1,460 research outputs found
The Aggregation Kinetics of a Simulated Telechelic Polymer
We investigate the aggregation kinetics of a simulated telechelic polymer
gel. In the hybrid Molecular Dynamics (MD) / Monte Carlo (MC) algorithm,
aggregates of associating end groups form and break according to MC rules,
while the position of the polymers in space is dictated by MD. As a result, the
aggregate sizes change every time step. In order to describe this aggregation
process, we employ master equations. They define changes in the number of
aggregates of a certain size in terms of reaction rates. These reaction rates
indicate the likelihood that two aggregates combine to form a large one, or
that a large aggregate splits into two smaller parts. The reaction rates are
obtained from the simulations for a range of temperatures.
Our results indicate that the rates are not only temperature dependent, but
also a function of the sizes of the aggregates involved in the reaction. Using
the measured rates, solutions to the master equations are shown to be stable
and in agreement with the aggregate size distribution, as obtained directly
from simulation data. Furthermore, we show how temperature induced variations
in these rates give rise to the observed changes in the aggregate distribution
that characterizes the sol-gel transition.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
East Asia and the global/transatlantic/Western crisis
This paper introduces the special collection on East Asia and the Global Crisis. After justifying why a focus on East Asia is appropriate, it draws out the main themes that run through the individual contributions. These are the extent to which the region is decoupling from the global economy (or the West), the increasing legitimacy of statist alternatives to neoliberal development strategies, and the impact of crises on the definition of ―region‖ and the functioning of regional institutions and governance mechanisms
Fluid Mechanics of Everyday Objects
High speed Schlieren videos were produced highlighting the fluid mechanics
found in everyday objects. This video (entry 102369) was submitted as part of
the Gallery of Fluid Motion 2013, which is a showcase of fluid dynamics videos.Comment: Both a high-resolution version and a low-resolution version of the
submitted video are available for downloa
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF STRUCTURAL PARAMETERS OBTAINED BY DIFFRACTOMETER AND SCANNING-DENSITOMETER MEASUREMENTS
The structure of cytosine monohydrate has been redetermined with reflexion data obtained from
automatic digital scanning of Weissenberg films. The previous determination with diffractometer data
[McClure & Craven, Acta Cryst. (1973), B29, 1234--1238] converged to an R of 0.037, with
average estimated standard deviations of 0"002 A and 0"15 ° in derived bond lengths and angles. The
photographic data set converged to an R of 0-0672 with e.s.d.'s of 0-004--0-005 A and 0.3-0.4 °. Normal
probability plots showed that the positional (and the derived geometric) parameters were very comparable;
the vibrational parameters were rather less so, some systematic error being apparent. The overall
conclusion from the study is that the two data sets have given essentially the same positional description
of the structure
Faster linearizability checking via -compositionality
Linearizability is a well-established consistency and correctness criterion
for concurrent data types. An important feature of linearizability is Herlihy
and Wing's locality principle, which says that a concurrent system is
linearizable if and only if all of its constituent parts (so-called objects)
are linearizable. This paper presents -compositionality, which generalizes
the idea behind the locality principle to operations on the same concurrent
data type. We implement -compositionality in a novel linearizability
checker. Our experiments with over nine implementations of concurrent sets,
including Intel's TBB library, show that our linearizability checker is one
order of magnitude faster and/or more space efficient than the state-of-the-art
algorithm.Comment: 15 pages, 2 figure
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