2,259 research outputs found
Topological analysis of polymeric melts: Chain length effects and fast-converging estimators for entanglement length
Primitive path analyses of entanglements are performed over a wide range of
chain lengths for both bead spring and atomistic polyethylene polymer melts.
Estimators for the entanglement length N_e which operate on results for a
single chain length N are shown to produce systematic O(1/N) errors. The
mathematical roots of these errors are identified as (a) treating chain ends as
entanglements and (b) neglecting non-Gaussian corrections to chain and
primitive path dimensions. The prefactors for the O(1/N) errors may be large;
in general their magnitude depends both on the polymer model and the method
used to obtain primitive paths. We propose, derive and test new estimators
which eliminate these systematic errors using information obtainable from the
variation of entanglement characteristics with chain length. The new estimators
produce accurate results for N_e from marginally entangled systems. Formulas
based on direct enumeration of entanglements appear to converge faster and are
simpler to apply.Comment: Major revisions. Developed near-ideal estimators which operate on
multiple chain lengths. Now test these on two very different model polymers
Cosmological dynamics of scalar field with non-minimal kinetic term
We investigate dynamics of scalar field with non-minimal kinetic term.
Nontrivial behavior of the field in the vicinity of singular points of kinetic
term is observed. In particular, the singular points could serve as attractor
for classical solutions.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, title is changed, some refs added, to be
published in Gen. Rel. and Gra
Assessing the Democratic Legitimacy of the 2016 Brexit Referendum
This is the final version. Available from the publisher via the link in this recordThis contribution addresses the input legitimacy of the British EU membership referendum of June
2016. It considers who was given a vote in the first place, and whether those given a vote could
make a reasonable choice in light of the campaign. More precisely, it assesses the following four
criteria: the franchise, the presence of clarity, the amount and quality of information, and the quality
of public debate, arguing that instances of direct democracy, such as referendums, require higher
standards of civic behaviour from both elected representatives and voters than those required of
representative democracy. The empirical analysis of these criteria shows that the referendum fell
short regarding the first two criteria whilst it could have done better as regards the last two. The
paper concludes by briefly discussing what can be learnt from this referendum for future
referendums
Measuring the Hausdorff Dimension of Quantum Mechanical Paths
We measure the propagator length in imaginary time quantum mechanics by Monte
Carlo simulation on a lattice and extract the Hausdorff dimension . We
find that all local potentials fall into the same universality class giving
like the free motion. A velocity dependent action () in the path integral (e.g. electrons moving in
solids, or Brueckner's theory of nuclear matter) yields if and if . We discuss the
relevance of fractal pathes in solid state physics and in , in particular
for the Wilson loop in .Comment: uuencoded and compressed shell archive file. 8 pages with 7 figure
Theoretical analysis of STM-derived lifetimes of excitations in the Shockley surface state band of Ag(111)
We present a quantitative many-body analysis using the GW approximation of
the decay rate due to electron-electron scattering of excitations in
the Shockley surface state band of Ag(111), as measured using the scanning
tunnelling microscope (STM). The calculations include the perturbing influence
of the STM, which causes a Stark-shift of the surface state energy and
concomitant increase in . We find varies more rapidly with
than recently found for image potential states, where the STM has been shown to
significantly affect measured lifetimes. For the Shockley states, the
Stark-shifts that occur under normal tunnelling conditions are relatively small
and previous STM-derived lifetimes need not be corrected.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Differentiated integration as a fair scheme of cooperation (working paper)
This is the final version. Available from the European University Institute via the link in this recordIn the past few years, there have been few discussions about the future of the European Union (EU) that did not involve the topic of differentiated integration (DI), the process whereby some member states integrate further, while others temporarily or permanently opt out of specific policies. Pragmatically, DI has allowed European integration to proceed by both widening and deepening. Normatively, it has allowed for diverging national capacities and preferences to be accommodated. However, the growing acceptance that the EUâs future may lie in more institutional diversity leaves unanswered the question of the conditions under which DI could be accepted as a fair scheme of cooperation. This is the question addressed by this paper. Why is this an important question? First, if DI is perceived as unfair, it will not generate the support it needs to work and, to the contrary, might further nourish hard forms of Euroscepticism. Second, if the institutional design of DI is perceived to be unfair, it will fail in its purpose of reconciling member states who want to integrate to different degrees, and at different speeds. Third, it has often been suggested that DI allows member states to leave their fundamental disagreements about the nature and the finalitĂ© of the EU unresolved by recognising that they may proceed separately, with some moving forward whilst others hold back. However, DI can in fact contribute to creating new divisions and is itself an expression of divisions. Therefore, it is important to develop a more explicit understanding of the different notions of fairness that are involved in different designs of DI. Overall, fair design in DI matters because it ensures that DI contributes to greater acceptance of the EU rather than creating additional divisions. The paper explores two main approaches of international cooperation â statism and cosmopolitanism â and relates them to fairness in institutional design in DI
Differentiated integration as a fair scheme of cooperation
Differentiated integration (DI), whereby some MS opt out or are excluded from certain common EU policies for sovereignty or capacity reasons, may be thought to undermine the EUâs functioning as what John Rawls called a fair scheme of cooperation, grounded in norms of impartiality and reciprocity. However, we argue that different forms of DI can be compatible with either fair cooperation between states on the model of Rawlsâ Law of Peoples or cooperation among citizens on the model of Rawlsâ two principles of domestic justice. Meanwhile, the EU has features of both, being an international Union of states and a supra- and trans-national Union of citizens. We defend the coherence of this combination and contend that DI can provide a justified mechanism for ensuring fairness between states remains compatible with fairness between citizens both within and across states. Indeed it offers a potential model for other forms of international cooperation
Elastic and Plastic Behavior of Model Solids
A short ranged attractive (SHRAT) potential is employed here which is of the type of the effective two-particle interaction used in a variant of the âembedded atomâ method for metals. Properties of the (pure) SHRAT model system in its gaseous, (metastable) liquid, and solid states have been computed earlier by molecular dynamics and, where possible, successfully compared with analytical calculations, as well as with the behavior of real substances. After some remarks on scaling and reference values, elastic properties of the model metal are characterized by the bulk and shear moduli, and their corresponding Born-Green and fluctuation contributions. It is demonstrated that plastic flow implies significant structural changes, being reflected by the BornâGreen contribution to the cubic shear modulus. Not only stick-slip behavior, but the detailed elastic response and plastic flow of the model solid is analyzed. In order to interpret and reproduce the simulated rheological quantities, a simple, but generalized Maxwell model is tested. Its tensorial generalization may be used in simulation schemes such as smoothed particle dynamics, which are applicable on length and time scales significantly larger than those accessible in molecular dynamics simulations
- âŠ