20,920 research outputs found
Dynamics of Perturbed Relative Equilibria of Point Vortices on the Sphere or Plane
Stable assemblages of localized vortices exist which have particle-like
properties, such as mass, and which can interact with one another when they
closely approach. In this article I calculate the mass of these localized
states and numerically investigate some aspects of their interactions.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure
Reduction of the planar 4-vortex system at zero momentum
The system of four point vortices in the plane has relative equilibria that
behave as composite particles, in the case where three of the vortices have
strength and one of the vortices has strength . These
relative equilibria occur at nongeneric momenta. The reduction of this system,
at those momenta, by continuous and then discrete symmetries, classifies the
4-vortex states which have been observed as products of collisions of two such
composite particles. In this article I explicitly calculate these reductions,
and show they are qualitatively identical one degree of freedom systems on a
cylinder. The flows on these reduced systems all have one stable equilibrium
and one unstable equilibrium, and all the orbits are periodic except for two
homoclinic connections to the unstable equilibrium.Comment: Minor typographical corrections and slightly revised introduction. 9
pages, 5 figures. To appear EQUIDIFF/99 proceeding
Skew critical problems
Skew critical problems occur in continuous and discrete nonholonomic
Lagrangian systems. They are analogues of constrained optimization problems,
where the objective is differentiated in directions given by an apriori
distribution, instead of tangent directions to the constraint. We show
semiglobal existence and uniqueness for nondegenerate skew critical problems,
and show that the solutions of two skew critical problems have the same contact
as the problems themselves. Also, we develop some infrastructure that is
necessary to compute with contact order geometrically, directly on manifolds
The Transversal Relative Equilibria of a Hamiltonian System with Symmetry
We show that, given a certain transversality condition, the set of relative
equilibria \mcl E near p_e\in\mcl E of a Hamiltonian system with symmetry
is locally Whitney-stratified by the conjugacy classes of the isotropy
subgroups (under the product of the coadjoint and adjoint actions) of the
momentum-generator pairs of the relative equilibria. The dimension
of the stratum of the conjugacy class (K) is , where
Z(K) is the center of K, and transverse to this stratum \mcl E is locally
diffeomorphic to the commuting pairs of the Lie algebra of . The
stratum \mcl E_{(K)} is a symplectic submanifold of P near p_e\in\mcl E if
and only if is nondegenerate and K is a maximal torus of G. We also show
that there is a dense subset of G-invariant Hamiltonians on P for which all the
relative equilibria are transversal. Thus, generically, the types of
singularities that can be found in the set of relative equilibria of a
Hamiltonian system with symmetry are those types found amongst the
singularities at zero of the sets of commuting pairs of certain Lie subalgebras
of the symmetry group.Comment: 18 page
Satellite-derived cloud fields during the FIRE cirrus IFO case study
The First ISCCP Regional Experiment (FIRE) Cirrus Intensive Field Observation (IFO) program measured cirrus cloud properties with a variety of instruments from the surface, aircraft, and satellites. Surface and aircraft observations provide a small scale point and line measurements of different micro- and macro-physical properties of advecting and evolving cloud systems. Satellite radiance data may be used to measure the areal variations of the bulk cloud characteristics over meso- and large scales. Ideally, the detailed cloud properties derived from the small scale measurements should be tied to the bulk cloud properties typically derived from the satellite data. Full linkage of these data sets for a comprehensive description of a given cloud field, one of the goals of FIRE, should lead to significant progress in understanding, measuring, and modeling cirrus cloud systems. The relationships derived from intercomparisons of lidar and satellite data by Minnis et al. are exploited in a mesoscale analysis of the satellite data taken over Wisconsin during the Cirrus IFO case study
Monte Carlo Simulation of Deffuant opinion dynamics with quality differences
In this work the consequences of different opinion qualities in the Deffuant
model were examined. If these qualities are randomly distributed, no different
behavior was observed. In contrast to that, systematically assigned qualities
had strong effects to the final opinion distribution. There was a high
probability that the strongest opinion was one with a high quality.
Furthermore, under the same conditions, this major opinion was much stronger
than in the models without systematic differences. Finally, a society with
systematic quality differences needed more tolerance to form a complete
consensus than one without or with unsystematic ones.Comment: 8 pages including 5 space-consuming figures, fir Int. J. Mod. Phys. C
15/1
A comparison of ISCCP and FIRE satellite cloud parameters
One of the goals of the First ISCCP Regional Experiment (FIRE) is the quantification of the uncertainties in the cloud parameter products derived by the International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project (ISCCP). This validation effort has many facets including sensitivity analyses and comparisons to similar data or theoretical results with known accuracies. The FIRE provides cloud-truth data at particular points or along particular lines from surface and aircraft measurement systems. Relating these data to the larger, area-averaged ISCCP results requires intermediate steps using higher resolution satellite data analyses. Errors in the cloud products derived with a particular method can be determined by performing analyses of high resolution satellite data over the area surrounding the point or line measurement. This same analysis technique may then be used to derive cloud parameters over a larger area containing similar cloud fields. It is assumed that the uncertainties found for the small scale analyses are the same for the large scale so that the method has been calibrated for the particular cloud type; i.e., its accuracy is known. Differences between the large scale results using the ISCCP technique and the calibrated method can be computed and used to determine if any significant biases or rms errors occur in the ISCCP results. Selected ISCCP results are compared to cloud parameters derived using the hybrid bispectral threshold method over the FIRE IFO and extended observation areas
Ultrathin oxides: bulk-oxide-like model surfaces or unique films?
To better understand the electronic and chemical properties of wide-gap oxide
surfaces at the atomic scale, experimental work has focused on epitaxial films
on metal substrates. Recent findings show that these films are considerably
thinner than previously thought. This raises doubts about the transferability
of the results to surface properties of thicker films and bulk crystals. By
means of density-functional theory and approximate GW corrections for the
electronic spectra we demonstrate for three characteristic wide-gap oxides
(silica, alumina, and hafnia) the influence of the substrate and highlight
critical differences between the ultrathin films and surfaces of bulk
materials. Our results imply that monolayer-thin oxide films have rather unique
properties.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted by PR
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