17,356 research outputs found
Efficient method for simulating quantum electron dynamics under the time dependent Kohn-Sham equation
A numerical scheme for solving the time-evolution of wave functions under the
time dependent Kohn-Sham equation has been developed. Since the effective
Hamiltonian depends on the wave functions, the wave functions and the effective
Hamiltonian should evolve consistently with each other. For this purpose, a
self-consistent loop is required at every time-step for solving the
time-evolution numerically, which is computationally expensive. However, in
this paper, we develop a different approach expressing a formal solution of the
TD-KS equation, and prove that it is possible to solve the TD-KS equation
efficiently and accurately by means of a simple numerical scheme without the
use of any self-consistent loops.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Physical Review E, 2002, in pres
A slow mode wave as a possible source of Pi 2 and associated particle precipitation: a case study
International audienceAn intensification of auroral luminosity referred to as an auroral break-up often accompanies the onset of geomagnetic pulsation (Pi 2) at the dip-equator. One such auroral break-up occurred at 2239 UT on 16 June, 1986, being accompanied by weak substorm activity (AE~50 nT) which was recorded in all-sky image of Syowa Station, Antarctica (66.2°S, 71.8°E in geomagnetic coordinates). The associated Pi 2 magnetic pulsation was detected by a fluxgate magnetometer in the afternoon sector at the dip-equator (Huancayo, Peru; 1.44°N, 355.9° in geomagnetic coordinates; 12.1°S, 75.2°W in geographic coordinates; L=1.00). In spite of the large separation of the two stations in longitude and latitude, the auroral break-up and subsequent luminosity modulation were seen to be correlated with the wave form of the ground Pi 2 pulsation. This occurred in such a way that the luminosity maximum was seen to occur at the phase of maximum amplitudes of Pi 2 wave form. We argue that the observed correlation could be interpreted as indicating a Pi 2-modulation of a field-aligned acceleration of the low energy electrons that may occur near the equator of the midnight magnetosphere
Novel Charge Order and Superconductivity in Two-Dimensional Frustrated Lattice at Quarter Filling
Motivated by the various physical properties observed in
-(BEDT-TTF)X, we study the ground state of extended Hubbard model
on two-dimensional anisotropic triangular lattice at 1/4-filling with
variational Monte Carlo method. It is shown that the nearest-neighbor Coulomb
interaction enhances the charge fluctuation and it induces the anomalous state
such as charge-ordered metallic state and the triplet next-nearest-neighbor
-wave superconductivity. We discuss the relation to the real materials and
propose the unified view of the family of -(BEDT-TTF)X.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Competing Fractional Quantum Hall and Electron Solid Phases in Graphene
We report experimental observation of the reentrant integer quantum Hall
effect in graphene, appearing in the N2 Landau level. Similar to
high-mobility GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures, the effect is due to a competition
between incompressible fractional quantum Hall states, and electron solid
phases. The tunability of graphene allows us to measure the - phase
diagram of the electron-solid phase. The hierarchy of reentrant states suggest
spin and valley degrees of freedom play a role in determining the ground state
energy. We find that the melting temperature scales with magnetic field, and
construct a phase diagram of the electron liquid-solid transition
Analysis of Biomass Pyrolysis Product Yield Distribution in Thermally Thin Regime at Different Heating Rates
A better understanding of biomass pyrolysis process at various thermal regimes is fundamental to the optimization of biomass thermochemical conversion processes. In this research work, the behaviour of biomass pyrolysis in thermally thin regime was numerically investigated at different heating rates (1, 5, 10 and 20 K/s). A kinetic model, consisting of five ordinary differential equations, was used to simulate the pyrolysis process. The model equations were coupled and simultaneously solved by using fourth-order Runge-Kutta method. The concentrations of the biomass sample (Maple wood) and product species per time were simulated. Findings revealed that tar yield increased with increase in heating rate. Char yield, however, decreased with increase in heating rate. Results also showed that the extent of secondary reactions, which influenced gas yield concentration, is a function of residence time and temperature. This model can be adopted for any biomass material when the kinetic parameters of the material are known. Keywords: Biomass, pyrolysis, kinetic model, thermally thin regim
Fourth-order gravity as the inflationary model revisited
We revisit the old (fourth-order or quadratically generated) gravity model of
Starobinsky in four space-time dimensions, and derive the (inflaton) scalar
potential in the equivalent scalar-tensor gravity model via a Legendre-Weyl
transform. The inflaton scalar potential is used to compute the (CMB)
observables of inflation associated with curvature perturbations (namely, the
scalar and tensor spectral indices, and the tensor-to-scalar ratio), including
the new next-to-leading-order terms with respect to the inverse number of
e-foldings. The results are compared to the recent (WMAP5) experimental bounds.
We confirm both mathematical and physical equivalence between f(R) gravity
theories and the corresponding scalar-tensor gravity theories.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, 1 table, LaTeX; few comments added, style
improved, references added and update
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