4,612 research outputs found

    Reflection of Channel-Guided Solitons at Junctions in Two-Dimensional Nonlinear Schroedinger Equation

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    Solitons confined in channels are studied in the two-dimensional nonlinear Schr\"odinger equation. We study the dynamics of two channel-guided solitons near the junction where two channels are merged. The two solitons merge into one soliton, when there is no phase shift. If a phase difference is given to the two solitons, the Josephson oscillation is induced. The Josephson oscillation is amplified near the junction. The two solitons are reflected when the initial velocity is below a critical value.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figure

    Electromagnetic emission from hot medium measured by the PHENIX experiment at RHIC

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    Electromagnetic radiation has been of interest in heavy ion collisions because they shed light on early stages of the collisions where hadronic probes do not provide direct information since hadronization and hadronic interactions occur later. The latest results on photon measurement from the PHENIX experiment at RHIC reflect thermodynamic properties of the matter produced in the heavy ion collisions. An unexpectedly large positive elliptic flow measured for direct photons can not be explained by any of the current models.Comment: Talk contributed to Rutherford Centennial Conference, Aug 8-12, 2011, held in Manchester, U

    Domain-size control by global feedback in bistable systems

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    We study domain structures in bistable systems such as the Ginzburg-Landau equation. The size of domains can be controlled by a global negative feedback. The domain-size control is applied for a localized spiral pattern

    Preface: Geometric properties for parabolic and elliptic PDE's.

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    Systematic study of high-pTp_T hadron and photon production with the PHENIX experiment

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    The suppression of hadrons with large transverse momentum (pTp_{\rm T}) in central Au+Au collisions at sNN\sqrt{s_{\rm NN}} = 200 GeV compared to a binary scaled p+p reference is one of the major discoveries at RHIC. To understand the nature of this suppression PHENIX has performed detailed studies of the energy and system-size dependence of the suppression pattern, including the first RHIC measurement near SPS energies. An additional source of information is provided by direct photons. Since they escape the medium basically unaffected they can provide a high pTp_{\rm T} baseline for hard-scattering processes. An overview of hadron production at high pTp_{\rm T} in different colliding systems and at energies from sNN=22.4−200\sqrt{s_{\rm NN}} = 22.4 - 200 GeV will be given. In addition, the latest direct photon measurements by the PHENIX experiment shall be discussed.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, Proceeding for the Conference Strangeness in Quark Matter, Levoca, Slovakia, June 24-29, 200

    Ratio control in a cascade model of cell differentiation

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    We propose a kind of reaction-diffusion equations for cell differentiation, which exhibits the Turing instability. If the diffusivity of some variables is set to be infinity, we get coupled competitive reaction-diffusion equations with a global feedback term. The size ratio of each cell type is controlled by a system parameter in the model. Finally, we extend the model to a cascade model of cell differentiation. A hierarchical spatial structure appears as a result of the cell differentiation. The size ratio of each cell type is also controlled by the system parameter.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figure

    Fluctuation Dissipation Relation for a Langevin Model with Multiplicative Noise

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    A random multiplicative process with additive noise is described by a Langevin equation. We show that the fluctuation-dissipation relation is satisfied in the Langevin model, if the noise strength is not so strong.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, other comment

    Achieving precise mechanical control in intrinsically noisy systems

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    How can precise control be realized in intrinsically noisy systems? Here, we develop a general theoretical framework that provides a way of achieving precise control in signal-dependent noisy environments. When the control signal has Poisson or supra-Poisson noise, precise control is not possible. If, however, the control signal has sub-Poisson noise, then precise control is possible. For this case, the precise control solution is not a function, but a rapidly varying random process that must be averaged with respect to a governing probability density functional. Our theoretical approach is applied to the control of straight-trajectory arm movement. Sub-Poisson noise in the control signal is shown to be capable of leading to precise control. Intriguingly, the control signal for this system has a natural counterpart, namely the bursting pulses of neurons-trains of Dirac-delta functions-in biological systems to achieve precise control performance

    Stochastic synchronization in globally coupled phase oscillators

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    Cooperative effects of periodic force and noise in globally Cooperative effects of periodic force and noise in globally coupled systems are studied using a nonlinear diffusion equation for the number density. The amplitude of the order parameter oscillation is enhanced in an intermediate range of noise strength for a globally coupled bistable system, and the order parameter oscillation is entrained to the external periodic force in an intermediate range of noise strength. These enhancement phenomena of the response of the order parameter in the deterministic equations are interpreted as stochastic resonance and stochastic synchronization in globally coupled systems.Comment: 5 figure

    Cascade Failure in a Phase Model of Power Grids

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    We propose a phase model to study cascade failure in power grids composed of generators and loads. If the power demand is below a critical value, the model system of power grids maintains the standard frequency by feedback control. On the other hand, if the power demand exceeds the critical value, an electric failure occurs via step out (loss of synchronization) or voltage collapse. The two failures are incorporated as two removal rules of generator nodes and load nodes. We perform direct numerical simulation of the phase model on a scale-free network and compare the results with a mean-field approximation.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
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