37,034 research outputs found
Corrugation of relativistic magnetized shock waves
As a shock front interacts with turbulence, it develops corrugation which
induces outgoing wave modes in the downstream plasma. For a fast shock wave,
the incoming wave modes can either be fast magnetosonic waves originating from
downstream, outrunning the shock, or eigenmodes of the upstream plasma drifting
through the shock. Using linear perturbation theory in relativistic MHD, this
paper provides a general analysis of the corrugation of relativistic magnetized
fast shock waves resulting from their interaction with small amplitude
disturbances. Transfer functions characterizing the linear response for each of
the outgoing modes are calculated as a function of the magnetization of the
upstream medium and as a function of the nature of the incoming wave.
Interestingly, if the latter is an eigenmode of the upstream plasma, we find
that there exists a resonance at which the (linear) response of the shock
becomes large or even diverges. This result may have profound consequences on
the phenomenology of astrophysical relativistic magnetized shock waves.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures; to appear in Ap
The q-gradient method for global optimization
The q-gradient is an extension of the classical gradient vector based on the
concept of Jackson's derivative. Here we introduce a preliminary version of the
q-gradient method for unconstrained global optimization. The main idea behind
our approach is the use of the negative of the q-gradient of the objective
function as the search direction. In this sense, the method here proposed is a
generalization of the well-known steepest descent method. The use of Jackson's
derivative has shown to be an effective mechanism for escaping from local
minima. The q-gradient method is complemented with strategies to generate the
parameter q and to compute the step length in a way that the search process
gradually shifts from global in the beginning to almost local search in the
end. For testing this new approach, we considered six commonly used test
functions and compared our results with three Genetic Algorithms (GAs)
considered effective in optimizing multidimensional unimodal and multimodal
functions. For the multimodal test functions, the q-gradient method
outperformed the GAs, reaching the minimum with a better accuracy and with less
function evaluations.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figur
Generalized enthalpy model of a high pressure shift freezing process
High-pressure freezing processes are a novel emerging technology in food processing, offering significant improvements to the quality of frozen foods. To be able to simulate plateau times and thermal history under different conditions, in this work we present a generalized enthalpy model of the high-pressure shift freezing process. The model includes the effects of pressure on conservation of enthalpy and incorporates the freezing point depression of non-dilute food samples. In addition the significant heat transfer effects of convection in the pressurizing medium are accounted for by solving the two-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations. We run the model for several numerical tests where the food sample is agar gel, and find good agreement with experimental data from the literature
Hyperon effects on the properties of -stable neutron star matter
We present results from Brueckner-Hartree-Fock calculations for
-stable neutron star matter with nucleonic and hyperonic degrees of
freedom employing the most recent parametrizations of the baryon-baryon
interaction of the Nijmegen group. Only and are present up
to densities . The corresponding equations of state are then used
to compute properties of neutron stars such as masses and radii.Comment: 4 pages, contributed talk at HYP2000, Torino, 23-27 Oct. 200
Particle Multiplicity in Jets and Sub-jets with Jet Axis from Color Current
We study the particle multiplicity in a jet or sub-jet as derived from an
energy-multiplicity 2-particle correlation. This definition avoids the notion
of a globally fixed jet axis and allows for the study of smaller jet cone
openings in a more stable way. The results are sensitive to the mean color
current in the jet from primary parton which takes into
account intermediate partonic processes in the sub-jet production where at high energies. We generalize previous calculations in
Leading Logarithmic Approximation (LLA). The size of the effects related to
this jet axis definition are computed for multiplicities in sub-jets with
different opening angles and energies by including contributions from the
Modified LLA (MLLA) and Next-to-MLLA to the leading order QCD results
- …