65 research outputs found
Discrete models of force chain networks
A fundamental property of any material is its response to a localized stress
applied at a boundary. For granular materials consisting of hard, cohesionless
particles, not even the general form of the stress response is known. Directed
force chain networks (DFCNs) provide a theoretical framework for addressing
this issue, and analysis of simplified DFCN models reveal both rich
mathematical structure and surprising properties. We review some basic elements
of DFCN models and present a class of homogeneous solutions for cases in which
force chains are restricted to lie on a discrete set of directions.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, dcds-B.cls; Minor corrections to version 2, but
including an important factor of 2; Submitted to Discrete and Continuous
Dynamical Systems B for special issue honoring David Schaeffe
Controlling spatiotemporal dynamics with time-delay feedback
We suggest a spatially local feedback mechanism for stabilizing periodic
orbits in spatially extended systems. Our method, which is based on a
comparison between present and past states of the system, does not require the
external generation of an ideal reference state and can suppress both absolute
and convective instabilities. As an example, we analyze the complex
Ginzburg-Landau equation in one dimension, showing how the time-delay feedback
enlarges the stability domain for travelling waves.Comment: 4 pages REVTeX + postscript file with 3 figure
Forcing nonperiodicity with a single tile
An aperiodic prototile is a shape for which infinitely many copies can be
arranged to fill Euclidean space completely with no overlaps, but not in a
periodic pattern. Tiling theorists refer to such a prototile as an "einstein"
(a German pun on "one stone"). The possible existence of an einstein has been
pondered ever since Berger's discovery of large set of prototiles that in
combination can tile the plane only in a nonperiodic way. In this article we
review and clarify some features of a prototile we recently introduced that is
an einstein according to a reasonable definition. [This abstract does not
appear in the published article.]Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures. This article has been substantially revised and
accepted for publication in the Mathematical Intelligencer and is scheduled
to appear in Vol 33. Citations to and quotations from this work should
reference that publication. If you cite this work, please check that the
published form contains precisely the material to which you intend to refe
Quasicrystalline structure of the Smith monotile tilings
We show that the tilings of the plane with the Smith hat aperiodic monotile
(and its mirror image) are quasicrystals with hexagonal (C6) rotational
symmetry. Although this symmetry is compatible with periodicity, the tilings
are quasiperiodic with an incommensurate ratio characterizing the
quasiperiodicity that stays locked to the golden mean as the tile parameters
are continuously varied. Smith et al. [arXiv:2303.10798 (2023)] have shown that
the hat tiling can be constructed as a decoration of a substitution tiling
employing a set of four "metatiles." We analyze a modification of the metatiles
that yields a set of "Key tiles," constructing a continuous family of Key tiles
that contains the family corresponding to the Smith metatiles. The Key tilings
can be constructed as projections of a subset of 6-dimensional hypercubic
lattice points onto the two-dimensional tiling plane, and when projected onto a
certain 4-dimensional subspace this subset uniformly fills four equilateral
triangles. We use this feature to analytically compute the diffraction pattern
of a set of unit masses placed at the tiling vertices, thereby establishing the
quasiperiodic nature of the tiling. We comment on several unusual features of
the family of Key tilings and hat decorations and show the tile rearrangements
associated with two tilings that differ by an infinitesimal phason shift.Comment: 12 pages, 16 figure
Local growth of icosahedral quasicrystalline tilings
Icosahedral quasicrystals (IQCs) with extremely high degrees of translational
order have been produced in the laboratory and found in naturally occurring
minerals, yet questions remain about how IQCs form. In particular, the
fundamental question of how locally determined additions to a growing cluster
can lead to the intricate long-range correlations in IQCs remains open. In
answer to this question, we have developed an algorithm that is capable of
producing a perfectly ordered IQC, yet relies exclusively on local rules for
sequential, face-to-face addition of tiles to a cluster. When the algorithm is
seeded with a special type of cluster containing a defect, we find that growth
is forced to infinity with high probability and that the resultant IQC has a
vanishing density of defects. The geometric features underlying this algorithm
can inform analyses of experimental systems and numerical models that generate
highly ordered quasicrystals.Comment: 13 pages, 15 figures, 1 tabl
Hierarchical freezing in a lattice model
A certain two-dimensional lattice model with nearest and next-nearest
neighbor interactions is known to have a limit-periodic ground state. We show
that during a slow quench from the high temperature, disordered phase, the
ground state emerges through an infinite sequence of phase transitions. We
define appropriate order parameters and show that the transitions are related
by renormalizations of the temperature scale. As the temperature is decreased,
sublattices with increasingly large lattice constants become ordered. A rapid
quench results in glass-like state due to kinetic barriers created by
simultaneous freezing on sublattices with different lattice constants.Comment: 6 pages; 5 figures (minor changes, reformatted
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