62,401 research outputs found
Alternative method to find orbits in chaotic systems
We present here a new method which applies well ordered symbolic dynamics to
find unstable periodic and non-periodic orbits in a chaotic system. The method
is simple and efficient and has been successfully applied to a number of
different systems such as the H\'enon map, disk billiards, stadium billiard,
wedge billiard, diamagnetic Kepler problem, colinear Helium atom and systems
with attracting potentials. The method seems to be better than earlier applied
methods.Comment: 5 pages, uuencoded compressed tar PostScript fil
Trace functions as Laplace transforms
We study trace functions on the form t\to\tr f(A+tB) where is a
real function defined on the positive half-line, and and are
matrices such that is positive definite and is positive
semi-definite. If is non-negative and operator monotone decreasing, then
such a trace function can be written as the Laplace transform of a positive
measure. The question is related to the Bessis-Moussa-Villani conjecture.
Key words: Trace functions, BMV-conjecture.Comment: Minor change of style, update of referenc
Random Phase Approximation and Extensions Applied to a Bosonic Field Theory
An application of a self-consistent version of RPA to quantum field theory
with broken symmetry is presented. Although our approach can be applied to any
bosonic field theory, we specifically study the theory in 1+1
dimensions. We show that standard RPA approach leads to an instability which
can be removed when going to a superior version,i.e. the renormalized RPA. We
present a method based on the so-called charging formula of the many electron
problem to calculate the correlation energy and the RPA effective potential.Comment: 30 pages, LaTeX file, 10 figures included, final version accepted in
EPJ
Bifurcations and Complete Chaos for the Diamagnetic Kepler Problem
We describe the structure of bifurcations in the unbounded classical
Diamagnetic Kepler problem. We conjecture that this system does not have any
stable orbits and that the non-wandering set is described by a complete trinary
symbolic dynamics for scaled energies larger then .Comment: 15 pages PostScript uuencoded with figure
The health state preferences and logistical inconsistencies of New Zealanders: a tale of two tariffs
Notwithstanding the proposed use of Cost-Utility Analysis (CUA) to inform health care priority setting in New Zealand, to date there has been no research into New Zealanders’ valuations of health-related quality of life. This paper reports the results of a study of the health state preferences of adult New Zealanders generated from a postal survey to which 1360 people responded (a 50% response rate). The survey employed a self-completed questionnaire in which a selection of health states were described using the EQ-5D health state classification system and respondents’ valuations were sought using a visual analogue scale (VAS). Close attention is paid to the quality of the data, in particular to the ‘logical inconsistencies’ in respondents’ valuations. Regression analysis is used to interpolate values over the 245 possible EQ-5D states. Two tariffs of health state preferences, arising from contrasting treatments of the logical inconsistencies, are reported.New Zealand, EuroQol, EQ-5D
Dynamical density functional theory with hydrodynamic interactions and colloids in unstable traps
A density functional theory for colloidal dynamics is presented which
includes hydrodynamic interactions between the colloidal particles. The theory
is applied to the dynamics of colloidal particles in an optical trap which
switches periodically in time from a stable to unstable confining potential. In
the absence of hydrodynamic interactions, the resulting density breathing mode,
exhibits huge oscillations in the trap center which are almost completely
damped by hydrodynamic interactions. The predicted dynamical density fields are
in good agreement with Brownian dynamics computer simulations
Particle ejection during mergers of dark matter halos
Dark matter halos are built from accretion and merging. During merging some
of the dark matter particles may be ejected with velocities higher than the
escape velocity. We use both N-body simulations and single-particle
smooth-field simulations to demonstrate that rapid changes to the mean field
potential are responsible for such ejection, and in particular that dynamical
friction plays no significant role in it. Studying a range of minor mergers, we
find that typically between 5-15% of the particles from the smaller of the two
merging structures are ejected. We also find that the ejected particles
originate essentially from the small halo, and more specifically are particles
in the small halo which pass later through the region in which the merging
occurs.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures. Accepted for publication in JCA
Nonequilibrium static growing length scales in supercooled liquids on approaching the glass transition
The small wavenumber behavior of the structure factor of
overcompressed amorphous hard-sphere configurations was previously studied for
a wide range of densities up to the maximally random jammed state, which can be
viewed as a prototypical glassy state [A. Hopkins, F. H. Stillinger and S.
Torquato, Phys. Rev. E, 86, 021505 (2012)]. It was found that a precursor to
the glassy jammed state was evident long before the jamming density was reached
as measured by a growing nonequilibrium length scale extracted from the volume
integral of the direct correlation function , which becomes long-ranged
as the critical jammed state is reached. The present study extends that work by
investigating via computer simulations two different atomic models: the
single-component Z2 Dzugutov potential in three dimensions and the
binary-mixture Kob-Andersen potential in two dimensions. Consistent with the
aforementioned hard-sphere study, we demonstrate that for both models a
signature of the glass transition is apparent well before the transition
temperature is reached as measured by the length scale determined from from the
volume integral of the direct correlation function in the single-component case
and a generalized direct correlation function in the binary-mixture case. The
latter quantity is obtained from a generalized Orstein-Zernike integral
equation for a certain decoration of the atomic point configuration. We also
show that these growing length scales, which are a consequence of the
long-range nature of the direct correlation functions, are intrinsically
nonequilibrium in nature as determined by an index that is a measure of
deviation from thermal equilibrium. It is also demonstrated that this
nonequilibrium index, which increases upon supercooling, is correlated with a
characteristic relaxation time scale.Comment: 26 pages, 14 figure
Inequalities for quantum skew information
We study quantum information inequalities and show that the basic inequality
between the quantum variance and the metric adjusted skew information generates
all the multi-operator matrix inequalities or Robertson type determinant
inequalities studied by a number of authors. We introduce an order relation on
the set of functions representing quantum Fisher information that renders the
set into a lattice with an involution. This order structure generates new
inequalities for the metric adjusted skew informations. In particular, the
Wigner-Yanase skew information is the maximal skew information with respect to
this order structure in the set of Wigner-Yanase-Dyson skew informations.
Key words and phrases: Quantum covariance, metric adjusted skew information,
Robertson-type uncertainty principle, operator monotone function,
Wigner-Yanase-Dyson skew information
Toward the Jamming Threshold of Sphere Packings: Tunneled Crystals
We have discovered a new family of three-dimensional crystal sphere packings
that are strictly jammed (i.e., mechanically stable) and yet possess an
anomalously low density. This family constitutes an uncountably infinite number
of crystal packings that are subpackings of the densest crystal packings and
are characterized by a high concentration of self-avoiding "tunnels" (chains of
vacancies) that permeate the structures. The fundamental geometric
characteristics of these tunneled crystals command interest in their own right
and are described here in some detail. These include the lattice vectors (that
specify the packing configurations), coordination structure, Voronoi cells, and
density fluctuations. The tunneled crystals are not only candidate structures
for achieving the jamming threshold (lowest-density rigid packing), but may
have substantially broader significance for condensed matter physics and
materials science.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure
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