12 research outputs found
Core of the Magnetic Obstacle
Rich recirculation patterns have been recently discovered in the electrically
conducting flow subject to a local external magnetic termed "the magnetic
obstacle" [Phys. Rev. Lett. 98 (2007), 144504]. This paper continues the study
of magnetic obstacles and sheds new light on the core of the magnetic obstacle
that develops between magnetic poles when the intensity of the external field
is very large. A series of both 3D and 2D numerical simulations have been
carried out, through which it is shown that the core of the magnetic obstacle
is streamlined both by the upstream flow and by the induced cross stream
electric currents, like a foreign insulated insertion placed inside the
ordinary hydrodynamic flow. The closed streamlines of the mass flow resemble
contour lines of electric potential, while closed streamlines of the electric
current resemble contour lines of pressure. New recirculation patterns not
reported before are found in the series of 2D simulations. These are composed
of many (even number) vortices aligned along the spanwise line crossing the
magnetic gap. The intensities of these vortices are shown to vanish toward to
the center of the magnetic gap, confirming the general conclusion of 3D
simulations that the core of the magnetic obstacle is frozen. The implications
of these findings for the case of turbulent flow are discussed briefly.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Journal of Turbulenc
Collapses and explosions in self-gravitating systems
Collapse and reverse to collapse explosion transition in self-gravitating
systems are studied by molecular dynamics simulations. A microcanonical
ensemble of point particles confined to a spherical box is considered; the
particles interact via an attractive soft Coulomb potential. It is observed
that the collapse in the particle system indeed takes place when the energy of
the uniform state is put near or below the metastability-instability threshold
(collapse energy), predicted by the mean-field theory. Similarly, the explosion
in the particle system occurs when the energy of the core-halo state is
increased above the explosion energy, where according to the mean field
predictions the core-halo state becomes unstable. For a system consisting of
125 -- 500 particles, the collapse takes about single particle crossing
times to complete, while a typical explosion is by an order of magnitude
faster. A finite lifetime of metastable states is observed. It is also found
that the mean-field description of the uniform and the core-halo states is
exact within the statistical uncertainty of the molecular dynamics data.Comment: 9 pages, 14 figure
Molar mass estimate of dark matter from the dark mass distribution measurements
We study the distribution of dark matter versus visible matter using a set of
data obtained from strong gravitational lensing in the galaxy cluster
CL0024+1654 and another set of data inferred from the universal rotation curves
in spiral galaxies. The important feature of these two dramatically different
observations is that the mass density profile of both visible and dark
components can be estimated. From these measurements we deduce the mass of the
dark matter particle and our estimate of the mass for the dark matter particle
is MeV. We contrast our estimates from CL0024+1654
data and the universal rotation curves of the spiral galaxies and discuss their
consistency.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figure
Phase transitions in small systems
Traditionally, phase transitions are defined in the thermodynamic
limit only. We discuss how phase transitions of first order (with
phase separation and surface tension), continuous transitions and
(multi)-critical points can be seen and classified for small
systems. "Small"systems are systems where the linear dimension is
of the characteristic range of the interaction between the
particles; i.e. also astrophysical systems are "small"in this
sense. Boltzmann defines the entropy as the logarithm of the area
of the surface in the mechanical N-body phase
space at total energy E. The topology of S(E,N) or more
precisely, of the curvature determinant
allows the classification of phase transitions without taking
the thermodynamic limit. Micro-canonical thermo-statistics and
phase transitions will be discussed here for a system coupled by
short range forces in another situation where entropy is not
extensive. The first calculation of the entire entropy surface
S(E,N) for the diluted Potts model (ordinary (q=3)-Potts
model plus vacancies) on a square lattice is shown. The
regions in {E,N}where D> 0 correspond to pure phases, ordered
resp. disordered, and D< 0 represent transitions of first order
with phase separation and "surface tension". These regions are
bordered by a line with D=0. A line of continuous transitions
starts at the critical point of the ordinary (q=3)-Potts model and
runs down to a branching point Pm. Along this line
vanishes in the direction of the
eigenvector of D with the largest
eigen-value . It characterizes a maximum of the
largest eigenvalue . This corresponds to a critical line
where the transition is continuous and the surface tension
disappears. Here the neighboring phases are indistinguishable. The
region where two or more lines with D=0 cross is the region of the
(multi)-critical point. The micro-canonical ensemble allows to put
these phenomena entirely on the level of mechanics
The Antonov problem for rotating systems
We study the classical Antonov problem (of retrieving the statistical
equilibrium properties of a self-gravitating gas of classical particles obeying
Boltzmann statistics in space and confined in a spherical box) for a rotating
system. It is shown that a critical angular momentum (or, in the
canonical language, a critical angular velocity ) exists, such that
for the system's behaviour is qualitatively similar to that
of a non-rotating gas, with a high energy disordered phase and a low energy
collapsed phase ending with Antonov's limit, below which there is no
equilibrium state. For , instead, the low-energy phase is
characterized by the formation of two dense clusters (a ``binary star'').
Remarkably, no Antonov limit is found for . The
thermodynamics of the system (phase diagram, caloric curves, local stability)
is analyzed and compared with the recently-obtained picture emerging from a
different type of statistics which forbids particle overlapping.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, minor revisions, to appear in Nucl. Phys.