259 research outputs found
Movers and shakers: Granular damping in microgravity
The response of an oscillating granular damper to an initial perturbation is
studied using experiments performed in microgravity and granular dynamics
mulations. High-speed video and image processing techniques are used to extract
experimental data. An inelastic hard sphere model is developed to perform
simulations and the results are in excellent agreement with the experiments.
The granular damper behaves like a frictional damper and a linear decay of the
amplitude is bserved. This is true even for the simulation model, where
friction forces are absent. A simple expression is developed which predicts the
optimal damping conditions for a given amplitude and is independent of the
oscillation frequency and particle inelasticities.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
Oscillatory instability in a driven granular gas
We discovered an oscillatory instability in a system of inelastically
colliding hard spheres, driven by two opposite "thermal" walls at zero gravity.
The instability, predicted by a linear stability analysis of the equations of
granular hydrodynamics, occurs when the inelasticity of particle collisions
exceeds a critical value. Molecular dynamic simulations support the theory and
show a stripe-shaped cluster moving back and forth in the middle of the box
away from the driving walls. The oscillations are irregular but have a single
dominating frequency that is close to the frequency at the instability onset,
predicted from hydrodynamics.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Europhysics Letter
KAM for the quantum harmonic oscillator
In this paper we prove an abstract KAM theorem for infinite dimensional
Hamiltonians systems. This result extends previous works of S.B. Kuksin and J.
P\"oschel and uses recent techniques of H. Eliasson and S.B. Kuksin. As an
application we show that some 1D nonlinear Schr\"odinger equations with
harmonic potential admits many quasi-periodic solutions. In a second
application we prove the reducibility of the 1D Schr\"odinger equations with
the harmonic potential and a quasi periodic in time potential.Comment: 54 pages. To appear in Comm. Math. Phy
Breaking arches with vibrations: the role of defects
We present experimental results about the stability of arches against
external vibrations. Two dimensional strings of mutually stabilizing grains are
geometrically analyzed and subsequently submitted to a periodic forcing at
fixed frequency and increasing amplitude. The main factor that determines the
granular arch resistance against vibrations is the maximum angle among those
formed between any particle of the arch and its two neighbors: the higher the
maximum angle is, the easier to break the arch. Based in an analysis of the
forces, a simple explanation is given for this dependence. From this,
interesting information can be extracted about the expected magnitudes of
normal forces and friction coefficients of the particles conforming the arches
Closed classes of functions, generalized constraints and clusters
Classes of functions of several variables on arbitrary non-empty domains that
are closed under permutation of variables and addition of dummy variables are
characterized in terms of generalized constraints, and hereby Hellerstein's
Galois theory of functions and generalized constraints is extended to infinite
domains. Furthermore, classes of operations on arbitrary non-empty domains that
are closed under permutation of variables, addition of dummy variables and
composition are characterized in terms of clusters, and a Galois connection is
established between operations and clusters.Comment: 21 page
Linear Response for Granular Fluids
The linear response of an isolated, homogeneous granular fluid to small
spatial perturbations is studied by methods of non-equilibrium statistical
mechanics. The long wavelength linear hydrodynamic equations are obtained, with
formally exact expressions for the susceptibilities and transport coefficients.
The latter are given in equivalent Einstein-Helfand and Green-Kubo forms. The
context of these results and their contrast with corresponding results for
normal fluids are discussed.Comment: Submitted to PR
Drastic fall-off of the thermal conductivity for disordered lattices in the limit of weak anharmonic interactions
We study the thermal conductivity, at fixed positive temperature, of a
disordered lattice of harmonic oscillators, weakly coupled to each other
through anharmonic potentials. The interaction is controlled by a small
parameter . We rigorously show, in two slightly different setups,
that the conductivity has a non-perturbative origin. This means that it decays
to zero faster than any polynomial in as . It
is then argued that this result extends to a disordered chain studied by Dhar
and Lebowitz, and to a classical spins chain recently investigated by
Oganesyan, Pal and Huse.Comment: 21 page
Violation of the Einstein relation in Granular Fluids: the role of correlations
We study the linear response in different models of driven granular gases. In
some situations, even if the the velocity statistics can be strongly
non-Gaussian, we do not observe appreciable violations of the Einstein formula
for diffusion versus mobility. The situation changes when strong correlations
between velocities and density are present: in this case, although a form of
fluctuation-dissipation relation holds, the differential velocity response of a
particle and its velocity self-correlation are no more proportional. This
happens at high densities and strong inelasticities, but still in the
fluid-like (and ergodic) regime.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, submitted for publicatio
Assessing a Hydrodynamic Description for Instabilities in Highly Dissipative, Freely Cooling Granular Gases
An intriguing phenomenon displayed by granular flows and predicted by
kinetic-theory-based models is the instability known as particle "clustering,"
which refers to the tendency of dissipative grains to form transient, loose
regions of relatively high concentration. In this work, we assess a
modified-Sonine approximation recently proposed [Garz\'o et al., Physica A 376,
94 (2007)] for a granular gas via an examination of system stability. In
particular, we determine the critical length scale associated with the onset of
two types of instabilities -vortices and clusters- via stability analyses of
the Navier-Stokes-order hydrodynamic equations by using the expressions of the
transport coefficients obtained from both the standard and the modified-Sonine
approximations. We examine the impact of both Sonine approximations over a
range of solids fraction \phi <0.2 for small restitution coefficients
e=0.25--0.4, where the standard and modified theories exhibit discrepancies.
The theoretical predictions for the critical length scales are compared to
molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, of which a small percentage were not
considered due to inelastic collapse. Results show excellent quantitative
agreement between MD and the modified-Sonine theory, while the standard theory
loses accuracy for this highly dissipative parameter space. The modified theory
also remedies a (highdissipation) qualitative mismatch between the standard
theory and MD for the instability that forms more readily. Furthermore, the
evolution of cluster size is briefly examined via MD, indicating that
domain-size clusters may remain stable or halve in size, depending on system
parameters.Comment: 4 figures; to be published in Phys. Rev.
Scaling properties of granular materials
Given an assembly of viscoelastic spheres with certain material properties,
we raise the question how the macroscopic properties of the assembly will
change if all lengths of the system, i.e. radii, container size etc., are
scaled by a constant. The result leads to a method to scale down experiments to
lab-size.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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