12,742 research outputs found
Simulation of the Gravitational Collapse and Fragmentation of Rotating Molecular Clouds
In this paper we study the process of the subsequent (runaway) fragmentation
of the rotating isothermal Giant Molecular Cloud (GMC) complex. Our own
developed Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) gas-dynamical model
successfully reproduce the observed Cloud Mass-distribution Function (CMF) in
our Galaxy (even the differences between the inner and outer parts of our
Galaxy). The steady state CMF is established during the collapse within a
free-fall timescale of the GMC. We show that one of the key parameters, which
defines the observed slope of the present day CMF, is the initial ratio of the
rotational (turbulent) and gravitational energy inside the fragmented GMC.Comment: 8 pages, 9 EPS figures, special forma.cls class file is use
Acoustic Radiation Force and Torque on Small Particles as Measures of the Canonical Momentum and Spin Densities
We examine acoustic radiation force and torque on a small (subwavelength)
absorbing isotropic particle immersed in a monochromatic (but generally
inhomogeneous) sound-wave field. We show that by introducing the monopole and
dipole polarizabilities of the particle, the problem can be treated in a way
similar to the well-studied optical forces and torques on dipole Rayleigh
particles. We derive simple analytical expressions for the acoustic force
(including both the gradient and scattering forces) and torque. Importantly,
these expressions reveal intimate relations to the fundamental field properties
introduced recently for acoustic fields: the canonical momentum and spin
angular momentum densities. We compare our analytical results with previous
calculations and exact numerical simulations. We also consider an important
example of a particle in an evanescent acoustic wave, which exhibits the
mutually-orthogonal scattering (radiation-pressure) force, gradient force, and
torque from the transverse spin of the field.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, Supplemental Material, to appear in Phys. Rev.
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A cesium gas strongly confined in one dimension : sideband cooling and collisional properties
We study one-dimensional sideband cooling of Cesium atoms strongly confined
in a far-detuned optical lattice. The Lamb-Dicke regime is achieved in the
lattice direction whereas the transverse confinement is much weaker. The
employed sideband cooling method, first studied by Vuletic et al.\cite{Vule98},
uses Raman transitions between Zeeman levels and produces a spin-polarized
sample. We present a detailed study of this cooling method and investigate the
role of elastic collisions in the system. We accumulate of the atoms
in the vibrational ground state of the strongly confined motion, and elastic
collisions cool the transverse motion to a temperature of K=, where is the oscillation
frequency in the strongly confined direction. The sample then approaches the
regime of a quasi-2D cold gas. We analyze the limits of this cooling method and
propose a dynamical change of the trapping potential as a mean of cooling the
atomic sample to still lower temperatures. Measurements of the rate of
thermalization between the weakly and strongly confined degrees of freedom are
compatible with the zero energy scattering resonance observed previously in
weak 3D traps. For the explored temperature range the measurements agree with
recent calculations of quasi-2D collisions\cite{Petr01}. Transparent analytical
models reproduce the expected behavior for and also for where the 2D
features are prominent.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figure
A rigorous derivation of the stationary compressible Reynolds equation via the Navier-Stokes equations
We provide a rigorous derivation of the compressible Reynolds system as a
singular limit of the compressible (barotropic) Navier-Stokes system on a thin
domain. In particular, the existence of solutions to the Navier-Stokes system
with non-homogeneous boundary conditions is shown that may be of independent
interest. Our approach is based on new a priori bounds available for the
pressure law of hard sphere type. Finally, uniqueness for the limit problem is
established in the 1D case
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