381 research outputs found
Structural Properties of Self-Attracting Walks
Self-attracting walks (SATW) with attractive interaction u > 0 display a
swelling-collapse transition at a critical u_{\mathrm{c}} for dimensions d >=
2, analogous to the \Theta transition of polymers. We are interested in the
structure of the clusters generated by SATW below u_{\mathrm{c}} (swollen
walk), above u_{\mathrm{c}} (collapsed walk), and at u_{\mathrm{c}}, which can
be characterized by the fractal dimensions of the clusters d_{\mathrm{f}} and
their interface d_{\mathrm{I}}. Using scaling arguments and Monte Carlo
simulations, we find that for u<u_{\mathrm{c}}, the structures are in the
universality class of clusters generated by simple random walks. For
u>u_{\mathrm{c}}, the clusters are compact, i.e. d_{\mathrm{f}}=d and
d_{\mathrm{I}}=d-1. At u_{\mathrm{c}}, the SATW is in a new universality class.
The clusters are compact in both d=2 and d=3, but their interface is fractal:
d_{\mathrm{I}}=1.50\pm0.01 and 2.73\pm0.03 in d=2 and d=3, respectively. In
d=1, where the walk is collapsed for all u and no swelling-collapse transition
exists, we derive analytical expressions for the average number of visited
sites and the mean time to visit S sites.Comment: 15 pages, 8 postscript figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Frequency-dependent (ac) Conduction in Disordered Composites: a Percolative Study
In a recent paper [Phys. Rev. B{\bf57}, 3375 (1998)], we examined in detail
the nonlinear (electrical) dc response of a random resistor cum tunneling bond
network (, introduced by us elsewhere to explain nonlinear response of
metal-insulator type mixtures). In this work which is a sequel to that paper,
we consider the ac response of the -based correlated () model.
Numerical solutions of the Kirchoff's laws for the model give a power-law
exponent (= 0.7 near ) of the modulus of the complex ac conductance at
moderately low frequencies, in conformity with experiments on various types of
disordered systems. But, at very low frequencies, it gives a simple quadratic
or linear dependence on the frequency depending upon whether the system is
percolating or not. We do also discuss the effective medium approximation
() of our and the traditional random network model, and discuss
their comparative successes and shortcomings.Comment: Revised and reduced version with 17 LaTeX pages plus 8 JPEG figure
Effect on costs of ACC/AHA guidelines for preoperative cardiac risk assessment before aortic surgery
Scaling in Late Stage Spinodal Decomposition with Quenched Disorder
We study the late stages of spinodal decomposition in a Ginzburg-Landau mean
field model with quenched disorder. Random spatial dependence in the coupling
constants is introduced to model the quenched disorder. The effect of the
disorder on the scaling of the structure factor and on the domain growth is
investigated in both the zero temperature limit and at finite temperature. In
particular, we find that at zero temperature the domain size, , scales
with the amplitude, , of the quenched disorder as with and in two
dimensions. We show that , where is the
Lifshitz-Slyosov exponent. At finite temperature, this simple scaling is not
observed and we suggest that the scaling also depends on temperature and .
We discuss these results in the context of Monte Carlo and cell dynamical
models for phase separation in systems with quenched disorder, and propose that
in a Monte Carlo simulation the concentration of impurities, , is related to
by .Comment: RevTex manuscript 5 pages and 5 figures (obtained upon request via
email [email protected]
On the Behavior of the Effective QCD Coupling alpha_tau(s) at Low Scales
The hadronic decays of the tau lepton can be used to determine the effective
charge alpha_tau(m^2_tau') for a hypothetical tau-lepton with mass in the range
0 < m_tau' < m_tau. This definition provides a fundamental definition of the
QCD coupling at low mass scales. We study the behavior of alpha_tau at low mass
scales directly from first principles and without any renormalization-scheme
dependence by looking at the experimental data from the OPAL Collaboration. The
results are consistent with the freezing of the physical coupling at mass
scales s = m^2_tau' of order 1 GeV^2 with a magnitude alpha_tau ~ 0.9 +/- 0.1.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Physical Review D, added
references, some text added, no results nor figures change
Effects of Pore Walls and Randomness on Phase Transitions in Porous Media
We study spin models within the mean field approximation to elucidate the
topology of the phase diagrams of systems modeling the liquid-vapor transition
and the separation of He--He mixtures in periodic porous media. These
topologies are found to be identical to those of the corresponding random field
and random anisotropy spin systems with a bimodal distribution of the
randomness. Our results suggest that the presence of walls (periodic or
otherwise) are a key factor determining the nature of the phase diagram in
porous media.Comment: REVTeX, 11 eps figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Robust antiferromagnetic coupling in hard-soft bi-magnetic core/shell nanoparticles
The growing miniaturization demand of magnetic devices is fuelling the recent interest in bi-magnetic nanoparticles as ultimate small components. One of the main goals has been to reproduce practical magnetic properties observed so far in layered systems. In this context, although useful effects such as exchange bias or spring magnets have been demonstrated in core/shell nanoparticles, other interesting key properties for devices remain elusive. Here we show a robust antiferromagnetic (AFM) coupling in core/shell nanoparticles which, in turn, leads to the foremost elucidation of positive exchange bias in bi-magnetic hard-soft systems and the remarkable regulation of the resonance field and amplitude. The AFM coupling in iron oxide manganese oxide based, soft/hard and hard/soft, core/shell nanoparticles is demonstrated by magnetometry, ferromagnetic resonance and X-ray magnetic circular dichroism. Monte Carlo simulations prove the consistency of the AFM coupling. This unique coupling could give rise to more advanced applications of bi-magnetic core/shell nanoparticles
Application of Pauli-Villars regularization and discretized light-cone quantization to a single-fermion truncation of Yukawa theory
We apply Pauli-Villars regularization and discretized light-cone quantization
to the nonperturbative solution of (3+1)-dimensional Yukawa theory in a
single-fermion truncation. Three heavy scalars, including two with negative
norm, are used to regulate the theory. The matrix eigenvalue problem is solved
for the lowest-mass state with use of a new, indefinite-metric Lanczos
algorithm. Various observables are extracted from the wave functions, including
average multiplicities and average momenta of constituents, structure
functions, and a form factor slope.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures, RevTeX; published version: more extensive data
in the tables of v
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