8,292 research outputs found
Fractional Reaction-Diffusion Equation
A fractional reaction-diffusion equation is derived from a continuous time
random walk model when the transport is dispersive. The exit from the encounter
distance, which is described by the algebraic waiting time distribution of jump
motion, interferes with the reaction at the encounter distance. Therefore, the
reaction term has a memory effect. The derived equation is applied to the
geminate recombination problem. The recombination is shown to depend on the
intrinsic reaction rate, in contrast with the results of Sung et al. [J. Chem.
Phys. {\bf 116}, 2338 (2002)], which were obtained from the fractional
reaction-diffusion equation where the diffusion term has a memory effect but
the reaction term does not. The reactivity dependence of the recombination
probability is confirmed by numerical simulations.Comment: to appear in Journal of Chemical Physic
Orientational relaxation in a dispersive dynamic medium : Generalization of the Kubo-Ivanov-Anderson jump diffusion model to include fractional environmental dynamics
Ivanov-Anderson (IA) model (and an earlier treatment by Kubo) envisages a
decay of the orientational correlation by random but large amplitude molecular
jumps, as opposed to infinitesimal small jumps assumed in Brownian diffusion.
Recent computer simulation studies on water and supercooled liquids have shown
that large amplitude motions may indeed be more of a rule than exception.
Existing theoretical studies on jump diffusion mostly assume an exponential
(Poissonian) waiting time distribution for jumps, thereby again leading to an
exponential decay. Here we extend the existing formalism of Ivanov and Anderson
to include an algebraic waiting time distribution between two jumps. As a
result, the first and second rank orientational time correlation functions show
the same long time power law, but their short time decay behavior is quite
different. The predicted Cole-Cole plot of dielectric relaxation reproduces
various features of non-Debye behaviour observed experimentally. We also
developed a theory where both unrestricted small jumps and large angular jumps
coexist simultaneously. The small jumps are shown to have a large effect on the
long time decay, particularly in mitigating the effects of algebraic waiting
time distribution, and in giving rise to an exponential-like decay, with a time
constant, surprisingly, less than the time constant that arises from small
amplitude decay alone.Comment: 14 figure
Monoid automata for displacement context-free languages
In 2007 Kambites presented an algebraic interpretation of
Chomsky-Schutzenberger theorem for context-free languages. We give an
interpretation of the corresponding theorem for the class of displacement
context-free languages which are equivalent to well-nested multiple
context-free languages. We also obtain a characterization of k-displacement
context-free languages in terms of monoid automata and show how such automata
can be simulated on two stacks. We introduce the simultaneous two-stack
automata and compare different variants of its definition. All the definitions
considered are shown to be equivalent basing on the geometric interpretation of
memory operations of these automata.Comment: Revised version for ESSLLI Student Session 2013 selected paper
Estimation of Regional Evapotranspiration Using Remotely Sensed Land Surface Temperature. Part 1: Measurement of Evapotranspiration at the Environmental Research Center and Determination of Priestley-taylor Parameter
In order to study the distribution of evapotranspiration in the humid region using remote sensing technology, the parameter (alpha) in the Priestley-Taylor model was determined. The daily means of the parameter alpha = 1.14 can be available from summer to autumn and alpha = to approximately 2.0 in winter. The results of the satellite and the airborne sensing done on 21st and 22nd January, 1983, are described. Using the vegetation distribution in the Tsukuba Academic New Town, as well as the radiation temperature obtained by remote sensing and the radiation data observed at the ground surface, the evapotranspiration was calculated for each vegetation type by the Priestley-Taylor method. The daily mean evapotranspiration on 22nd January, 1983, was approximately 0.4 mm/day. The differences in evapotranspiration between the vegetation types were not detectable, because the magnitude of evapotranspiration is very little in winter
Dispersive photoluminescence decay by geminate recombination in amorphous semiconductors
The photoluminescence decay in amorphous semiconductors is described by power
law at long times. The power-law decay of photoluminescence at
long times is commonly observed but recent experiments have revealed that the
exponent, , is smaller than the value 1.5 predicted from a
geminate recombination model assuming normal diffusion. Transient currents
observed in the time-of-flight experiments are highly dispersive characterized
by the disorder parameter smaller than 1. Geminate recombination rate
should be influenced by the dispersive transport of charge carriers. In this
paper we derive the simple relation, . Not only the
exponent but also the amplitude of the decay calculated in this study is
consistent with measured photoluminescence in a-Si:H.Comment: 18pages. Submitted for the publication in Phys. Rev.
Estimation of Regional Evapotranspiration Using Remotely Sensed Land Surface Temperature. Part 2: Application of Equilibrium Evaporation Model to Estimate Evapotranspiration by Remote Sensing Technique
In a humid region like Japan, it seems that the radiation term in the energy balance equation plays a more important role for evapotranspiration then does the vapor pressure difference between the surface and lower atmospheric boundary layer. A Priestley-Taylor type equation (equilibrium evaporation model) is used to estimate evapotranspiration. Net radiation, soil heat flux, and surface temperature data are obtained. Only temperature data obtained by remotely sensed techniques are used
Nuclear Matter on a Lattice
We investigate nuclear matter on a cubic lattice. An exact thermal formalism
is applied to nucleons with a Hamiltonian that accommodates on-site and
next-neighbor parts of the central, spin- and isospin-exchange interactions. We
describe the nuclear matter Monte Carlo methods which contain elements from
shell model Monte Carlo methods and from numerical simulations of the Hubbard
model. We show that energy and basic saturation properties of nuclear matter
can be reproduced. Evidence of a first-order phase transition from an
uncorrelated Fermi gas to a clustered system is observed by computing
mechanical and thermodynamical quantities such as compressibility, heat
capacity, entropy and grand potential. We compare symmetry energy and first
sound velocities with literature and find reasonable agreement.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figures (some in color), to be submitted to Phys. Rev.
Quantum annealing with antiferromagnetic fluctuations
We introduce antiferromagnetic quantum fluctuations into quantum annealing in
addition to the conventional transverse-field term. We apply this method to the
infinite-range ferromagnetic p-spin model, for which the conventional quantum
annealing has been shown to have difficulties to find the ground state
efficiently due to a first-order transition. We study the phase diagram of this
system both analytically and numerically. Using the static approximation, we
find that there exists a quantum path to reach the final ground state from the
trivial initial state that avoids first-order transitions for intermediate
values of p. We also study numerically the energy gap between the ground state
and the first excited state and find evidence for intermediate values of p that
the time complexity scales polynomially with the system size at a second-order
transition point along the quantum path that avoids first-order transitions.
These results suggest that quantum annealing would be able to solve this
problem with intermediate values of p efficiently in contrast to the case with
only simple transverse-field fluctuations.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures; Added references; To be published in Physical
Review
- …