1,322 research outputs found
Anomalous wave reflection from the interface of two strongly nonlinear granular media
Granular materials exhibit a strongly nonlinear behaviour affecting the
propagation of information in the medium. Dynamically self-organized strongly
nonlinear solitary waves are the main information carriers in granular chains.
Here we report the first experimental observation of the dramatic change of
reflectivity from the interface of two granular media triggered by a noncontact
magnetically induced initial precompression. It may be appropriate to name this
phenomenon the "acoustic diode" effect. Based on numerical simulations, we
explain this effect by the high gradient of particle velocity near the
interface.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figure
Scattering of solitary waves in granular media
A detailed numerical study of the scattering of solitary waves by a barrier,
in a granular media with Hertzian contact, shows the existence of secondary
multipulse structures generated at the interface of two "sonic vacua", which
have a similar structure as the one previously found by Nesterenko and
coworkers.Comment: 4 pages, 9 figures (fig 5, replaced). Submitted to PR
Strongly Nonlinear Waves in 3D Phononic Crystals
Three dimensional phononic crystal ("sonic vacuum" without prestress) was assembled from 137 vertical cavities arranged in hexagonal pattern in Silicone matrix filled with stainless steel spheres. This system has unique strongly nonlinear properties with respect to wave propagation inherited from nonlinear Hertz type elastic contact interaction. Trains of strongly nonlinear solitary waves excited by short duration impact were investigated. Solitary wave with speed below sound speed in the air and reflection from the boundary of two "sonic vacuums" were detected
Delayed Scattering of Solitary Waves from Interfaces in a Granular Container
In granular media, the characterization of the behavior of solitary waves
around interfaces is of importance in order to look for more applications of
these systems. We study the behavior of solitary waves at both interfaces of a
symmetric granular container, a class of systems that has received recent
attention because it posses the feature of energy trapping. Hertzian contact is
assumed. We have found that the scattering process is elastic at one interface,
while at the other interface it is observed that the transmitted solitary wave
has stopped its movement during a time that gets longer when the ratio between
masses at the interfaces increases. The origin of this effect can be traced
back to the phenomenon of gaps opening, recently observed experimentally.Comment: To appear in Physical Review E, vol 7
Observation of two-wave structure in strongly nonlinear dissipative granular chains
In a strongly nonlinear viscous granular chain under conditions of loading
that exclude stationary waves (e.g., impact by a single grain) we observe a
pulse that consists of two interconnected but distinct parts. One is a leading
narrow "primary pulse" with properties similar to a solitary wave in a "sonic
vacuum." It arises from strong nonlinearity and discreteness in the absence of
dissipation, but now decays due to viscosity. The other is a broad, much more
persistent shock-like "secondary pulse" trailing the primary pulse and caused
by viscous dissipation. The medium behind the primary pulse is transformed from
a "sonic vacuum" to a medium with finite sound speed. When the rapidly decaying
primary pulse dies, the secondary pulse continues to propagate in the "sonic
vacuum," with an oscillatory front if the viscosity is relatively small, until
its eventual (but very slow) disintegration. Beyond a critical viscosity there
is no separation of the two pulses, and the dissipation and nonlinearity
dominate the shock-like attenuating pulse which now exhibits a nonoscillatory
front
Skyrme-Random-Phase-Approximation description of E1 strength in 92-100Mo
The isovector dipole E1 strength in Mo isotopes with A=92,94,96,98,100 is
analyzed within the self-consistent separable random-phase approximation (SRPA)
model with Skyrme forces SkT6, SkM*, SLy6, and SkI3. The special attention is
paid to the low-energy region near the particle thresholds (4-12 MeV), which is
important for understanding of astrophysical processes. We show that, due to a
compensation effect, the influence of nuclear deformation on E1 strength below
10-12 MeV is quite modest. At the same time, in agreement with previous
predictions, the deformation increases the strength at higher energy. At 4-8
MeV the strength is mainly determined by the tail of E1 giant resonance. The
four Skyrme forces differ in description of the whole giant resonance but give
rather similar results below 12 MeV.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, to be published in Int. J. Mod. Phys. (E) as
contribution to Proceedings of 15th Nuclear Physics Workshop (Kazimierz,
Poland, 2008
Strongly nonlinear waves in a chain of Teflon beads
One dimensional "sonic vacuum" type phononic crystals were assembled from a
chain of Teflon spheres with different diameters in a Teflon holder. It was
demonstrated for the first time that this polymer-based "sonic vacuum", with
exceptionally low elastic modulus of particles, supports propagation of
strongly nonlinear solitary waves with a very low speed.Comment: 33 pages, 6 figure
Analytic invariant charge and the lattice static quark-antiquark potential
A recently developed model for the QCD analytic invariant charge is compared
with quenched lattice simulation data on the static quark-antiquark potential.
By employing this strong running coupling one is able to obtain the confining
quark-antiquark potential in the framework of the one-gluon exchange model. To
achieve this objective a technique for evaluating the integrals of a required
form is developed. Special attention is paid here to removing the divergences
encountered the calculations. All this enables one to examine the asymptotic
behavior of the potential at both small and large distances with high accuracy.
An explicit expression for the quark-antiquark potential, which interpolates
between these asymptotics, and satisfies the concavity condition, is proposed.
The derived potential coincides with the perturbative results at small
distances, and it is in a good agreement with the lattice data in the
nonperturbative physically-relevant region. An estimation of the parameter
is obtained for the case of pure gluodynamics. It is found to
be consistent with all the previous estimations of in the
framework of approach in hand.Comment: LaTeX2e, 10 pages with 3 EPS figure
Experimental evidence of shock mitigation in a Hertzian tapered chain
We present an experimental study of the mechanical impulse propagation
through a horizontal alignment of elastic spheres of progressively decreasing
diameter , namely a tapered chain. Experimentally, the diameters of
spheres which interact via the Hertz potential are selected to keep as close as
possible to an exponential decrease, , where the
experimental tapering factor is either ~% or ~%.
In agreement with recent numerical results, an impulse initiated in a
monodisperse chain (a chain of identical beads) propagates without shape
changes, and progressively transfer its energy and momentum to a propagating
tail when it further travels in a tapered chain. As a result, the front pulse
of this wave decreases in amplitude and accelerates. Both effects are
satisfactorily described by the hard spheres approximation, and basically, the
shock mitigation is due to partial transmissions, from one bead to the next, of
momentum and energy of the front pulse. In addition when small dissipation is
included, a better agreement with experiments is found. A close analysis of the
loading part of the experimental pulses demonstrates that the front wave adopts
itself a self similar solution as it propagates in the tapered chain. Finally,
our results corroborate the capability of these chains to thermalize
propagating impulses and thereby act as shock absorbing devices.Comment: ReVTeX, 7 pages with 6 eps, accepted for Phys. Rev. E (Related papers
on http://www.supmeca.fr/perso/jobs/
Strongly Nonlinear Waves in Polymer Based Phononic Crystals
One dimensional "sonic vacuum"-type phononic crystals were assembled from chains of polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) beads and Parylene coated spheres with different diameters. It was demonstrated for the first time that these polymer-based granular system, with exceptionally low elastic modulus of particles, support the propagation of strongly nonlinear solitary waves with a very low speed. They can be described using classical nonlinear Hertz law despite the viscoelastic nature of the polymers and the high strain rate deformation of the contact area. Trains of strongly nonlinear solitary waves excited by an impact were investigated experimentally and were found to be in reasonable agreement with numerical calculations. Tunability of the signal shape and velocity was achieved through a non-contact magnetically induced precompression of the chains. This applied prestress allowed an increase of up to two times the solitary waves speed and significant delayed the signal splitting. Anomalous reflection at the interface of two "sonic vacua"-type systems was reported
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