1,351 research outputs found
Direct observation of twist mode in electroconvection in I52
I report on the direct observation of a uniform twist mode of the director
field in electroconvection in I52. Recent theoretical work suggests that such a
uniform twist mode of the director field is responsible for a number of
secondary bifurcations in both electroconvection and thermal convection in
nematics. I show here evidence that the proposed mechanisms are consistent with
being the source of the previously reported SO2 state of electroconvection in
I52. The same mechanisms also contribute to a tertiary Hopf bifurcation that I
observe in electroconvection in I52. There are quantitative differences between
the experiment and calculations that only include the twist mode. These
differences suggest that a complete description must include effects described
by the weak-electrolyte model of electroconvection
Covering R-trees, R-free groups, and dendrites
We prove that every length space X is the orbit space (with the quotient
metric) of an R-tree T via a free action of a locally free subgroup G(X) of
isometries of X. The mapping f:T->X is a kind of generalized covering map
called a URL-map and is universal among URL-maps onto X. T is the unique R-tree
admitting a URL-map onto X. When X is a complete Riemannian manifold M of
dimension n>1, the Menger sponge, the Sierpin'ski carpet or gasket, T is
isometric to the so-called "universal" R-tree A_{c}, which has valency equal to
the cardinality of the continuum at each point. In these cases, and when X is
the Hawaiian earring H, the action of G(X) on T gives examples in addition to
those of Dunwoody and Zastrow that negatively answer a question of J. W. Morgan
about group actions on R-trees. Indeed, for one length metric on H, we obtain
precisely Zastrow's example.Comment: This paper is the result of splitting off some of the results in the
preprint "Covering R-trees" and adding additional applications to R-free
group
Understanding the relationships between the physical environment and physical activity in older adults: a systematic review of qualitative studies
published_or_final_versio
Modulated structures in electroconvection in nematic liquid crystals
Motivated by experiments in electroconvection in nematic liquid crystals with
homeotropic alignment we study the coupled amplitude equations describing the
formation of a stationary roll pattern in the presence of a weakly-damped mode
that breaks isotropy. The equations can be generalized to describe the planarly
aligned case if the orienting effect of the boundaries is small, which can be
achieved by a destabilizing magnetic field. The slow mode represents the
in-plane director at the center of the cell. The simplest uniform states are
normal rolls which may undergo a pitchfork bifurcation to abnormal rolls with a
misaligned in-plane director.We present a new class of defect-free solutions
with spatial modulations perpendicular to the rolls. In a parameter range where
the zig-zag instability is not relevant these solutions are stable attractors,
as observed in experiments. We also present two-dimensionally modulated states
with and without defects which result from the destabilization of the
one-dimensionally modulated structures. Finally, for no (or very small)
damping, and away from the rotationally symmetric case, we find static chevrons
made up of a periodic arrangement of defect chains (or bands of defects)
separating homogeneous regions of oblique rolls with very small amplitude.
These states may provide a model for a class of poorly understood stationary
structures observed in various highly-conducting materials ("prechevrons" or
"broad domains").Comment: 13 pages, 13 figure
Electron-phonon scattering at the intersection of two Landau levels
We predict a double-resonant feature in the magnetic field dependence of the
phonon-mediated longitudinal conductivity of a two-subband
quasi-two-dimensional electron system in a quantizing magnetic field. The two
sharp peaks in appear when the energy separation between two
Landau levels belonging to different size-quantization subbands is favorable
for acoustic-phonon transitions. One-phonon and two-phonon mechanisms of
electron conductivity are calculated and mutually compared. The phonon-mediated
interaction between the intersecting Landau levels is considered and no avoided
crossing is found at thermal equilibrium.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
Three-dimensional pattern formation, multiple homogeneous soft modes, and nonlinear dielectric electroconvection
Patterns forming spontaneously in extended, three-dimensional, dissipative
systems are likely to excite several homogeneous soft modes (
hydrodynamic modes) of the underlying physical system, much more than quasi
one- and two-dimensional patterns are. The reason is the lack of damping
boundaries. This paper compares two analytic techniques to derive the patten
dynamics from hydrodynamics, which are usually equivalent but lead to different
results when applied to multiple homogeneous soft modes. Dielectric
electroconvection in nematic liquid crystals is introduced as a model for
three-dimensional pattern formation. The 3D pattern dynamics including soft
modes are derived. For slabs of large but finite thickness the description is
reduced further to a two-dimensional one. It is argued that the range of
validity of 2D descriptions is limited to a very small region above threshold.
The transition from 2D to 3D pattern dynamics is discussed. Experimentally
testable predictions for the stable range of ideal patterns and the electric
Nusselt numbers are made. For most results analytic approximations in terms of
material parameters are given.Comment: 29 pages, 2 figure
Universal critical temperature for Kosterlitz-Thouless transitions in bilayer quantum magnets
Recent experiments show that double layer quantum Hall systems may have a
ground state with canted antiferromagnetic order. In the experimentally
accessible vicinity of a quantum critical point, the order vanishes at a
temperature T_{KT} = \kappa H, where H is the magnetic field and \kappa is a
universal number determined by the interactions and Berry phases of the thermal
excitations. We present quantum Monte Carlo simulations on a model spin system
which support the universality of \kappa and determine its numerical value.
This allows experimental tests of an intrinsically quantum-mechanical universal
quantity, which is not also a property of a higher dimensional classical
critical point.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Quasiparticle properties of a coupled quantum wire electron-phonon system
We study leading-order many-body effects of longitudinal optical (LO) phonons
on electronic properties of one-dimensional quantum wire systems. We calculate
the quasiparticle properties of a weakly polar one dimensional electron gas in
the presence of both electron-phonon and electron-electron interactions. The
leading-order dynamical screening approximation (GW approximation) is used to
obtain the electron self-energy, the quasiparticle spectral function, and the
quasiparticle damping rate in our calculation by treating electrons and phonons
on an equal footing. Our theory includes effects (within the random phase
approximation) of Fermi statistics, Landau damping, plasmon-phonon mode
coupling, phonon renormalization, dynamical screening, and impurity scattering.
In general, electron-electron and electron-phonon many-body renormalization
effects are found to be nonmultiplicative and nonadditive in our theoretical
results for quasiparticle properties.Comment: 21 pages, Revtex, 12 figures enclose
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