24,362 research outputs found
Heterogeneous Computing on Mixed Unstructured Grids with PyFR
PyFR is an open-source high-order accurate computational fluid dynamics
solver for mixed unstructured grids that can target a range of hardware
platforms from a single codebase. In this paper we demonstrate the ability of
PyFR to perform high-order accurate unsteady simulations of flow on mixed
unstructured grids using heterogeneous multi-node hardware. Specifically, after
benchmarking single-node performance for various platforms, PyFR v0.2.2 is used
to undertake simulations of unsteady flow over a circular cylinder at Reynolds
number 3 900 using a mixed unstructured grid of prismatic and tetrahedral
elements on a desktop workstation containing an Intel Xeon E5-2697 v2 CPU, an
NVIDIA Tesla K40c GPU, and an AMD FirePro W9100 GPU. Both the performance and
accuracy of PyFR are assessed. PyFR v0.2.2 is freely available under a 3-Clause
New Style BSD license (see www.pyfr.org).Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, 6 table
Rejuvenation and overaging in a colloidal glass under shear
We report the modifications of the microscopic dynamics of a colloidal glass
submitted to shear. We use multispeckle diffusing wave spectroscopy to monitor
the evolution of the spontaneous slow relaxation processes after the sample
have been submitted to various straining. We show that high shear rejuvenates
the system and accelerates its dynamics whereas moderate shear overage the
system. We analyze this phenomena within the frame of the Bouchaud's trap
model.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to be published in PR
Effect of picosecond strain pulses on thin layers of the ferromagnetic semiconductor (Ga,Mn)(As,P)
The effect of picosecond acoustic strain pulses (ps-ASP) on a thin layer of
(Ga,Mn)As co-doped with phosphorus was probed using magneto-optical Kerr effect
(MOKE). A transient MOKE signal followed by low amplitude oscillations was
evidenced, with a strong dependence on applied magnetic field, temperature and
ps-ASP amplitude. Careful interferometric measurement of the layer's thickness
variation induced by the ps-ASP allowed us to model very accurately the
resulting signal, and interpret it as the strain modulated reflectivity
(differing for probe polarizations), independently from dynamic
magnetization effects.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Ageing and relaxation times in disordered insulators
We focus on the slow relaxations observed in the conductance of disordered
insulators at low temperature (especially granular aluminum films). They
manifest themselves as a temporal logarithmic decrease of the conductance after
a quench from high temperatures and the concomitant appearance of a field
effect anomaly centered on the gate voltage maintained. We are first interested
in ageing effects, i.e. the age dependence of the dynamical properties of the
system. We stress that the formation of a second field effect anomaly at a
different gate voltage is not a "history free" logarithmic (lnt) process, but
departs from lnt in a way which encodes the system's age. The apparent
relaxation time distribution extracted from the observed relaxations is thus
not "constant" but evolves with time. We discuss what defines the age of the
system and what external perturbation out of equilibrium does or does not
rejuvenate it. We further discuss the problem of relaxation times and comment
on the commonly used "two dip" experimental protocol aimed at extracting
"characteristic times" for the glassy systems (granular aluminum, doped indium
oxide...). We show that it is inoperable for systems like granular Al and
probably highly doped InOx where it provides a trivial value only determined by
the experimental protocol. But in cases where different values are obtained
like in lightly doped InOx or some ultra thin metal films, potentially
interesting information can be obtained, possibly about the "short time"
dynamics of the different systems. Present ideas about the effect of doping on
the glassiness of disordered insulators may also have to be reconsidered.Comment: to appear in the proceedings of the 14th International Conference on
Transport and Interactions in Disordered Systems (TIDS14
Point-wise mutual information-based video segmentation with high temporal consistency
In this paper, we tackle the problem of temporally consistent boundary
detection and hierarchical segmentation in videos. While finding the best
high-level reasoning of region assignments in videos is the focus of much
recent research, temporal consistency in boundary detection has so far only
rarely been tackled. We argue that temporally consistent boundaries are a key
component to temporally consistent region assignment. The proposed method is
based on the point-wise mutual information (PMI) of spatio-temporal voxels.
Temporal consistency is established by an evaluation of PMI-based point
affinities in the spectral domain over space and time. Thus, the proposed
method is independent of any optical flow computation or previously learned
motion models. The proposed low-level video segmentation method outperforms the
learning-based state of the art in terms of standard region metrics
Observation of superspin glass state in magnetically textured ferrofluid (gamma-Fe2O3)
Magnetic properties in a magnetically textured ferrofluid made out of
interacting maghemite (gamma-Fe2O3) nanoparticles suspended in glycerin have
been investigated. Despite the loss of uniform distribution of anisotropy axes,
a superspin glass state exists at low temperature in a concentrated, textured
ferrofluid as in the case of its non-textured counterpart. The onset of
superspin glass state was verified from the sample's AC susceptibility. The
influence of the anisotropy axis orientation on the aging behavior in the
glassy states is also discussed
A microscopic description of the aging dynamics: fluctuation-dissipation relations, effective temperature and heterogeneities
We consider the dynamics of a diluted mean-field spin glass model in the
aging regime. The model presents a particularly rich heterogeneous behavior. In
order to catch this behavior, we perform a **spin-by-spin analysis** for a
**given disorder realization**. The results compare well with the outcome of a
static calculation which uses the ``survey propagation'' algorithm of Mezard,
Parisi, and Zecchina [Sciencexpress 10.1126/science.1073287 (2002)]. We thus
confirm the connection between statics and dynamics at the level of single
degrees of freedom. Moreover, working with single-site quantities, we can
introduce a new response-vs-correlation plot, which clearly shows how
heterogeneous degrees of freedom undergo coherent structural rearrangements.
Finally we discuss the general scenario which emerges from our work and
(possibly) applies to more realistic glassy models. Interestingly enough, some
features of this scenario can be understood recurring to thermometric
considerations.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures (7 eps files
Development of weight and cost estimates for lifting surfaces with active controls
Equations and methodology were developed for estimating the weight and cost incrementals due to active controls added to the wing and horizontal tail of a subsonic transport airplane. The methods are sufficiently generalized to be suitable for preliminary design. Supporting methodology and input specifications for the weight and cost equations are provided. The weight and cost equations are structured to be flexible in terms of the active control technology (ACT) flight control system specification. In order to present a self-contained package, methodology is also presented for generating ACT flight control system characteristics for the weight and cost equations. Use of the methodology is illustrated
Off-equilibrium dynamics of the two-dimensional Coulomb glass
The dynamics of the 2D Coulomb glass model is investigated by kinetic Monte
Carlo simulation. An exponential divergence of the relaxation time signals a
zero-temperature freezing transition. At low temperatures the dynamics of the
system is glassy. The local charge correlations and the response to
perturbations of the local potential show aging. The dynamics of formation of
the Coulomb gap is slow and the density of states at the Fermi level decays in
time as a power law. The relevance of these findings for recent transport
experiments in Anderson-insulating films is pointed out.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
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