1,491 research outputs found
Trajectory and smooth attractors for Cahn-Hilliard equations with inertial term
The paper is devoted to a modification of the classical Cahn-Hilliard
equation proposed by some physicists. This modification is obtained by adding
the second time derivative of the order parameter multiplied by an inertial
coefficient which is usually small in comparison to the other physical
constants. The main feature of this equation is the fact that even a globally
bounded nonlinearity is "supercritical" in the case of two and three space
dimensions. Thus the standard methods used for studying semilinear hyperbolic
equations are not very effective in the present case. Nevertheless, we have
recently proven the global existence and dissipativity of strong solutions in
the 2D case (with a cubic controlled growth nonlinearity) and for the 3D case
with small inertial coefficient and arbitrary growth rate of the nonlinearity.
The present contribution studies the long-time behavior of rather weak (energy)
solutions of that equation and it is a natural complement of the results of our
previous papers. Namely, we prove here that the attractors for energy and
strong solutions coincide for both the cases mentioned above. Thus, the energy
solutions are asymptotically smooth. In addition, we show that the non-smooth
part of any energy solution decays exponentially in time and deduce that the
(smooth) exponential attractor for the strong solutions constructed previously
is simultaneously the exponential attractor for the energy solutions as well
Anomalous scaling of passive scalars in rotating flows
We present results of direct numerical simulations of passive scalar
advection and diffusion in turbulent rotating flows. Scaling laws and the
development of anisotropy are studied in spectral space, and in real space
using an axisymmetric decomposition of velocity and passive scalar structure
functions. The passive scalar is more anisotropic than the velocity field, and
its power spectrum follows a spectral law consistent with . This scaling is explained with phenomenological arguments that
consider the effect of rotation. Intermittency is characterized using scaling
exponents and probability density functions of velocity and passive scalar
increments. In the presence of rotation, intermittency in the velocity field
decreases more noticeably than in the passive scalar. The scaling exponents
show good agreement with Kraichnan's prediction for passive scalar
intermittency in two-dimensions, after correcting for the observed scaling of
the second order exponent.Comment: 10 pages, 15 figure
Electrodynamics of balanced charges
In this work we modify the wave-corpuscle mechanics for elementary charges
introduced by us recently. This modification is designed to better describe
electromagnetic (EM) phenomena at atomic scales. It includes a modification of
the concept of the classical EM field and a new model for the elementary charge
which we call a balanced charge (b-charge). A b-charge does not interact with
itself electromagnetically, and every b-charge possesses its own elementary EM
field. The EM energy is naturally partitioned as the interaction energy between
pairs of different b-charges. We construct EM theory of b-charges (BEM) based
on a relativistic Lagrangian with the following properties: (i) b-charges
interact only through their elementary EM potentials and fields; (ii) the field
equations for the elementary EM fields are exactly the Maxwell equations with
proper currents; (iii) a free charge moves uniformly preserving up to the
Lorentz contraction its shape; (iv) the Newton equations with the Lorentz
forces hold approximately when charges are well separated and move with
non-relativistic velocities. The BEM theory can be characterized as
neoclassical one which covers the macroscopic as well as the atomic spatial
scales, it describes EM phenomena at atomic scale differently than the
classical EM theory. It yields in macroscopic regimes the Newton equations with
Lorentz forces for centers of well separated charges moving with
nonrelativistic velocities. Applied to atomic scales it yields a hydrogen atom
model with a frequency spectrum matching the same for the Schrodinger model
with any desired accuracy.Comment: Manuscript was edited to improve the exposition and to remove noticed
typo
Linear superposition in nonlinear wave dynamics
We study nonlinear dispersive wave systems described by hyperbolic PDE's in
R^{d} and difference equations on the lattice Z^{d}. The systems involve two
small parameters: one is the ratio of the slow and the fast time scales, and
another one is the ratio of the small and the large space scales. We show that
a wide class of such systems, including nonlinear Schrodinger and Maxwell
equations, Fermi-Pasta-Ulam model and many other not completely integrable
systems, satisfy a superposition principle. The principle essentially states
that if a nonlinear evolution of a wave starts initially as a sum of generic
wavepackets (defined as almost monochromatic waves), then this wave with a high
accuracy remains a sum of separate wavepacket waves undergoing independent
nonlinear evolution. The time intervals for which the evolution is considered
are long enough to observe fully developed nonlinear phenomena for involved
wavepackets. In particular, our approach provides a simple justification for
numerically observed effect of almost non-interaction of solitons passing
through each other without any recourse to the complete integrability. Our
analysis does not rely on any ansatz or common asymptotic expansions with
respect to the two small parameters but it uses rather explicit and
constructive representation for solutions as functions of the initial data in
the form of functional analytic series.Comment: New introduction written, style changed, references added and typos
correcte
Vortical and Wave Modes in 3D Rotating Stratified Flows: Random Large Scale Forcing
Utilizing an eigenfunction decomposition, we study the growth and spectra of
energy in the vortical and wave modes of a 3D rotating stratified fluid as a
function of . Working in regimes characterized by moderate
Burger numbers, i.e. or , our results
indicate profound change in the character of vortical and wave mode
interactions with respect to . As with the reference state of
, for the wave mode energy saturates quite quickly
and the ensuing forward cascade continues to act as an efficient means of
dissipating ageostrophic energy. Further, these saturated spectra steepen as
decreases: we see a shift from to scaling for
(where and are the forcing and dissipation scales,
respectively). On the other hand, when the wave mode energy
never saturates and comes to dominate the total energy in the system. In fact,
in a sense the wave modes behave in an asymmetric manner about .
With regard to the vortical modes, for , the signatures of 3D
quasigeostrophy are clearly evident. Specifically, we see a scaling
for and, in accord with an inverse transfer of energy, the
vortical mode energy never saturates but rather increases for all . In
contrast, for and increasing, the vortical modes contain a
progressively smaller fraction of the total energy indicating that the 3D
quasigeostrophic subsystem plays an energetically smaller role in the overall
dynamics.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figs. (abbreviated abstract
Decadal changes in Arctic Ocean Chlorophyll a: Bridging ocean color observations from the 1980s to present time
Remotely-sensed Ocean color data offer a unique opportunity for studying variations of bio-optical properties which is especially valuable in the Arctic Ocean (AO) where in situ data are sparse. In this study, we re-processed the raw data from the Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-View (SeaWiFS, 1998–2010) and the MODerate resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS, 2003–2016) ocean-color sensors to ensure compatibility with the first ocean color sensor, namely, the Coastal Zone Color Scanner (CZCS, 1979–1986). Based on a bio-regional approach, this study assesses the quality of this new homogeneous pan-Arctic Chl a dataset, which provides the longest (but non-continuous) ocean color time-series ever produced for the AO (37 years long between 1979 and 2016). We show that despite the temporal gaps between 1986 and 1998 due to the absence of ocean color satellite, the time series is suitable to establish a baseline of phytoplankton biomass for the early 1980s, before sea-ice loss accelerated in the AO. More importantly, it provides the opportunity to quantify decadal changes over the AO revealing for instance the continuous Chl a increase in the inflow shelves such as the Barents Sea since the CZCS era
Experimental demonstration of mode structure in ultralong Raman fiber lasers
We present the first experimental demonstration of a resolvable mode structure with spacing c/2nL in the RF spectra of ultralong Raman fiber lasers. The longest ever demonstrated laser cavity (L=84km), RF peaks of ∼100 Hz width and spacing ∼1 kHz have been observed at low intracavity powers. The width of the peaks increases linearly with growing intracavity power and is almost independent of fiber length. © 2007 Optical Society of America
Лечение кислотозависимых заболеваний: сегодня вновь актуально (Что нового внёс Maastricht-IV?)
Department of Family Medicine, Nicolae Testemitanu State Medical and Pharmaceutical University, Congresul III al Medicilor de Familie din Republica Moldova, 17–18 mai, 2012, Chişinău, Republica Moldova, Conferinţa Naţională „Maladii bronhoobstructive la copii”, consacrată profesorului universitar, doctor habilitat Victor Gheţeul, 27 aprilie, Chişinău, Republica MoldovaToday, acid-dependent disease (ADD) is a problem not just for gastroentorology, but also for family medicine. Consensus Maastricht-IV (2010)
recommends starting with quarto therapy and flexibility in HP eradication.Кислотозависимые заболевания (КЗЗ) и сегодня остаются ведущей проблемой не только гастроэнтерологии, но и семейной медицины.
Консенсус Maastricht-IV (2010) указал на необходимость стартовой квадротерапии и гибкость схем эрадикации Hp
Anisotropy and non-universality in scaling laws of the large scale energy spectrum in rotating turbulence
Rapidly rotating turbulent flow is characterized by the emergence of columnar
structures that are representative of quasi-two dimensional behavior of the
flow. It is known that when energy is injected into the fluid at an
intermediate scale , it cascades towards smaller as well as larger scales.
In this paper we analyze the flow in the \textit{inverse cascade} range at a
small but fixed Rossby number, {}. Several
{numerical simulations with} helical and non-helical forcing functions are
considered in periodic boxes with unit aspect ratio. In order to resolve the
inverse cascade range with {reasonably} large Reynolds number, the analysis is
based on large eddy simulations which include the effect of helicity on eddy
viscosity and eddy noise. Thus, we model the small scales and resolve
explicitly the large scales. We show that the large-scale energy spectrum has
at least two solutions: one that is consistent with
Kolmogorov-Kraichnan-Batchelor-Leith phenomenology for the inverse cascade of
energy in two-dimensional (2D) turbulence with a {}
scaling, and the other that corresponds to a steeper {}
spectrum in which the three-dimensional (3D) modes release a substantial
fraction of their energy per unit time to 2D modes. {The spectrum that} emerges
{depends on} the anisotropy of the forcing function{,} the former solution
prevailing for forcings in which more energy is injected into 2D modes while
the latter prevails for isotropic forcing. {In the case of anisotropic forcing,
whence the energy} goes from the 2D to the 3D modes at low wavenumbers,
large-scale shear is created resulting in another time scale ,
associated with shear, {thereby producing} a spectrum for the
{total energy} with the 2D modes still following a {}
scaling
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