12,077 research outputs found
Rubber friction on (apparently) smooth lubricated surfaces
We study rubber sliding friction on hard lubricated surfaces. We show that
even if the hard surface appears smooth to the naked eye, it may exhibit short
wavelength roughness, which may give the dominant contribution to rubber
friction. That is, the observed sliding friction is mainly due to the
viscoelastic deformations of the rubber by the substrate surface asperities.
The presented results are of great importance for rubber sealing and other
rubber applications involving (apparently) smooth surfaces.Comment: 7 pages, 15 figure
Contact mechanics with adhesion: Interfacial separation and contact area
We study the adhesive contact between elastic solids with randomly rough,
self affine fractal surfaces. We present molecular dynamics (MD) simulation
results for the interfacial stress distribution and the wall-wall separation.
We compare the MD results for the relative contact area and the average
interfacial separation, with the prediction of the contact mechanics theory of
Persson. We find good agreement between theory and the simulation results. We
apply the theory to the system studied by Benz et al. involving polymer in
contact with polymer, but in this case the adhesion gives only a small
modification of the interfacial separation as a function of the squeezing
pressure.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Spectroscopic studies in open quantum systems
The spectroscopic properties of an open quantum system are determined by the
eigenvalues and eigenfunctions of an effective Hamiltonian H consisting of the
Hamiltonian H_0 of the corresponding closed system and a non-Hermitian
correction term W arising from the interaction via the continuum of decay
channels. The eigenvalues E_R of H are complex. They are the poles of the
S-matrix and provide both the energies and widths of the states. We illustrate
the interplay between Re(H) and Im(H) by means of the different interference
phenomena between two neighboured resonance states. Level repulsion along the
real axis appears if the interaction is caused mainly by Re(H) while a
bifurcation of the widths appears if the interaction occurs mainly due to
Im(H). We then calculate the poles of the S-matrix and the corresponding
wavefunctions for a rectangular microwave resonator with a scatter as a
function of the area of the resonator as well as of the degree of opening to a
guide. The calculations are performed by using the method of exterior complex
scaling. Re(W) and Im(W) cause changes in the structure of the wavefunctions
which are permanent, as a rule. At full opening to the lead, short-lived
collective states are formed together with long-lived trapped states. The
wavefunctions of the short-lived states at full opening to the lead are very
different from those at small opening. The resonance picture obtained from the
microwave resonator shows all the characteristic features known from the study
of many-body systems in spite of the absence of two-body forces. The poles of
the S-matrix determine the conductance of the resonator. Effects arising from
the interplay between resonance trapping and level repulsion along the real
axis are not involved in the statistical theory.Comment: The six jpg files are not included in the tex-fil
Molecular dynamics study of contact mechanics: contact area and interfacial separation from small to full contact
We report a molecular dynamics study of the contact between a rigid solid
with a randomly rough surface and an elastic block with a flat surface. We
study the contact area and the interfacial separation from small contact (low
load) to full contact (high load). For small load the contact area varies
linearly with the load and the interfacial separation depends logarithmically
on the load. For high load the contact area approaches to the nominal contact
area (i.e., complete contact), and the interfacial separation approaches to
zero. The present results may be very important for soft solids, e.g., rubber,
or for very smooth surfaces, where complete contact can be reached at moderate
high loads without plastic deformation of the solids.Comment: 4 pages,5 figure
Warm water deuterium fractionation in IRAS 16293-2422 - The high-resolution ALMA and SMA view
Measuring the water deuterium fractionation in the inner warm regions of
low-mass protostars has so far been hampered by poor angular resolution
obtainable with single-dish ground- and space-based telescopes. Observations of
water isotopologues using (sub)millimeter wavelength interferometers have the
potential to shed light on this matter. Observations toward IRAS 16293-2422 of
the 5(3,2)-4(4,1) transition of H2-18O at 692.07914 GHz from Atacama Large
Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) as well as the 3(1,3)-2(2,0) of H2-18O at
203.40752 GHz and the 3(1,2)-2(2,1) transition of HDO at 225.89672 GHz from the
Submillimeter Array (SMA) are presented. The 692 GHz H2-18O line is seen toward
both components of the binary protostar. Toward one of the components, "source
B", the line is seen in absorption toward the continuum, slightly red-shifted
from the systemic velocity, whereas emission is seen off-source at the systemic
velocity. Toward the other component, "source A", the two HDO and H2-18O lines
are detected as well with the SMA. From the H2-18O transitions the excitation
temperature is estimated at 124 +/- 12 K. The calculated HDO/H2O ratio is (9.2
+/- 2.6)*10^(-4) - significantly lower than previous estimates in the warm gas
close to the source. It is also lower by a factor of ~5 than the ratio deduced
in the outer envelope. Our observations reveal the physical and chemical
structure of water vapor close to the protostars on solar-system scales. The
red-shifted absorption detected toward source B is indicative of infall. The
excitation temperature is consistent with the picture of water ice evaporation
close to the protostar. The low HDO/H2O ratio deduced here suggests that the
differences between the inner regions of the protostars and the Earth's oceans
and comets are smaller than previously thought.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Interfacial separation between elastic solids with randomly rough surfaces: comparison of experiment with theory
We study the average separation between an elastic solid and a hard solid
with a nominal flat but randomly rough surface, as a function of the squeezing
pressure. We present experimental results for a silicon rubber (PDMS) block
with a flat surface squeezed against an asphalt road surface. The theory shows
that an effective repulse pressure act between the surfaces of the form p
proportional to exp(-u/u0), where u is the average separation between the
surfaces and u0 a constant of order the root-mean-square roughness, in good
agreement with the experimental results.Comment: 6 pages, 10 figure
The deuterium fractionation of water on solar-system scales in deeply-embedded low-mass protostars
(Abridged) The water deuterium fractionation (HDO/HO abundance ratio) has
traditionally been used to infer the amount of water brought to Earth by
comets. Measuring this ratio in deeply-embedded low-mass protostars makes it
possible to probe the critical stage when water is transported from clouds to
disks in which icy bodies are formed. We present sub-arcsecond resolution
observations of HDO in combination with HO from the PdBI toward the
three low-mass protostars NGC 1333-IRAS 2A, IRAS 4A-NW, and IRAS 4B. The
resulting HDO/HO ratio is for IRAS 2A,
for IRAS 4A-NW, and for IRAS
4B. Derived ratios agree with radiative transfer models within a factor of 2-4
depending on the source. Our HDO/HO ratios for the inner regions (where
K) of four young protostars are only a factor of 2 higher than those
found for pristine, solar system comets. These small differences suggest that
little processing of water occurs between the deeply embedded stage and the
formation of planetesimals and comets.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Fluid flow at the interface between elastic solids with randomly rough surfaces
I study fluid flow at the interface between elastic solids with randomly
rough surfaces. I use the contact mechanics model of Persson to take into
account the elastic interaction between the solid walls and the Bruggeman
effective medium theory to account for the influence of the disorder on the
fluid flow. I calculate the flow tensor which determines the pressure flow
factor and, e.g., the leak-rate of static seals. I show how the perturbation
treatment of Tripp can be extended to arbitrary order in the ratio between the
root-mean-square roughness amplitude and the average interfacial surface
separation. I introduce a matrix D(Zeta), determined by the surface roughness
power spectrum, which can be used to describe the anisotropy of the surface at
any magnification Zeta. I present results for the asymmetry factor Gamma(Zeta)
(generalized Peklenik number) for grinded steel and sandblasted PMMA surfaces.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figure
Mass and motion of globulettes in the Rosette Nebula
We have investigated tiny molecular clumps in the Rosette Nebula. Radio
observations were made of molecular line emission from 16 globulettes
identified in a previous optical survey. In addtion, we collected images in the
NIR broad-band JHKs and narrow-band Paschen beta and H2. Ten objects, for which
we collected information from several transitions in 12CO and 13CO were
modelled using a spherically symmetric model. The best fit to observed line
ratios and intensities was obtained by assuming a model composed of a cool and
dense centre and warm and dense surface layer. The average masses derived range
from about 50 to 500 Jupiter masses, which is similar to earlier estimates
based on extinction measures. The globulettes selected are dense, with very
thin layers of fluorescent H2 emission. The NIR data shows that several
globulettes are very opaque and contain dense cores. Because of the high
density encountered already at the surface, the rims become thin, as evidenced
by our P beta images.
We conclude that the entire complex of shells, elephant trunks, and
globulettes in the northern part of the nebula is expanding with nearly the
same velocity of ~22 km/s, and with a very small spread in velocity among the
globulettes. Some globulettes are in the process of detaching from elephant
trunks and shells, while other more isolated objects must have detached long
ago and are lagging behind in the general expansion of the molecular shell. The
suggestion that some globulettes might collapse to form planetary-mass objects
or brown dwarfs is strengthened by our finding of dense cores in several
objects.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures Astronomy and Astrophysics 201
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