35 research outputs found
Annihilation of edge dislocations in smectic A liquid crystals
This paper presents a theoretical study of the annihilation of edge dislocations in the same smectic plane in a bulk smectic-A phase. We use a time-dependent Landau-Ginzburg approach where the smectic ordering is described by the complex order parameter psi( r--> ,t) =eta e(iphi) . This quantity allows both the degree of layering and the position of the layers to be monitored. We are able to follow both precollision and postcollision regimes, and distinguish different early and late behaviors within these regimes. The early precollision regime is driven by changes in the phi ( r--> ) configuration. The relative velocity of the defects is approximately inversely proportional to the interdefect separation distance. In the late precollision regime the symmetry changes within the cores of defects also become influential. Following the defect collision, in the early postcollision stage, bulk layer order is approached exponentially in time. At very late times, however, there seems to be a long-time power-law tail in the order parameter fluctuation relaxation
Confined nanorods: jamming due to helical buckling
We investigate a longitudinally loaded elastic nanorod inside a cylindrical
channel and show within the context of classical elasticity theory that the
Euler buckling instability leads to a helical postbuckling form of the rod
within the channel. The local pitch of the confined helix changes along the
channel and so does the longitudinal force transmitted along the rod,
diminishing away from the loaded end. This creates a possibility of jamming of
the nanorod within the channel.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Macroscopic behavior of systems with an axial dynamic preferred direction
We present the derivation of the macroscopic equations for systems with an axial dynamic preferred direction. In addition to the usual hydrodynamic variables, we introduce the time derivative of the local preferred direction as a new variable and discuss its macroscopic consequences including new cross-coupling terms. Such an approach is expected to be useful for a number of systems for which orientational degrees of freedom are important including, for example, the formation of dynamic macroscopic patterns shown by certain bacteria such a Proteus mirabilis. We point out similarities in symmetry between the additional macroscopic variable discussed here, and the magnetization density in magnetic systems as well as the so-called vector in superfluid 3He-A. Furthermore we investigate the coupling to a gel-like system for which one has the strain tensor and relative rotations between the new variable and the network as additional macroscopic variables
Ray-trace modeling of acoustic Green's function based on the semiclassical (eikonal) approximation
The Green's function (GF) for the scalar wave equation is numerically constructed by an advanced geometric ray-tracing method based on the eikonal approximation related to the semiclassical propagator. The underlying theory is first briefly introduced, and then it is applied to acoustics and implemented in a ray-tracing-type numerical simulation. The so constructed numerical method is systematically used to calculate the sound field in a rectangular (cuboid) room, yielding also the acoustic modes of the room. The simulated GF is rigorously compared to its analytic approximation. Good agreement is found, which proves the devised numerical approach potentially useful also for low frequency acoustic modeling, which is in practice not covered by geometrical methods