80,001 research outputs found
Effect of shear on droplets in a binary mixture
In this article we use a lattice-Boltzmann simulation to examine the effects
of shear flow on a equilibrium droplet in a phase separated binary mixture. We
find that large drops break up as the shear is increased but small drops
dissolve. We also show how the tip-streaming, observed for deformed drops,
leads to a state of dynamic equilibrium.Comment: 10 pages, LaTex, to appear in International Journal of Physics
Classes of confining gauge field configurations
We present a numerical method to compute path integrals in effective SU(2)
Yang-Mills theories. The basic idea is to approximate the Yang-Mills path
integral by summing over all gauge field configurations, which can be
represented as a linear superposition of a small number of localized building
blocks. With a suitable choice of building blocks many essential features of
SU(2) Yang-Mills theory can be reproduced, particularly confinement. The
analysis of our results leads to the conclusion that topological charge as well
as extended structures are essential elements of confining gauge field
configurations.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures, several sections adde
Microscopic systems with and without Coulomb interaction, fragmentation and phase transitions in finite nuclei
We test the influence of the Coulomb interaction on the thermodynamic and
cluster generation properties of a system of classical particles described by
different lattice models. Numerical simulations show that the Coulomb
interaction produces essentially a shift in temperature of quantities like the
specific heat but not qualitative changes. We also consider a cellular model.
The thermodynamic properties of the system are qualitatively unaltered.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures. New comments concerning the effect of the Coulomb
interaction on the caloric curve. Justification of the criterion which
defines bound clusters. Further comments about the identification of the
order of the transition. To be published in Eur. Phys. J.
A wide field survey at the Northern Ecliptic Pole: II. Number counts and galaxy colours in B_j, R, and K
We present a medium deep survey carried out in the three filters B_j, R and
K. The survey covers homogeneously the central square degree around the
Northern Ecliptic Pole (NEP) down to a completeness limit of 24.25, 23.0 and
17.5mag in B_j, R and K, respectively. While the near infrared data have been
presented in the first paper of this series, here we concentrate on the optical
data and the results based on the combined B_jRK-data. The unique combination
of area and depth in our survey allows to perform a variety of investigations
based on homogeneous material covering more than ten magnitudes in apparent
brightness. We analyze the number counts for point-like and extended sources in
B_j and R to determine the slopes in dlogN/dm and to test for possible breaks
therein. While we can confirm the slopes found in previous works with a higher
statistical significance, the largest uncertainty remaining for the amplitudes
is galactic extinction. We determine the colour distributions of galaxies in
B_j-R and R-K down to B_j=24.0 and K=18.0mag, respectively. The distributions
in both colours are modeled using galaxy spectral evolution synthesis. We
demonstrate that the standard models of galaxy evolution are unable to
reproduce the steady reddening trend in R-K despite flawless fits to the colour
distributions in the optical (B_j-R). The B_jRK data collected over a large
area provides the opportunity to select rare objects like candidates for
high-redshift galaxies and extremely red objects (EROs, R-K>5.0) and to
determine their surface density. Our EROs are selected at an intermediate
magnitude range and contain contribution from both galactic as well as
extragalactic sources. At K<16.5mag, where a morphological classification is
possible, the stellar component dominates the sample.Comment: Accepted for A&A, 14 pages, 10 figure
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