467 research outputs found

    Helical close packings of ideal ropes

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    Closely packed conformations of helices formed on the ideal rope are considered. The pitch versus radius relations which define a closely packed helix are determined. The relations stem from the turn-to-turn distance and curvature limiting conditions. Plots of the relations are shown to cross each other. The physical sense of the crossing point is discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figure

    The ideal trefoil knot

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    The most tight conformation of the trefoil knot found by the SONO algorithm is presented. Structure of the set of its self-contact points is analyzed.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure

    The motion of the freely falling chain tip

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    The dynamics of the tip of the falling chain is analyzed. Results of laboratory experiments are presented and compared with results of numerical simulations. Time dependences of the velocity and the acceleration of the chain tip for a number of different initial conformations of the chain are determined. A simple analytical model of the system is also considered.Comment: 29 pages, 13 figure

    Two-dimensional melting far from equilibrium in a granular monolayer

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    We report an experimental investigation of the transition from a hexagonally ordered solid phase to a disordered liquid in a monolayer of vibrated spheres. The transition occurs as the intensity of the vibration amplitude is increased. Measurements of the density of dislocations and the positional and orientational correlation functions show evidence for a dislocation-mediated continuous transition from a solid phase with long-range order to a liquid with only short-range order. The results show a strong similarity to simulations of melting of hard disks in equilibrium, despite the fact that the granular monolayer is far from equilibrium due to the effects of interparticle dissipation and the vibrational forcing.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Helical Tubes in Crowded Environments

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    When placed in a crowded environment, a semi-flexible tube is forced to fold so as to make a more compact shape. One compact shape that often arises in nature is the tight helix, especially when the tube thickness is of comparable size to the tube length. In this paper we use an excluded volume effect to model the effects of crowding. This gives us a measure of compactness for configurations of the tube, which we use to look at structures of the semi-flexible tube that minimize the excluded volume. We focus most of our attention on the helix and which helical geometries are most compact. We found that helices of specific pitch to radius ratio 2.512 to be optimally compact. This is the same geometry that minimizes the global curvature of the curve defining the tube. We further investigate the effects of adding a bending energy or multiple tubes to begin to explore the more complete space of possible geometries a tube could form.Comment: 10 page

    Orientational instabilities in nematics with weak anchoring under combined action of steady flow and external fields

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    We study the homogeneous and the spatially periodic instabilities in a nematic liquid crystal layer subjected to steady plane {\em Couette} or {\em Poiseuille} flow. The initial director orientation is perpendicular to the flow plane. Weak anchoring at the confining plates and the influence of the external {\em electric} and/or {\em magnetic} field are taken into account. Approximate expressions for the critical shear rate are presented and compared with semi-analytical solutions in case of Couette flow and numerical solutions of the full set of nematodynamic equations for Poiseuille flow. In particular the dependence of the type of instability and the threshold on the azimuthal and the polar anchoring strength and external fields is analysed.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure

    Ordered droplet structures at the liquid crystal surface and elastic-capillary colloidal interactions

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    We demonstrate a variety of ordered patterns, including hexagonal structures and chains, formed by colloidal particles (droplets) at the free surface of a nematic liquid crystal (LC). The surface placement introduces a new type of particle interaction as compared to particles entirely in the LC bulk. Namely, director deformations caused by the particle lead to distortions of the interface and thus to capillary attraction. The elastic-capillary coupling is strong enough to remain relevant even at the micron scale when its buoyancy-capillary counterpart becomes irrelevant.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, to be published in Physical Review Letter

    Hard-core Yukawa model for two-dimensional charge stabilized colloids

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    The hyper-netted chain (HNC) and Percus-Yevick (PY) approximations are used to study the phase diagram of a simple hard-core Yukawa model of charge-stabilized colloidal particles in a two-dimensional system. We calculate the static structure factor and the pair distribution function over a wide range of parameters. Using the statics correlation functions we present an estimate for the liquid-solid phase diagram for the wide range of the parameters.Comment: 7 pages, 9figure

    Buckling Instabilities of a Confined Colloid Crystal Layer

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    A model predicting the structure of repulsive, spherically symmetric, monodisperse particles confined between two walls is presented. We study the buckling transition of a single flat layer as the double layer state develops. Experimental realizations of this model are suspensions of stabilized colloidal particles squeezed between glass plates. By expanding the thermodynamic potential about a flat state of N N confined colloidal particles, we derive a free energy as a functional of in-plane and out-of-plane displacements. The wavevectors of these first buckling instabilities correspond to three different ordered structures. Landau theory predicts that the symmetry of these phases allows for second order phase transitions. This possibility exists even in the presence of gravity or plate asymmetry. These transitions lead to critical behavior and phases with the symmetry of the three-state and four-state Potts models, the X-Y model with 6-fold anisotropy, and the Heisenberg model with cubic interactions. Experimental detection of these structures is discussed.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figures on request. EF508
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