110 research outputs found
Regularization of moving boundaries in a Laplacian field by a mixed Dirichlet-Neumann boundary condition: exact results
The dynamics of ionization fronts that generate a conducting body, are in
simplest approximation equivalent to viscous fingering without regularization.
Going beyond this approximation, we suggest that ionization fronts can be
modeled by a mixed Dirichlet-Neumann boundary condition. We derive exact
uniformly propagating solutions of this problem in 2D and construct a single
partial differential equation governing small perturbations of these solutions.
For some parameter value, this equation can be solved analytically which shows
that the uniformly propagating solution is linearly convectively stable.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Diffusion-Limited Aggregation on Curved Surfaces
We develop a general theory of transport-limited aggregation phenomena
occurring on curved surfaces, based on stochastic iterated conformal maps and
conformal projections to the complex plane. To illustrate the theory, we use
stereographic projections to simulate diffusion-limited-aggregation (DLA) on
surfaces of constant Gaussian curvature, including the sphere () and
pseudo-sphere (), which approximate "bumps" and "saddles" in smooth
surfaces, respectively. Although curvature affects the global morphology of the
aggregates, the fractal dimension (in the curved metric) is remarkably
insensitive to curvature, as long as the particle size is much smaller than the
radius of curvature. We conjecture that all aggregates grown by conformally
invariant transport on curved surfaces have the same fractal dimension as DLA
in the plane. Our simulations suggest, however, that the multifractal
dimensions increase from hyperbolic () geometry, which
we attribute to curvature-dependent screening of tip branching.Comment: 4 pages, 3 fig
Bott periodicity and stable quantum classes
We use Bott periodicity to relate previously defined quantum classes to
certain "exotic Chern classes" on . This provides an interesting
computational and theoretical framework for some Gromov-Witten invariants
connected with cohomological field theories. This framework has applications to
study of higher dimensional, Hamiltonian rigidity aspects of Hofer geometry of
, one of which we discuss here.Comment: prepublication versio
Laplacian Growth, Elliptic Growth, and Singularities of the Schwarz Potential
The Schwarz function has played an elegant role in understanding and in
generating new examples of exact solutions to the Laplacian growth (or "Hele-
Shaw") problem in the plane. The guiding principle in this connection is the
fact that "non-physical" singularities in the "oil domain" of the Schwarz
function are stationary, and the "physical" singularities obey simple dynamics.
We give an elementary proof that the same holds in any number of dimensions for
the Schwarz potential, introduced by D. Khavinson and H. S. Shapiro [17]
(1989). A generalization is also given for the so-called "elliptic growth"
problem by defining a generalized Schwarz potential. New exact solutions are
constructed, and we solve inverse problems of describing the driving
singularities of a given flow. We demonstrate, by example, how \mathbb{C}^n -
techniques can be used to locate the singularity set of the Schwarz potential.
One of our methods is to prolong available local extension theorems by
constructing "globalizing families". We make three conjectures in potential
theory relating to our investigation
‘Gobbling drops’: the jetting–dripping transition in flows of polymer solutions
This paper discusses the breakup of capillary jets of dilute polymer solutions and the dynamics associated with the transition from dripping to jetting. High-speed digital video imaging reveals a new scenario of transition and breakup via periodic growth and detachment of large terminal drops. The underlying mechanism is discussed and a basic theory for the mechanism of breakup is also presented. The dynamics of the terminal drop growth and trajectory prove to be governed primarily by mass and momentum balances involving capillary, gravity and inertial forces, whilst the drop detachment event is controlled by the kinetics of the thinning process in the viscoelastic ligaments that connect the drops. This thinning process of the ligaments that are subjected to a constant axial force is driven by surface tension and resisted by the viscoelasticity of the dissolved polymeric molecules. Analysis of this transition provides a new experimental method to probe the rheological properties of solutions when minute concentrations of macromolecules have been added.Schlumberger FoundationMIT Class of 1951 Fellowship Fun
Quantum unsharpness and symplectic rigidity
We discuss a link between "hard" symplectic topology and an unsharpness
principle for generalized quantum observables (positive operator valued
measures). The link is provided by the Berezin-Toeplitz quantization.Comment: 26 pages, more preliminaries added, changes in the expositio
Interface dynamics in Hele-Shaw flows with centrifugal forces. Preventing cusp singularities with rotation
A class of exact solutions of Hele-Shaw flows without surface tension in a
rotating cell is reported. We show that the interplay between injection and
rotation modifies drastically the scenario of formation of finite-time cusp
singularities. For a subclass of solutions, we show that, for any given initial
condition, there exists a critical rotation rate above which cusp formation is
prevented. We also find an exact sufficient condition to avoid cusps
simultaneously for all initial conditions. This condition admits a simple
interpretation related to the linear stability problem.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Symplectic geometry of quantum noise
We discuss a quantum counterpart, in the sense of the Berezin-Toeplitz
quantization, of certain constraints on Poisson brackets coming from "hard"
symplectic geometry. It turns out that they can be interpreted in terms of the
quantum noise of observables and their joint measurements in operational
quantum mechanics. Our findings include various geometric mechanisms of quantum
noise production and a noise-localization uncertainty relation. The methods
involve Floer theory and Poisson bracket invariants originated in function
theory on symplectic manifolds.Comment: Revised version, 57 pages, 3 figures. Incorporates arXiv:1203.234
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