622 research outputs found
Casimir-like force arising from quantum fluctuations in a slow-moving dilute Bose-Einstein condensate
We calculate a force due to zero-temperature quantum fluctuations on a
stationary object in a moving superfluid flow. We model the object by a
localized potential varying only in the flow direction and model the flow by a
three-dimensional weakly interacting Bose-Einstein condensate at zero
temperature. We show that this force exists for any arbitrarily small flow
velocity and discuss the implications for the stability of superfluid flow.Comment: v3: revised discussion of toroidal geometry; replotted figure; minor
editorial changes; quantitative and qualitative conclusions remain unchange
Super-Arrhenius dynamics for sub-critical crack growth in disordered brittle media
Taking into account stress fluctuations due to thermal noise, we study
thermally activated irreversible crack growth in disordered media. The
influence of material disorder on sub-critical growth of a single crack in
two-dimensional brittle elastic material is described through the introduction
of a rupture threshold distribution. We derive analytical predictions for crack
growth velocity and material lifetime in agreement with direct numerical
calculations. It is claimed that crack growth process is inhibited by disorder:
velocity decreases and lifetime increases with disorder. More precisely,
lifetime is shown to follow a super-Arrhenius law, with an effective
temperature theta - theta_d, where theta is related to the thermodynamical
temperature and theta_d to the disorder variance.Comment: Submitted to Europhysics Letter
Thermal activation of rupture and slow crack growth in a model of homogenous brittle materials
Slow crack growth in a model of homogenous brittle elastic material is
described as a thermal activation process where stress fluctuations allow to
overcome a breaking threshold through a series of irreversible steps. We study
the case of a single crack in a flat sheet for which analytical predictions can
be made, and compare them with results from the equivalent problem of a 2D
spring network. Good statistical agreement is obtained for the crack growth
profile and final rupture time. The specific scaling of the energy barrier with
stress intensity factor appears as a consequence of irreversibility. In
addition, the model brings out a characteristic growth length whose physical
meaning could be tested experimentally.Comment: To be published in : Europhysics Letter
Transition between Two Oscillation Modes
A model for the symmetric coupling of two self-oscillators is presented. The
nonlinearities cause the system to vibrate in two modes of different
symmetries. The transition between these two regimes of oscillation can occur
by two different scenarios. This might model the release of vortices behind
circular cylinders with a possible transition from a symmetric to an
antisymmetric Benard-von Karman vortex street.Comment: 12 pages, 0 figure
Adsorption of a binary mixture of monomers with nearest-neighbour cooperative effects
A model for the adsorption of a binary mixture on a one-dimensional infinite
lattice with nearest neighbour cooperative effects is considered. The particles
of the two species are both monomers but differ in the repulsive interaction
experienced by them when trying to adsorb. An exact expression for the coverage
of the lattice is derived. In the jamming limit, it is a monotonic function of
the ratio between the attempt frequencies of the two species, varying between
the values corresponding to each of the two single species. This is in contrast
with the results obtained in other models for the adsorption of particles of
different sizes. The structure of the jamming state is also investigated.Comment: v2: Errors in the figures fixed; same text; 23 pages, 5 figures.
Accepted for publication in Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Genera
Subcritical crack growth in fibrous materials
We present experiments on the slow growth of a single crack in a fax paper
sheet submitted to a constant force . We find that statistically averaged
crack growth curves can be described by only two parameters : the mean rupture
time and a characteristic growth length . We propose a model
based on a thermally activated rupture process that takes into account the
microstructure of cellulose fibers. The model is able to reproduce the shape of
the growth curve, the dependence of on as well as the effect of
temperature on the rupture time . We find that the length scale at which
rupture occurs in this model is consistently close to the diameter of cellulose
microfibrils
Roughness of moving elastic lines - crack and wetting fronts
We investigate propagating fronts in disordered media that belong to the
universality class of wetting contact lines and planar tensile crack fronts. We
derive from first principles their nonlinear equations of motion, using the
generalized Griffith criterion for crack fronts and three standard mobility
laws for contact lines. Then we study their roughness using the self-consistent
expansion. When neglecting the irreversibility of fracture and wetting
processes, we find a possible dynamic rough phase with a roughness exponent of
and a dynamic exponent of z=2. When including the irreversibility,
we conclude that the front propagation can become history dependent, and thus
we consider the value as a lower bound for the roughness exponent.
Interestingly, for propagating contact line in wetting, where irreversibility
is weaker than in fracture, the experimental results are close to 0.5, while
for fracture the reported values of 0.55--0.65 are higher.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure
Anomalous time correlation in two-dimensional driven diffusive systems
We study the time correlation function of a density field in two-dimensional
driven diffusive systems within the framework of fluctuating hydrodynamics. It
is found that the time correlation exhibits power-law behavior in an
intermediate time regime in the case that the fluctuation-dissipation relation
is violated and that the power-law exponent depends on the extent of this
violation. We obtain this result by employing a renormalization group method to
treat a logarithmic divergence in time.Comment: 6 page
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