3,565 research outputs found
Self-guided wakefield experiments driven by petawatt class ultra-short laser pulses
We investigate the extension of self-injecting laser wakefield experiments to
the regime that will be accessible with the next generation of petawatt class
ultra-short pulse laser systems. Using linear scalings, current experimental
trends and numerical simulations we determine the optimal laser and target
parameters, i.e. focusing geometry, plasma density and target length, that are
required to increase the electron beam energy (to > 1 GeV) without the use of
external guiding structures.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figure
Exact Results for the One-Dimensional Self-Organized Critical Forest-Fire Model
We present the analytic solution of the self-organized critical (SOC)
forest-fire model in one dimension proving SOC in systems without conservation
laws by analytic means. Under the condition that the system is in the steady
state and very close to the critical point, we calculate the probability that a
string of neighboring sites is occupied by a given configuration of trees.
The critical exponent describing the size distribution of forest clusters is
exactly and does not change under certain changes of the model
rules. Computer simulations confirm the analytic results.Comment: 12 pages REVTEX, 2 figures upon request, dro/93/
Cellular Automata Simulating Experimental Properties of Traffic Flows
A model for 1D traffic flow is developed, which is discrete in space and
time. Like the cellular automaton model by Nagel and Schreckenberg [J. Phys. I
France 2, 2221 (1992)], it is simple, fast, and can describe stop-and-go
traffic. Due to its relation to the optimal velocity model by Bando et al.
[Phys. Rev. E 51, 1035 (1995)], its instability mechanism is of deterministic
nature. The model can be easily calibrated to empirical data and displays the
experimental features of traffic data recently reported by Kerner and Rehborn
[Phys. Rev. E 53, R1297 (1996)].Comment: For related work see
http://www.theo2.physik.uni-stuttgart.de/helbing.html and
http://traffic.comphys.uni-duisburg.de/member/home_schreck.htm
Coupling of the lattice and superlattice deformations and hysteresis in thermal expansion for the quasi one-dimensional conductor TaS
An original interferometer-based setup for measurements of length of
needle-like samples is developed, and thermal expansion of o-TaS crystals
is studied. Below the Peierls transition the temperature hysteresis of length
is observed, the width of the hysteresis loop being up to . The behavior of the loop is anomalous: the length changes so
that it is in front of its equilibrium value. The hysteresis loop couples with
that of conductivity. The sign and the value of the length hysteresis are
consistent with the strain dependence of the charge-density waves (CDW) wave
vector. With lowering temperature down to 100 K the CDW elastic modulus grows
achieving a value comparable with the lattice Young modulus. Our results could
be helpful in consideration of different systems with intrinsic
superstructures.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Phys. Rev. Lett., accepted for publicatio
Single-vehicle data of highway traffic - a statistical analysis
In the present paper single-vehicle data of highway traffic are analyzed in
great detail. By using the single-vehicle data directly empirical time-headway
distributions and speed-distance relations can be established. Both quantities
yield relevant information about the microscopic states. Several fundamental
diagrams are also presented, which are based on time-averaged quantities and
compared with earlier empirical investigations. In the remaining part
time-series analyses of the averaged as well as the single-vehicle data are
carried out. The results will be used in order to propose objective criteria
for an identification of the different traffic states, e.g. synchronized
traffic.Comment: 12 pages, 19 figures, RevTe
Influence of realistic parameters on state-of-the-art LWFA experiments
We examine the influence of non-ideal plasma-density and non-Gaussian
transverse laser-intensity profiles in the laser wakefield accelerator
analytically and numerically. We find that the characteristic amplitude and
scale length of longitudinal density fluctuations impacts on the final energies
achieved by electron bunches. Conditions that minimize the role of the
longitudinal plasma density fluctuations are found. The influence of higher
order Laguerre-Gaussian laser pulses is also investigated. We find that higher
order laser modes typically lead to lower energy gains. Certain combinations of
higher order modes may, however, lead to higher electron energy gains.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures; Accepted for publication in Plasma Physics and
Controlled Fusio
Infrared spectroscopy of small-molecule endofullerenes
Hydrogen is one of the few molecules which has been incarcerated in the
molecular cage of C and forms endohedral supramolecular complex
H@C. In this confinement hydrogen acquires new properties. Its
translational motion becomes quantized and is correlated with its rotations. We
applied infrared spectroscopy to study the dynamics of hydrogen isotopologs
H, D and HD incarcerated in C. The translational and rotational
modes appear as side bands to the hydrogen vibrational mode in the mid infrared
part of the absorption spectrum. Because of the large mass difference of
hydrogen and C and the high symmetry of C the problem is
identical to a problem of a vibrating rotor moving in a three-dimensional
spherical potential. The translational motion within the C cavity breaks
the inversion symmetry and induces optical activity of H. We derive
potential, rotational, vibrational and dipole moment parameters from the
analysis of the infrared absorption spectra. Our results were used to derive
the parameters of a pairwise additive five-dimensional potential energy surface
for H@C. The same parameters were used to predict H energies
inside C[Xu et al., J. Chem. Phys., {\bf 130}, 224306 (2009)]. We
compare the predicted energies and the low temperature infrared absorption
spectra of H@C.Comment: Updated author lis
Dynamic Control of Laser Produced Proton Beams
The emission characteristics of intense laser driven protons are controlled
using ultra-strong (of the order of 10^9 V/m) electrostatic fields varying on a
few ps timescale. The field structures are achieved by exploiting the high
potential of the target (reaching multi-MV during the laser interaction).
Suitably shaped targets result in a reduction in the proton beam divergence,
and hence an increase in proton flux while preserving the high beam quality.
The peak focusing power and its temporal variation are shown to depend on the
target characteristics, allowing for the collimation of the inherently highly
divergent beam and the design of achromatic electrostatic lenses.Comment: 9 Pages, 5 figure
Evolution of avalanche conducting states in electrorheological liquids
Charge transport in electrorheological fluids is studied experimentally under
strongly nonequlibrium conditions. By injecting an electrical current into a
suspension of conducting nanoparticles we are able to initiate a process of
self-organization which leads, in certain cases, to formation of a stable
pattern which consists of continuous conducting chains of particles. The
evolution of the dissipative state in such system is a complex process. It
starts as an avalanche process characterized by nucleation, growth, and thermal
destruction of such dissipative elements as continuous conducting chains of
particles as well as electroconvective vortices. A power-law distribution of
avalanche sizes and durations, observed at this stage of the evolution,
indicates that the system is in a self-organized critical state. A sharp
transition into an avalanche-free state with a stable pattern of conducting
chains is observed when the power dissipated in the fluid reaches its maximum.
We propose a simple evolution model which obeys the maximum power condition and
also shows a power-law distribution of the avalanche sizes.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure
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