2,399 research outputs found
Grain Boundary Scars and Spherical Crystallography
We describe experimental investigations of the structure of two-dimensional
spherical crystals. The crystals, formed by beads self-assembled on water
droplets in oil, serve as model systems for exploring very general theories
about the minimum energy configurations of particles with arbitrary repulsive
interactions on curved surfaces. Above a critical system size we find that
crystals develop distinctive high-angle grain boundaries, or scars, not found
in planar crystals. The number of excess defects in a scar is shown to grow
linearly with the dimensionless system size. The observed slope is expected to
be universal, independent of the microscopic potential.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figs (high quality images available from Mark Bowick
Speckle visibility spectroscopy and variable granular fluidization
We introduce a dynamic light scattering technique capable of resolving motion
that changes systematically, and rapidly, with time. It is based on the
visibility of a speckle pattern for a given exposure duration. Applying this to
a vibrated layer of glass beads, we measure the granular temperature and its
variation with phase in the oscillation cycle. We observe several transitions
involving jammed states, where the grains are at rest during some portion of
the cycle. We also observe a two-step decay of the temperature on approach to
jamming.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, experimen
Activity driven fluctuations in living cells
We propose a model for the dynamics of a probe embedded in a living cell,
where both thermal fluctuations and nonequilibrium activity coexist. The model
is based on a confining harmonic potential describing the elastic cytoskeletal
matrix, which undergoes random active hops as a result of the nonequilibrium
rearrangements within the cell. We describe the probe's statistics and we bring
forth quantities affected by the nonequilibrium activity. We find an excellent
agreement between the predictions of our model and experimental results for
tracers inside living cells. Finally, we exploit our model to arrive at
quantitative predictions for the parameters characterizing nonequilibrium
activity, such as the typical time scale of the activity and the amplitude of
the active fluctuations.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Study of effects of fuel properties in turbine-powered business aircraft
Increased interest in research and technology concerning aviation turbine fuels and their properties was prompted by recent changes in the supply and demand situation of these fuels. The most obvious change is the rapid increase in fuel price. For commercial airplanes, fuel costs now approach 50 percent of the direct operating costs. In addition, there were occasional local supply disruptions and gradual shifts in delivered values of certain fuel properties. Dwindling petroleum reserves and the politically sensitive nature of the major world suppliers make the continuation of these trends likely. A summary of the principal findings, and conclusions are presented. Much of the material, especially the tables and graphs, is considered in greater detail later. The economic analysis and examination of operational considerations are described. Because some of the assumptions on which the economic analysis is founded are not easily verified, the sensitivity of the analysis to alternates for these assumptions is examined. The data base on which the analyses are founded is defined in a set of appendices
Avalanche statistics and time-resolved grain dynamics for a driven heap
We probe the dynamics of intermittent avalanches caused by steady addition of
grains to a quasi-two dimensional heap. To characterize the time-dependent
average avalanche flow speed v(t), we image the top free surface. To
characterize the grain fluctuation speed dv(t), we use Speckle-Visibility
Spectroscopy. During an avalanche, we find that the fluctuation speed is
approximately one-tenth the average flow speed, and that these speeds are
largest near the beginning of an event. We also find that the distribution of
event durations is peaked, and that event sizes are correlated with the time
interval since the end of the previous event. At high rates of grain addition,
where successive avalanches merge into smooth continuous flow, the relationship
between average and fluctuation speeds changes to dv Sqrt[v]
Scaling Behavior in Shaving Cream
The coarsening of a three-dimensional foam is studied with multiple light-scattering techniques. Scaling behavior is observed with the average bubble diameter growing in time as tz where z=0.45±0.05. Changes in the packing conditions during coarsening give rise to a dynamical process that also exhibits temporal scaling. Neighboring bubbles undergo sudden structural rearrangement events at a rate per unit volume that decays as t−y where y=2.0±0.2
Resolving long-range spatial correlations in jammed colloidal systems using photon correlation imaging
We introduce a new dynamic light scattering method, termed photon correlation
imaging, which enables us to resolve the dynamics of soft matter in space and
time. We demonstrate photon correlation imaging by investigating the slow
dynamics of a quasi two-dimensional coarsening foam made of highly packed,
deformable bubbles and a rigid gel network formed by dilute, attractive
colloidal particles. We find the dynamics of both systems to be determined by
intermittent rearrangement events. For the foam, the rearrangements extend over
a few bubbles, but a small dynamical correlation is observed up to macroscopic
length scales. For the gel, dynamical correlations extend up to the system
size. These results indicate that dynamical correlations can be extremely
long-ranged in jammed systems and point to the key role of mechanical
properties in determining their nature.Comment: Published version (Phys. Rev. Lett. 102, 085702 (2009)) The Dynamical
Activity Mapsprovided as Supplementary Online Material are also available on
http://w3.lcvn.univ-montp2.fr/~lucacip/dam/movies.ht
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