3,045 research outputs found
Simulated three-component granular segregation in a rotating drum
Discrete particle simulations are used to model segregation in granular
mixtures of three different particle species in a horizontal rotating drum.
Axial band formation is observed, with medium-size particles tending to be
located between alternating bands of big and small particles. Partial radial
segregation also appears; it precedes the axial segregation and is
characterized by an inner core region richer in small particles. Axial bands
are seen to merge during the long simulation runs, leading to a coarsening of
the band pattern; the relocation of particles involved in one such merging
event is examined. Overall, the behavior is similar to experiment and
represents a generalization of what occurs in the simpler two-component
mixture.Comment: 7 pages, 11 figures (low resolution color figures only; originals at
author's website http://www.ph.biu.ac.il/~rapaport/research/granular.html)
[revised version contains extra figures
A remark on the stability of interconnected nonlinear systems
Published versio
Close-packed structures and phase diagram of soft spheres in cylindrical pores
It is shown for a model system consisting of spherical particles confined in cylindrical pores that the first ten close-packed phases are in one-to-one correspondence with the first ten ways of folding a triangular lattice, each being characterized by a roll-up vector like the single-walled carbon nanotube. Phase diagrams in pressure-diameter and temperature-diameter planes are obtained by inherent-structure calculation and molecular dynamics simulation. The phase boundaries dividing two adjacent phases are infinitely sharp in the low-temperature limit but are blurred as temperature is increased. Existence of such phase boundaries explains rich, diameter-sensitive phase behavior unique for cylindrically confined systems
Correlations in a two-dimensional Bose gas with long range interactions
We study the correlations of two-dimensional dipolar excitons in coupled
quantum wells with a dipole -- dipole repulsive interaction. We show that at
low concentrations, the Bose degeneracy of the excitons is accompanied by
strong multi-particle correlations and the system behaves as a Bose liquid. At
high concentration the particles interaction suppresses quantum coherence and
the system behaves similar to a classical liquid down to a temperature lower
than typical for a Bose gas. We evaluate the interaction energy per particle
and the resulting blue shift of the exciton luminescence that is a direct tool
to measure the correlations. This theory can apply to other systems of bosons
with extended interaction.Comment: 11 pages including 2 figure
Computational study of the thermal conductivity in defective carbon nanostructures
We use non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations to study the adverse
role of defects including isotopic impurities on the thermal conductivity of
carbon nanotubes, graphene and graphene nanoribbons. We find that even in
structurally perfect nanotubes and graphene, isotopic impurities reduce thermal
conductivity by up to one half by decreasing the phonon mean free path. An even
larger thermal conductivity reduction, with the same physical origin, occurs in
presence of structural defects including vacancies and edges in narrow graphene
nanoribbons. Our calculations reconcile results of former studies, which
differed by up to an order of magnitude, by identifying limitations of various
computational approaches
Cluster-resolved dynamic scaling theory and universal corrections for transport on percolating systems
For percolating systems, we propose a universal exponent relation connecting
the leading corrections to scaling of the cluster size distribution with the
dynamic corrections to the asymptotic transport behaviour at criticality. Our
derivation is based on a cluster-resolved scaling theory unifying the scaling
of both the cluster size distribution and the dynamics of a random walker. We
corroborate our theoretical approach by extensive simulations for a site
percolating square lattice and numerically determine both the static and
dynamic correction exponents.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
Leaving College: Why Students Withdrew from a University
The purpose of this study was to determine the reasons why students withdrew during a semester from a mid-sized, comprehensive university located in the Midwest. Six hundred forty-five students were asked to complete the ACT Withdrawing/Non-returning Student Survey during the 1992-93 academic year and summer semester. Three hundred sixty-five completed surveys were returned for a 57% response rate.
Respondents indicated many different reasons for leaving which varied by year in school and whether or not the respondent was a graduate or undergraduate student. There was no typical withdrawing student and there were many reasons students withdrew over which the university has little or no control. The report concludes with a discussion of Vincent Tinto\u27s (1993) ideas concerning institutional departure.
The retention and persistence of students in higher education has been the focus of serious intellectual inquiry for many years. Various concepts of institutional departure, persistence and models for programmatic interventions to reduce departure have been developed. (For example, see Pascarella & Terenzini, 1991; Stage & Rushin, 1993; Steele, Kennedy, & Gordon, 1993; Tinto, 1993; Wolfe, 1993.) The purpose of this study was to focus on one aspect of student attrition, and. to investigate the reasons and general trends as . to why students withdrew during a semester from a midsized comprehensive university located in the Midwest. This information could then be used to guide institutional action
Stratified horizontal flow in vertically vibrated granular layers
A layer of granular material on a vertically vibrating sawtooth-shaped base
exhibits horizontal flow whose speed and direction depend on the parameters
specifying the system in a complex manner. Discrete-particle simulations reveal
that the induced flow rate varies with height within the granular layer and
oppositely directed flows can occur at different levels. The behavior of the
overall flow is readily understood once this novel feature is taken into
account.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, submitte
Using Available Volume to Predict Fluid Diffusivity in Random Media
We propose a simple equation for predicting self-diffusivity of fluids
embedded in random matrices of identical, but dynamically frozen, particles
(i.e., quenched-annealed systems). The only nontrivial input is the volume
available to mobile particles, which also can be predicted for two common
matrix types that reflect equilibrium and non-equilibrium fluid structures. The
proposed equation can account for the large differences in mobility exhibited
by quenched-annealed systems with indistinguishable static pair correlations,
illustrating the key role that available volume plays in transport.Comment: to appear in Physical Review E (12 pages, 4 figures
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