498 research outputs found
Asymptotic analysis of mode-coupling theory of active nonlinear microrheology
We discuss a schematic model of mode-coupling theory for force-driven active
nonlinear microrheology, where a single probe particle is pulled by a constant
external force through a dense host medium. The model exhibits both a glass
transition for the host, and a force-induced delocalization transition, where
an initially localized probe inside the glassy host attains a nonvanishing
steady-state velocity by locally melting the glass. Asymptotic expressions for
the transient density correlation functions of the schematic model are derived,
valid close to the transition points. There appear several nontrivial time
scales relevant for the decay laws of the correlators. For the nonlinear
friction coeffcient of the probe, the asymptotic expressions cause various
regimes of power-law variation with the external force, and two-parameter
scaling laws.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figure
The Measure of the Orthogonal Polynomials Related to Fibonacci Chains: The Periodic Case
The spectral measure for the two families of orthogonal polynomial systems
related to periodic chains with N-particle elementary unit and nearest
neighbour harmonic interaction is computed using two different methods. The
interest is in the orthogonal polynomials related to Fibonacci chains in the
periodic approximation. The relation of the measure to appropriately defined
Green's functions is established.Comment: 19 pages, TeX, 3 scanned figures, uuencoded file, original figures on
request, some misprints corrected, tbp: J. Phys.
Fast and Accurate Computation of Orbital Collision Probability for Short-Term Encounters
International audienceThis article provides a new method for computing the probability of collision between two spherical space objects involved in a short-term encounter under Gaussian-distributed uncertainty. In this model of conjunction, classical assumptions reduce the probability of collision to the integral of a two-dimensional Gaussian probability density function over a disk. The computational method presented here is based on an analytic expression for the integral, derived by use of Laplace transform and D-finite functions properties. The formula has the form of a product between an exponential term and a convergent power series with positive coefficients. Analytic bounds on the truncation error are also derived and are used to obtain a very accurate algorithm. Another contribution is the derivation of analytic bounds on the probability of collision itself, allowing for a very fast and - in most cases - very precise evaluation of the risk. The only other analytical method of the literature - based on an approximation - is shown to be a special case of the new formula. A numerical study illustrates the efficiency of the proposed algorithms on a broad variety of examples and favorably compares the approach to the other methods of the literature
Long-term storage and impedance-based water toxicity testing capabilities of fluidic biochips seeded with RTgill-W1 cells
Rainbow trout gill epithelial cells (RTgill-W1) are used in a cell-based biosensor that can respond within one hour to toxic chemicals that have the potential to contaminate drinking water supplies. RTgill-W1 cells seeded on enclosed fluidic biochips and monitored using electric cell-substrate impedance sensing (ECIS) technology responded to 18 out of the 18 toxic chemicals tested within one hour of exposure. Nine of these chemical responses were within established concentration ranges specified by the U.S. Army for comparison of toxicity sensors for field application. The RTgill-W1 cells remain viable on the biochips at ambient carbon dioxide levels at 6°C for 78 weeks without media changes. RTgill-W1 biochips stored in this manner were challenged with 9.4 μM sodium pentachlorophenate (PCP), a benchmark toxicant, and impedance responses were significant (p \u3c 0.001) for all storage times tested. This poikilothermic cell line has toxicant sensitivity comparable to a mammalian cell line (bovine lung microvessel endothelial cells (BLMVECs)) that was tested on fluidic biochips with the same chemicals. In order to remain viable, the BLMVEC biochips required media replenishments 3 times per week while being maintained at 37°C. The ability of RTgill-W1 biochips to maintain monolayer integrity without media replenishments for 78 weeks, combined with their chemical sensitivity and rapid response time, make them excellent candidates for use in low cost, maintenance-free field-portable biosensors
Decay of the Sinai Well in D dimensions
We study the decay law of the Sinai Well in dimensions and relate the
behavior of the decay law to internal distributions that characterize the
dynamics of the system. We show that the long time tail of the decay is
algebraic (), irrespective of the dimension .Comment: 14 pages, Figures available under request. Revtex. Submitted to Phys.
Rev. E.,e-mail: [email protected]
An exact analytical solution for generalized growth models driven by a Markovian dichotomic noise
Logistic growth models are recurrent in biology, epidemiology, market models,
and neural and social networks. They find important applications in many other
fields including laser modelling. In numerous realistic cases the growth rate
undergoes stochastic fluctuations and we consider a growth model with a
stochastic growth rate modelled via an asymmetric Markovian dichotomic noise.
We find an exact analytical solution for the probability distribution providing
a powerful tool with applications ranging from biology to astrophysics and
laser physics
Full counting statistics of energy fluctuations in a driven quantum resonator
We consider the statistics of time-integrated energy fluctuations of a driven
bosonic resonator (as measured by a QND detector), using the standard Keldysh
prescription to define higher moments. We find that due to an effective
cascading of fluctuations, these statistics are surprisingly non-classical: the
low-temperature, quantum probability distribution is not equivalent to the
high-temperature classical distribution evaluated at some effective
temperature. Moreover, for a sufficiently large drive detuning and low
temperatures, the Keldysh-ordered quasi-probability distribution characterizing
these fluctuations fails to be positive-definite; this is similar to the full
counting statistics of charge in superconducting systems. We argue that this
indicates a kind of non-classical behaviour akin to that tested by Leggett-Garg
inequalities.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Inter- and Intragranular Effects in Superconducting Compacted Platinum Powders
Compacted platinum powders exhibit a sharp onset of diamagnetic screening at
mK in zero magnetic field in all samples investigated. This
sharp onset is interpreted in terms of the intragranular transition into the
superconducting state. At lower temperatures, the magnetic ac susceptibility
strongly depends on the ac field amplitude and reflects the small intergranular
critical current density . This critical current density shows a strong
dependence on the packing fraction f of the granular samples. Surprisingly,
increases significantly with decreasing f ( A/cm for f = 0.67 and A/cm for f
= 0.50). The temperature dependence of shows strong positive curvature
over a wide temperature range for both samples. The phase diagrams of inter-
and intragranular superconductivity for different samples indicate that the
granular structure might play the key role for an understanding of the origin
of superconductivity in the platinum compacts.Comment: 11 pages including 9 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev. B in Nov. 0
Influence of oxygen ordering kinetics on Raman and optical response in YBa_2Cu_3O_{6.4}
Kinetics of the optical and Raman response in YBa_2Cu_3O_{6.4} were studied
during room temperature annealing following heat treatment. The superconducting
T_c, dc resistivity, and low-energy optical conductivity recover slowly,
implying a long relaxation time for the carrier density. Short relaxation times
are observed for the B_{1g} Raman scattering -- magnetic, continuum, and phonon
-- and the charge transfer band. Monte Carlo simulations suggest that these two
relaxation rates are related to two length scales corresponding to local oxygen
ordering (fast) and long chain and twin formation (slow).Comment: REVTeX, 3 pages + 4 PostScript (compressed) figure
Some Orthogonal Polynomials Arising from Coherent States
We explore in this paper some orthogonal polynomials which are naturally
associated to certain families of coherent states, often referred to as
nonlinear coherent states in the quantum optics literature. Some examples turn
out to be known orthogonal polynomials but in many cases we encounter a general
class of new orthogonal polynomials for which we establish several qualitative
results.Comment: 21 page
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