2,212 research outputs found

    Measurements of Grain Motion in a Dense, Three-Dimensional Granular Fluid

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    We have used an NMR technique to measure the short-time, three-dimensional displacement of grains in a system of mustard seeds vibrated vertically at 15g. The technique averages over a time interval in which the grains move ballistically, giving a direct measurement of the granular temperature profile. The dense, lower portion of the sample is well described by a recent hydrodynamic theory for inelastic hard spheres. Near the free upper surface the mean free path is longer than the particle diameter and the hydrodynamic description fails.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Fluctuations of a Greenlandic tidewater glacier driven by changes in atmospheric forcing : observations and modelling of Kangiata Nunaata Sermia, 1859–present

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    Acknowledgements. The authors wish to thank Stephen Price, Mauri Pelto, and the anonymous reviewer for their reviews and comments that helped to improve the manuscript. RACMO2.1 data were provided by Jan van Angelen and Michiel van den Broeke, IMAU, Utrecht University. MAR v3.2 data used for runoff calculations were provided by Xavier Fettweis, Department of Geography, University of Liège. The photogrammetric DEM used in Figs. 1 and 3 was provided by Kurt H. Kjær, Centre for GeoGenetics, University of Copenhagen. This research was financially supported by J. M. Lea’s PhD funding, NERC grant number NE/I528742/1. Support for F. M. Nick was provided through the Conoco-Phillips/Lundin Northern Area Program CRIOS project (Calving Rates and Impact on Sea Level).Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Measurement of persistence in 1-D diffusion

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    Using a novel NMR scheme we observed persistence in 1-D gas diffusion. Analytical approximations and numerical simulations have shown that for an initially random array of spins undergoing diffusion, the probability p(t) that the average spin orientation in a given region has not changed sign (i.e., ``persists'') up to time t follows a power law t^{-\theta}, where \theta depends on the dimensionality of the system. The large nuclear spin polarization of laser-polarized 129Xe gas allowed us both to prepare an initial ``quasi-random'' 1-D array of spin orientations and then to perform real-time NMR imaging to monitor the spin diffusion. Our measurements are consistent with theoretical and numerical predictions of \theta ~ 0.12. We also observed finite size effects for long time gas diffusion
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