7,639 research outputs found
On principal hook length partitions and durfee sizes in skew characters
In this paper we construct for a given arbitrary skew diagram A all
partitions nu with maximal principal hook lengths among all partitions with the
character [nu] appearing in the skew character [A]. Furthermore we show that
these are also partitions with minimal Durfee size. This we use to give the
maximal Durfee size for [nu] appearing in [A] for the cases when A decays into
two partitions and for some special cases of A. Also this gives conditions for
two skew diagrams to represent the same skew character.Comment: 13 pages, minor changes from v1 to v2 as suggested by the referee, to
appear in Annals. Com
Quasi-rigidity: some uniqueness issues
Quasi-rigidity means that one builds a theory for assemblies of grains under
a slowly changing external load by using the deformation of those grains as a
small parameter. Is quasi-rigidity a complete theory for these granular
assemblies? Does it provide unique predictions of the assembly's behavior, or
must some other process be invoked to decide between several possibilities? We
provide evidence that quasi-rigidity is a complete theory by showing that two
possible sources of indeterminacy do not exist for the case of disk shaped
grains. One possible source of indeterminacy arises from zero-frequency modes
present in the packing. This problem can be solved by considering the
conditions required to obtain force equilibrium. A second possible source of
indeterminacy is the necessity to choose the status (sliding or non-sliding) at
each contact. We show that only one choice is permitted, if contacts slide only
when required by Coulomb friction.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys Rev E (introduction and
conclusion revised
Effects of Velocity Correlation on Early Stage of Free Cooling Process of Inelastic Hard Sphere System
The free cooling process in the inelastic hard sphere system is studied by
analysing the data from large scale molecular dynamics simulations on a three
dimensional system. The initial energy decay, the velocity distribution
function, and the velocity correlation functions are calculated to be compared
with theoretical predictions. The energy decay rate in the homogeneous cooling
state is slightly but distinctively smaller than that expected from the
independent collision assumption. The form of the one particle velocity
distribution is found not to be stationary. These contradict to the predictions
of the kinetic theory based on the Enskog-Boltzmann equation and suggest that
the velocity correlation is already important in the early stage of homogeneous
cooling state. The energy decay rate is analysed in terms of the velocity
correlation.Comment: 9 pages (figures included). To be published in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn.
Vol. 73 No. 1 (2004) Added two references and removed one. Changed the name
of T_{L}. Added unit constants in Sec. 5 and
Homogeneous cooling of rough, dissipative particles: Theory and simulations
We investigate freely cooling systems of rough spheres in two and three
dimensions. Simulations using an event driven algorithm are compared with
results of an approximate kinetic theory, based on the assumption of a
generalized homogeneous cooling state. For short times , translational and
rotational energy are found to change linearly with . For large times both
energies decay like with a ratio independent of time, but not
corresponding to equipartition. Good agreement is found between theory and
simulations, as long as no clustering instability is observed. System
parameters, i.e. density, particle size, and particle mass can be absorbed in a
rescaled time, so that the decay of translational and rotational energy is
solely determined by normal restitution and surface roughness.Comment: 10 pages, 10 eps-figure
X-ray Supercavities in the Hydra A Cluster and the Outburst History of the Central Galaxy's Active Nucleus
A 227 ksec Chandra Observatory X-ray image of the hot plasma in the Hydra A
cluster has revealed an extensive cavity system. The system was created by a
continuous outflow or a series of bursts from the nucleus of the central galaxy
over the past 200-500 Myr. The cavities have displaced 10% of the plasma within
a 300 kpc radius of the central galaxy, creating a swiss-cheese-like topology
in the hot gas. The surface brightness decrements are consistent with empty
cavities oriented within 40 degrees of the plane of the sky. The outflow has
deposited upward of 10^61 erg into the cluster gas, most of which was propelled
beyond the inner ~100 kpc cooling region. The supermassive black hole has
accreted at a rate of approximately 0.1-0.25 solar masses per year over this
time frame, which is a small fraction of the Eddington rate of a ~10^9 solar
mass black hole, but is dramatically larger than the Bondi rate. Given the
previous evidence for a circumnuclear disk of cold gas in Hydra A, these
results are consistent with the AGN being powered primarily by infalling cold
gas. The cavity system is shadowed perfectly by 330 MHz radio emission. Such
low frequency synchrotron emission may be an excellent proxy for X-ray cavities
and thus the total energy liberated by the supermassive black hole.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures; Submitted to ApJ, revised per referee's
suggestion
Spatial Correlations in Compressible Granular Flows
For a freely evolving granular fluid, the buildup of spatial correlations in
density and flow field is described using fluctuating hydrodynamics. The theory
for incompressible flows is extended to the general, compressible case,
including longitudinal velocity and density fluctuations, and yields
qualitatively different results for long range correlations. The structure
factor of density fluctuations shows a maximum at finite wavenumber, shifting
in time to smaller wavenumbers and corresponding to a growing correlation
length. It agrees well with two-dimensional molecular dynamics simulations.Comment: 12 pages, Latex, 3 figure
Energy flows in vibrated granular media
We study vibrated granular media, investigating each of the three components
of the energy flow: particle-particle dissipation, energy input at the
vibrating wall, and particle-wall dissipation. Energy dissipated by
interparticle collisions is well estimated by existing theories when the
granular material is dilute, and these theories are extended to include
rotational kinetic energy. When the granular material is dense, the observed
particle-particle dissipation rate decreases to as little as 2/5 of the
theoretical prediction. We observe that the rate of energy input is the weight
of the granular material times an average vibration velocity times a function
of the ratio of particle to vibration velocity. `Particle-wall' dissipation has
been neglected in all theories up to now, but can play an important role when
the granular material is dilute. The ratio between gravitational potential
energy and kinetic energy can vary by as much as a factor of 3. Previous
simulations and experiments have shown that E ~ V^delta, with delta=2 for
dilute granular material, and delta ~ 1.5 for dense granular material. We
relate this change in exponent to the departure of particle-particle
dissipation from its theoretical value.Comment: 19 pages revtex, 10 embedded eps figures, accepted by PR
The powerful outburst in Hercules A
The radio source Hercules A resides at the center of a cooling flow cluster
of galaxies at redshift z = 0.154. A Chandra X-ray image reveals a shock front
in the intracluster medium (ICM) surrounding the radio source, about 160 kpc
from the active galactic nucleus (AGN) that hosts it. The shock has a Mach
number of 1.65, making it the strongest of the cluster-scale shocks driven by
an AGN outburst found so far. The age of the outburst ~5.9e7 y, its energy
about 3e61 erg and its mean power ~1.6e46 erg/s. As for the other large AGN
outbursts in cooling flow clusters, this outburst overwhelms radiative losses
from the ICM of the Hercules A cluster by a factor of ~100. It adds to the case
that AGN outbursts are a significant source of preheating for the ICM. Unless
the mechanical efficiency of the AGN in Hercules A exceeds 10%, the central
black hole must have grown by more than 1.7e8 Msun to power this one outburst.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, accepted by ApJ
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