29,882 research outputs found
Diffusion and Relaxation Dynamics in Cluster Crystals
For a large class of fluids exhibiting ultrasoft bounded pair potentials,
particles form crystals consisting of clusters located in the lattice sites,
with a density-independent lattice constant. Here we present an investigation
on the dynamic features of a representative example of this class. It is found
that particles can diffuse between lattice sites, maintaining the lattice
structure, through an activated hopping mechanism. This feature yields finite
values for the diffusivity and full relaxation of density correlation
functions. Simulations suggest the existence of a localization transition which
is avoided by hopping, and a dynamic decoupling between self- and collective
correlations.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figure
Explicit Soliton for the Laplacian Co-Flow on a Solvmanifold
We apply the general Ansatz in geometric flows on homogeneous spaces proposed
by Jorge Lauret for the Laplacian co-flow of invariant -structures on a
Lie group, finding an explicit soliton on a particular almost Abelian
-manifold.Comment: Minor corrections, proof's Lemma 4.1 modified. To appear in the S\~ao
Paulo Journal of mathematical scienc
Spectral changes in layered -electron systems induced by Kondo hole substitution in the boundary-layer
We investigate the effect of disorder on the dynamical spectrum of layered
-electron systems. With random dilution of -sites in a single Kondo
insulating layer, we explore the range and extent to which Kondo hole
incoherence can penetrate into adjacent layers. We consider three cases of
neighboring layers: band insulator, Kondo insulator and simple metal. The
disorder-induced spectral weight transfer, used here for quantification of the
proximity effect, decays algebraically with distance from the boundary layer.
Further, we show that the spectral weight transfer is highly dependent on the
frequency range considered as well as the presence of interactions in the clean
adjacent layers. The changes in the low frequency spectrum are very similar
when the adjacent layers are either metallic or Kondo insulating, and hence are
independent of interactions. In stark contrast, a distinct picture emerges for
the spectral weight transfers across large energy scales. The spectral weight
transfer over all energy scales is much higher when the adjacent layers are
non-interacting as compared to when they are strongly interacting Kondo
insulators. Thus, over all scales, interactions screen the disorder effects
significantly. We discuss the possibility of a crossover from non-Fermi liquid
to Fermi liquid behavior upon increasing the ratio of clean to disordered
layers in particle-hole asymmetric systems.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figure
Constructive Heuristics for the Minimum Labelling Spanning Tree Problem: a preliminary comparison
This report studies constructive heuristics for the minimum labelling spanning tree
(MLST) problem. The purpose is to find a spanning tree that uses edges that are as similar as
possible. Given an undirected labeled connected graph (i.e., with a label or color for each edge),
the minimum labeling spanning tree problem seeks a spanning tree whose edges have the smallest
possible number of distinct labels. The model can represent many real-world problems in
telecommunication networks, electric networks, and multimodal transportation networks, among
others, and the problem has been shown to be NP-complete even for complete graphs. A primary
heuristic, named the maximum vertex covering algorithm has been proposed. Several versions of
this constructive heuristic have been proposed to improve its efficiency. Here we describe the
problem, review the literature and compare some variants of this algorithm
Numerical modelling of non-ionic microgels: an overview
Microgels are complex macromolecules. These colloid-sized polymer networks
possess internal degrees of freedom and, depending on the polymer(s) they are
made of, can acquire a responsiveness to variations of the environment
(temperature, pH, salt concentration, etc.). Besides being valuable for many
practical applications, microgels are also extremely important to tackle
fundamental physics problems. As a result, these last years have seen a rapid
development of protocols for the synthesis of microgels, and more and more
research has been devoted to the investigation of their bulk properties.
However, from a numerical standpoint the picture is more fragmented, as the
inherently multi-scale nature of microgels, whose bulk behaviour crucially
depends on the microscopic details, cannot be handled at a single level of
coarse-graining. Here we present an overview of the methods and models that
have been proposed to describe non-ionic microgels at different length-scales,
from the atomistic to the single-particle level. We especially focus on
monomer-resolved models, as these have the right level of details to capture
the most important properties of microgels, responsiveness and softness. We
suggest that these microscopic descriptions, if realistic enough, can be
employed as starting points to develop the more coarse-grained representations
required to investigate the behaviour of bulk suspensions
Mobile particles in an immobile environment: Molecular Dynamics simulation of a binary Yukawa mixture
Molecular dynamics computer simulations are used to investigate thedynamics
of a binary mixture of charged (Yukawa) particles with a size-ratio of 1:5. We
find that the system undergoes a phase transition where the large particles
crystallize while the small particles remain in a fluid-like (delocalized)
phase. Upon decreasing temperature below the transition, the small particles
become increasingly localized on intermediate time scales. This is reflected in
the incoherent intermediate scattering functions by the appearance of a plateau
with a growing height. At long times, the small particles show a diffusive
hopping motion. We find that these transport properties are related to
structural correlations and the single-particle potential energy distribution
of the small particles.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
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Solving the minimum labelling spanning tree problem using hybrid local search
Given a connected, undirected graph whose edges are labelled (or coloured), the minimum
labelling spanning tree (MLST) problem seeks a spanning tree whose edges have the smallest
number of distinct labels (or colours). In recent work, the MLST problem has been shown
to be NP-hard and some effective heuristics (Modified Genetic Algorithm (MGA) and Pilot
Method (PILOT)) have been proposed and analyzed. A hybrid local search method, that we
call Group-Swap Variable Neighbourhood Search (GS-VNS), is proposed in this paper. It is
obtained by combining two classic metaheuristics: Variable Neighbourhood Search (VNS) and
Simulated Annealing (SA). Computational experiments show that GS-VNS outperforms MGA
and PILOT. Furthermore, a comparison with the results provided by an exact approach shows
that we may quickly obtain optimal or near-optimal solutions with the proposed heuristic
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