1,821 research outputs found
Thermodynamics of black holes: an analogy with glasses
The present equilibrium formulation of thermodynamics for black holes has
several drawbacks, such as assuming the same temperature for black hole and
heat bath. Recently the author formulated non-equilibrium thermodynamics for
glassy systems. This approach is applied to black holes, with the cosmic
background temperature being the bath temperature, and the Hawking temperature
the internal temperature. Both Hawking evaporation and absorption of background
radiation are taken into account.
It is argued that black holes did not form in the very early universe.Comment: 4 pages revtex; submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Multiple scattering of classical waves: from microscopy to mesoscopy and diffusion
A tutorial discussion of the propagation of waves in random media is
presented. In first approximation the transport of the multiple scattered waves
is given by diffusion theory, but important corrections are present. These
corrections are calculated with the radiative transfer or Schwarzschild-Milne
equation, which describes intensity transport at the ``mesoscopic'' level and
is derived from the ``microscopic'' wave equation. A precise treatment of the
diffuse intensity is derived which automatically includes the effects of
boundary layers. Effects such as the enhanced backscatter cone and imaging of
objects in opaque media are also discussed within this framework. In the second
part the approach is extended to mesoscopic correlations between multiple
scattered intensities which arise when scattering is strong. These correlations
arise from the underlying wave character. The derivation of correlation
functions and intensity distribution functions is given and experimental data
are discussed. Although the focus is on light scattering, the theory is also
applicable to micro waves, sound waves and non-interacting electrons.Comment: Review. 86 pages Latex, 32 eps-figures included. To appear in Rev.
Mod. Phy
Solvable glassy system: static versus dynamical transition
A directed polymer is considered on a flat substrate with randomly located
parallel ridges. It prefers to lie inside wide regions between the ridges. When
the transversel width is exponential in the
longitudinal length , there can be a large number of
available wide states. This ``complexity'' causes a phase transition from a
high temperature phase where the polymer lies in the widest lane, to a glassy
low temperature phase where it lies in one of many narrower lanes. Starting
from a uniform initial distribution of independent polymers, equilibration up
to some exponential time scale induces a sharp dynamical transition. When the
temperature is slowly increased with time, this occurs at a tunable
temperature. There is an asymmetry between cooling and heating. The structure
of phase space in the low temperature non-equilibrium glassy phase is of a
one-level tree.Comment: 4 pages revte
Quantum description of spherical spins
The spherical model for spins describes ferromagnetic phase transitions well,
but it fails at low temperatures. A quantum version of the spherical model is
proposed. It does not induce qualitative changes near the phase transition.
However, it produces a physical low temperature behavior. The entropy is
non-negative. Model parameters can be adapted to the description of real
quantum spins. Several applications are discussed. Zero-temperature quantum
phase transitions are analyzed for a ferromagnet and a spin glass in a
transversal field. Their crossover exponents are presented.Comment: 4 pages postscript. Revised version, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
Quantum thermodynamics: thermodynamics at the nanoscale
A short introduction on quantum thermodynamics is given and three new topics
are discussed: 1) Maximal work extraction from a finite quantum system. The
thermodynamic prediction fails and a new, general result is derived, the
``ergotropy''. 2) In work extraction from two-temperature setups, the presence
of correlations can push the effective efficiency beyond the Carnot bound. 3)
In the presence of level crossing, non-slow changes may be more optimal than
slow ones.Comment: 5 pages. Talk given at Physics of Quantum Electronics (PQE2004),
Snowbird, by Th.M. Nieuwenhuize
Does the Third Law of Thermodynamics hold in the Quantum Regime?
The first in a long series of papers by John T. Lewis,
G. W. Ford and the present author, considered the problem of the most general
coupling of a quantum particle to a linear passive heat bath, in the course of
which they derived an exact formula for the free energy of an oscillator
coupled to a heat bath in thermal equilibrium at temperature T. This formula,
and its later extension to three dimensions to incorporate a magnetic field,
has proved to be invaluable in analyzing problems in quantum thermodynamics.
Here, we address the question raised in our title viz. Nernst's third law of
thermodynamics
Qualitative reasoning in participatory spatial planning: the use of OSIRIS in the Yellow River Delta
The regularized BRST Jacobian of pure Yang-Mills theory
The Jacobian for infinitesimal BRST transformations of path integrals for
pure Yang-Mills theory, viewed as a matrix \unity +\Delta J in the space of
Yang-Mills fields and (anti)ghosts, contains off-diagonal terms. Naively, the
trace of vanishes, being proportional to the trace of the structure
constants. However, the consistent regulator \cR, constructed from a general
method, also contains off-diagonal terms. An explicit computation demonstrates
that the regularized Jacobian Tr\ \Delta J\exp -\cR /M^2 for is the variation of a local counterterm, which we give. This is a
direct proof at the level of path integrals that there is no BRST anomaly.Comment: 12 pages, latex, CERN-TH.6541/92, KUL-TF-92/2
Distributions of inherent structure energies during aging
We perform extensive simulations of a binary mixture Lennard-Jones system
subjected to a temperature jump in order to study the time evolution of
fluctuations during aging. Analyzing data from 1500 different aging
realizations, we calculate distributions of inherent structure energies for
different aging times and contrast them with equilibrium. We find that the
distributions initially become narrower and then widen as the system
equilibrates. For deep quenches, fluctuations in the glassy system differ
significantly from those observed in equilibrium. Simulation results are
partially captured by theoretical predictions only when the final temperature
is higher than the mode coupling temperature.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Random walks of molecular motors arising from diffusional encounters with immobilized filaments
Movements of molecular motors on cytoskeletal filaments are described by
directed walks on a line. Detachment from this line is allowed to occur with a
small probability. Motion in the surrounding fluid is described by symmetric
random walks. Effects of detachment and reattachment are calculated by an
analytical solution of the master equation in two and three dimensions. Results
are obtained for the fraction of bound motors, their average velocity and
displacement. The diffusion coefficient parallel to the filament becomes
anomalously large since detachment and subsequent reattachment, in the presence
of directed motion of the bound motors, leads to a broadening of the density
distribution.
The occurrence of protofilaments on a microtubule is modeled by internal
states of the binding sites. After a transient time all protofilaments become
equally populated.Comment: 20 pages Phys Rev E format + 11 figure
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