10,506 research outputs found

    Rotating Hele-Shaw cells with ferrofluids

    Full text link
    We investigate the flow of two immiscible, viscous fluids in a rotating Hele-Shaw cell, when one of the fluids is a ferrofluid and an external magnetic field is applied. The interplay between centrifugal and magnetic forces in determining the instability of the fluid-fluid interface is analyzed. The linear stability analysis of the problem shows that a non-uniform, azimuthal magnetic field, applied tangential to the cell, tends to stabilize the interface. We verify that maximum growth rate selection of initial patterns is influenced by the applied field, which tends to decrease the number of interface ripples. We contrast these results with the situation in which a uniform magnetic field is applied normally to the plane defined by the rotating Hele-Shaw cell.Comment: 12 pages, 3 ps figures, RevTe

    Enhanced solar anti-neutrino flux in random magnetic fields

    Get PDF
    We discuss the impact of the recent KamLAND constraint on the solar anti-neutrino flux on the analysis of solar neutrino data in the presence of Majorana neutrino transition magnetic moments and solar magnetic fields. We consider different stationary solar magnetic field models, both regular and random, highlighting the strong enhancement in the anti-neutrino production rates that characterize turbulent solar magnetic field models. Moreover, we show that for such magnetic fields inside the Sun, one can constrain the intrinsic neutrino magnetic moment down to the level of mu_nu lessthan few times 10^-12 x mu_B irrespective of details of the underlying turbulence model. This limit is more stringent than all current experimental sensitivities, and similar to the most stringent bounds obtained from stellar cooling. We also comment on the robustness of this limit and show that at most it might be weakened by one order of magnitude, under very unlikely circumstances.Comment: 25 pages, 5 figures; final version to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Unparticle physics and neutrino phenomenology

    Full text link
    We have constrained unparticle interactions with neutrinos and electrons using available data on neutrino-electron elastic scattering and the four CERN LEP experiments data on mono photon production. We have found that, for neutrino-electron elastic scattering, the MUNU experiment gives better constraints than previous reported limits in the region d>1.5. The results are compared with the current astrophysical limits, pointing out the cases where these limits may or may not apply. We also discuss the sensitivity of future experiments to unparticle physics. In particular, we show that the measurement of coherent reactor neutrino scattering off nuclei could provide a good sensitivity to the couplings of unparticle interaction with neutrinos and quarks. We also discuss the case of future neutrino-electron experiments as well as the International Linear Collider.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures. Minor changes, final versio

    Observation of slow light in the noise spectrum of a vertical external cavity surface emitting laser

    Full text link
    The role of coherent population oscillations is evidenced in the noise spectrum of an ultra-low noise lasers. This effect is isolated in the intensity noise spectrum of an optimized single-frequency vertical external cavity surface emitting laser. The coherent population oscillations induced by the lasing mode manifest themselves through their associated dispersion that leads to slow light effects probed by the spontaneous emission present in the non-lasing side modes.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Let

    Numerical and analytical modeling of unsteady viscoelastic flows: the start-up and pulsating test case problems

    Get PDF
    In this paper two test cases adequate for the assessment of viscoelastic flow codes under unsteady flow conditions are investigated. For one of them an analytical solution is also derived. First, the start-up of planar Poiseuille flow between two parallel plates was tackled. For upper-convected Maxwell and Oldroyd-B models there exist analytical solutions making it possible to evaluate exactly the discretization errors of the transient numerical method. Good agreement was found between the present numerical results and those analytical solutions, especially for “shock” propagation. For the UCM fluid, small numerical oscillations were observed at points where the time derivative of velocity was discontinuous, but for the Oldroyd-B fluid a smooth development of the transient evolution was obtained. Results with the PTT model without solvent viscosity and the FENE fluids were also obtained and, as expected, the behaviour was similar to that found for the UCM and Oldroyd-B fluids, respectively. Then, a pulsating flowproblemwas studied. In this test case the flow is generated by a periodic ressure gradient superimposed on a constant Poiseuille flow. The analytical solution for pulsatile Oldroyd-B flow in a channel was derived as part of the work and, again, difficulties in obtaining accurate numerical solutions with the UCM model were encountered, being necessary to employ extremely refined meshes. For the Oldroyd-B fluid no difficulties were found and the accuracy tended to improve with larger solvent viscosity parameter

    Symmetry breaking effects upon bipartite and multipartite entanglement in the XY model

    Full text link
    We analyze the bipartite and multipartite entanglement for the ground state of the one-dimensional XY model in a transverse magnetic field in the thermodynamical limit. We explicitly take into account the spontaneous symmetry breaking in order to explore the relation between entanglement and quantum phase transitions. As a result we show that while both bipartite and multipartite entanglement can be enhanced by spontaneous symmetry breaking deep into the ferromagnetic phase, only the latter is affected by it in the vicinity of the critical point. This result adds to the evidence that multipartite, and not bipartite, entanglement is the fundamental indicator of long range correlations in quantum phase transitions.Comment: 13 pages, 19 figures, comments welcome. V2: small changes, published versio

    Gravity-driven instability in a spherical Hele-Shaw cell

    Full text link
    A pair of concentric spheres separated by a small gap form a spherical Hele-Shaw cell. In this cell an interfacial instability arises when two immiscible fluids flow. We derive the equation of motion for the interface perturbation amplitudes, including both pressure and gravity drivings, using a mode coupling approach. Linear stability analysis shows that mode growth rates depend upon interface perimeter and gravitational force. Mode coupling analysis reveals the formation of fingering structures presenting a tendency toward finger tip-sharpening.Comment: 13 pages, 4 ps figures, RevTex, to appear in Physical Review
    corecore