101,533 research outputs found
Modulated phases in a three-dimensional Maier-Saupe model with competing interactions
This work is dedicated to the study of the discrete version of the Maier-Saupe model in the presence of competing interactions. The competition between interactions favoring different orientational ordering produces a rich phase diagram including modulated phases. Using a mean-field approach and Monte Carlo simulations, we show that the proposed model exhibits isotropic and nematic phases and also a series of modulated phases that meet at a multicritical point, a Lifshitz point. Though the Monte Carlo and mean-field phase diagrams show some quantitative disagreements, the Monte Carlo simulations corroborate the general behavior found within the mean-field approximation.We thank P. Gomes, R. Kaul, G. Landi, M. Oliveira, R. Oliveira, and S. Salinas for useful discussions and suggestions. P.F.B. was supported by Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Sao Paulo (FAPESP) and the Condensed Matter Theory Visitors Program at Boston University. N.X. and A.W.S. were funded in part by the NSF under Grant No. DMR-1410126. Some of the calculations were carried out on Boston University's Shared Computing Cluster. (Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Sao Paulo (FAPESP); Condensed Matter Theory Visitors Program at Boston University; DMR-1410126 - NSF)Accepted manuscrip
Shear modulus of simulated glass-forming model systems: Effects of boundary condition, temperature and sampling time
The shear modulus G of two glass-forming colloidal model systems in d=3 and
d=2 dimensions is investigated by means of, respectively, molecular dynamics
and Monte Carlo simulations. Comparing ensembles where either the shear strain
gamma or the conjugated (mean) shear stress tau are imposed, we compute G from
the respective stress and strain fluctuations as a function of temperature T
while keeping a constant normal pressure P. The choice of the ensemble is seen
to be highly relevant for the shear stress fluctuations mu_F(T) which at
constant tau decay monotonously with T following the affine shear elasticity
mu_A(T), i.e. a simple two-point correlation function. At variance,
non-monotonous behavior with a maximum at the glass transition temperature T_g
is demonstrated for mu_F(T) at constant gamma. The increase of G below T_g is
reasonably fitted for both models by a continuous cusp singularity, G(T) is
proportional to (1-T/T_g)^(1/2), in qualitative agreement with some recent
replica calculations. It is argued, however, that longer sampling times may
lead to a sharper transition. The additive jump discontinuity predicted by
mode-coupling theory and other replica calculations thus cannot ultimately be
ruled out
Understanding the different rotational behaviors of No and No
Total Routhian surface calculations have been performed to investigate
rapidly rotating transfermium nuclei, the heaviest nuclei accessible by
detailed spectroscopy experiments. The observed fast alignment in No
and slow alignment in No are well reproduced by the calculations
incorporating high-order deformations. The different rotational behaviors of
No and No can be understood for the first time in terms of
deformation that decreases the energies of the
intruder orbitals below the N=152 gap. Our investigations reveal the importance
of high-order deformation in describing not only the multi-quasiparticle states
but also the rotational spectra, both providing probes of the single-particle
structure concerning the expected doubly-magic superheavy nuclei.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, the version accepted for publication in Phys.
Rev.
Continuous vortex pumping into a spinor condensate with magnetic fields
We study the mechanisms and the limits of pumping vorticity into a spinor
condensate through manipulations of magnetic (B-) fields. We discover a
fundamental connection between the geometrical properties of the magnetic
fields and the quantized circulation of magnetically trapped atoms, a result
which generalizes several recent experimental and theoretical studies. The
optimal procedures are devised that are capable of continuously increasing or
decreasing a condensate's vorticity by repeating certain two step B-field
manipulation protocols. We carry out detailed numerical simulations that
support the claim that our protocols are highly efficient, stable, and robust
against small imperfections of all types. Our protocols can be implemented
experimentally within current technologies.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
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