraction of planetary systems trapped in
mean-motion resonances (MMRs) than the observations, indicating that the disk's
perturbation to the planetary orbits may be important to explain the observed
rate of MMRs. We also find much lower occurrence of planets on retrograde
orbits than the current observations of close-in planets suggest.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Non-relativistic bound states in a finite volume
We derive general results for the mass shift of bound states with angular
momentum l >= 1 in a periodic cubic box in two and three spatial dimensions.
Our results have applications to lattice simulations of hadronic molecules,
halo nuclei, and Feshbach molecules. The sign of the mass shift can be related
to the symmetry properties of the state under consideration. We verify our
analytical results with explicit numerical calculations. Moreover, we comment
on the relations connecting the effective range parameter, the binding momentum
of a given state and the asymptotic normalization coefficient of the
corresponding wave function. We give explicit expressions for this relation in
the shallow binding limit.Comment: 26 pages, 4 figure
Critical Statistical Charge for Anyonic Superconductivity
We examine a criterion for the anyonic superconductivity at zero temperature
in Abelian matter-coupled Chern-Simons gauge field theories in three
dimensions. By solving the Dyson-Schwinger equations, we obtain a critical
value of the statistical charge for the superconducting phase in a massless
fermion-Chern-Simons model.Comment: 11 pages; to appear in Phys Rev
Effect of bulk inversion asymmetry on the Datta-Das transistor
A model of the Datta-Das spin field-effect transistor is presented which, in
addition to the Rashba interaction, takes into account the influence of bulk
inversion asymmetry of zinc-blende semiconductors. In the presence of bulk
inversion asymmetry, the conductance is found to depend significantly on the
crystallographic orientation of the channel. We determine the channel direction
optimal for the observation of the Datta-Das effect in GaAs and InAs-based
devices.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex4, 4 EPS figure
Conformational transitions of a semiflexible polymer in nematic solvents
Conformations of a single semiflexible polymer chain dissolved in a low
molecular weight liquid crystalline solvents (nematogens) are examined by using
a mean field theory. We takes into account a stiffness and partial
orientational ordering of the polymer. As a result of an anisotropic coupling
between the polymer and nematogen, we predict a discontinuous (or continuous)
phase transition from a condensed-rodlike conformation to a swollen-one of the
polymer chain, depending on the stiffness of the polymer. We also discuss the
effects of the nematic interaction between polymer segments.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
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