20 research outputs found

    The Variational Multiscale Formulation for the Fully-Implicit Log-Morphology Equation as a Tensor-Based Blood Damage Model

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    We derive a variational multiscale (VMS) finite element formulation for a viscoelastic, tensor-based blood damage model. The tensor equation is numerically stabilized by a logarithmic shape tensor description that prevents unphysical, negative eigenvalues. The resulting VMS stabilization terms for this so-called log-morph equation are presented together with their special numerical treatment. Results for a 2D rotating stirrer test case obtained from log-morph simulations with both SUPG and VMS stabilization show significantly improved numerical behavior if compared with Galerkin/least squares (GLS) stabilized untransformed morphology simulation results. The newly proposed method is also successfully applied to a state-of-the-art centrifugal ventricular assist device (VAD), and clear advantages of the VMS stabilization compared to the SUPG stabilized formulation are presented.Comment: 23 pages, 7 figure

    Symmetries and boundary theories for chiral Projected Entangled Pair States

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    We investigate the topological character of lattice chiral Gaussian fermionic states in two dimensions possessing the simplest descriptions in terms of projected entangled-pair states (PEPS). They are ground states of two different kinds of Hamiltonians. The first one, Hff\mathcal H_\mathrm{ff}, is local, frustration-free, and gapless. It can be interpreted as describing a quantum phase transition between different topological phases. The second one, Hfb\mathcal H_\mathrm{fb} is gapped, and has hopping terms scaling as 1/r31/r^3 with the distance rr. The gap is robust against local perturbations, which allows us to define a Chern number for the PEPS. As for (non-chiral) topological PEPS, the non-trivial topological properties can be traced down to the existence of a symmetry in the virtual modes that are used to build the state. Based on that symmetry, we construct string-like operators acting on the virtual modes that can be continuously deformed without changing the state. On the torus, the symmetry implies that the ground state space of the local parent Hamiltonian is two-fold degenerate. By adding a string wrapping around the torus one can change one of the ground states into the other. We use the special properties of PEPS to build the boundary theory and show how the symmetry results in the appearance of chiral modes, and a universal correction to the area law for the zero R\'{e}nyi entropy.Comment: 29 pages, 14 figure

    Improving Numerical Stability of a Tensor-Based Blood Damage Model Using the Log-Conformation Formulation

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