1,706 research outputs found

    Numerical experiment of the vortex shedding from an oscillating circular cylinder in a uniform flow by the vortex method

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    In this study, the flow features of vortex shedding from a circular cylinder forced-oscillating in the in-line direction were investigated by use of numerical simulation (vortex method) at the Reynolds number Re=500, with varied amplitude ratio and varied frequency ratio. The numerical experiment was performed at the two-dimensional calculation for incompressible and viscous flow. The circular cylinder was divided into 40 panels which distributed the vortices. Every calculation continued to more than non-dimensional time T = 200. The main parameters of numerical experiment were the oscillation amplitude ratio 2a/d (a: half-amplitude of cylinder motion, d: cylinder diameter), the oscillation frequency ratio f/fK (f: cylinder oscillation frequency, fK: natural Karman vortex shedding frequency). The amplitude ratio is three kinds, is 0.0, 0.25 and 0.5, respectively. The oscillation frequency ratio is 15 kinds, is from 0.2 to 3.0 every 0.2 steps. As a result of calculations, two typical flow patterns of the lock-in were shown, and it was confirmed that the calculated flow pattern were reasonable agreement with previous experiment results. The fluid force act on the oscillating cylinder was investigated. It was clarified that the amplitude of the lift coefficient was larger than the amplitude of the drag coefficient in the lock-in of alternate vortex shedding, and the amplitude of the drag coefficient was larger than the amplitude of the lift coefficient in the lock-in of simultaneous vortex shedding

    Susceptibility Amplitude Ratios Near a Lifshitz Point

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    The susceptibility amplitude ratio in the neighborhood of a uniaxial Lifshitz point is calculated at one-loop level using field-theoretic and ϵL\epsilon_{L}-expansion methods. We use the Schwinger parametrization of the propagator in order to split the quadratic and quartic part of the momenta, as well as a new special symmetry point suitable for renormalization purposes. For a cubic lattice (d = 3), we find the result C+C=3.85\frac{C_{+}}{C_{-}} = 3.85.Comment: 7 pages, late

    Compressible Sherrington-Kirkpatrick spin-glass model

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    We introduce a Sherrington-Kirkpatrick spin-glass model with the addition of elastic degrees of freedom. The problem is formulated in terms of an effective four-spin Hamiltonian in the pressure ensemble, which can be treated by the replica method. In the replica-symmetric approximation, we analyze the pressure-temperature phase diagram, and obtain expressions for the critical boundaries between the disordered and the ordered (spin-glass and ferromagnetic) phases. The second-order para-ferromagnetic border ends at a tricritical point, beyond which the transition becomes discontinuous. We use these results to make contact with the temperature-concentration phase diagrams of mixtures of hydrogen-bonded crystals.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures; added references, added conten

    Amelioration of normothermic canine liver ischemia with prostacyclin.

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    A model of hepatic ischemia was developed in dogs using a pump-driven splanchnic-to-jugular vein bypass during crossclamping of the portal triad. An LD50 was established with three hours of ischemia. PGI2 given for one hour before the ischemic insult ameliorated the ischemic injury and increased survival

    On quantum-mechanical origin of statistical mechanics

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    © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd. The problem of deriving statistical mechanics from the stationary Schrödinger equation is discussed. The interaction Hamiltonian, which dynamically induces entanglement of the specific type, is constructed in a unified way based on the gauge principle. It is shown how microcanonical ensembles in both Bose-Einstein and Fermi-Dirac statistics emerge in the vanishing-interaction limit

    Electron-Phonon mechanism for Superconductivity in Na0.35_{0.35}CoO2_2: Valence-Band Suhl-Kondo effect Driven by Shear Phonons

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    To study the possible mechanism of superconductivity in Na0.35_{0.35}CoO2_2, we examine the interaction between all the relevant optical phonons (breathing and shear phonons) and t2g(a1g+eg)t_{2g}(a_{1g}+e_g')-electrons of Co-ions, and study the transition temperature for a s-wave superconductivity. The obtained TcT_{\rm c} is very low when the ege_g'-valence-bands are far below the Fermi level. However, TcT_{\rm c} is strongly enhanced when the top of the ege_g'-valence-bands is close to the Fermi level (say -50meV), thanks to interband hopping of Cooper pairs caused by shear phonons. This ``valence-band Suhl-Kondo mechanism'' due to shear phonons is significant to understand the superconductivity in Na0.35_{0.35}CoO2_2. By the same mechanism, the kink structure of the band-dispersion observed by ARPES, which indicates the strong mass-enhancement (m/m3m^\ast/m\sim3) due to optical phonons, is also explained.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; v2:Added references, published in J. Phys. Soc. Jp

    Specific heat amplitude ratios for anisotropic Lifshitz critical behaviors

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    We determine the specific heat amplitude ratio near a mm-axial Lifshitz point and show its universal character. Using a recent renormalization group picture along with new field-theoretical ϵL\epsilon_{L}-expansion techniques, we established this amplitude ratio at one-loop order. We estimate the numerical value of this amplitude ratio for m=1m=1 and d=3d=3. The result is in very good agreement with its experimental measurement on the magnetic material MnPMnP. It is shown that in the limit m0m \to 0 it trivially reduces to the Ising-like amplitude ratio.Comment: 8 pages, RevTex, accepted as a Brief Report in Physical Review

    Accelerator system for the PRISM based muon to electron conversion experiment

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    The next generation of lepton flavor violation experiments need high intensity and high quality muon beams. Production of such beams requires sending a short, high intensity proton pulse to the pion production target, capturing pions and collecting the resulting muons in the large acceptance transport system. The substantial increase of beam quality can be obtained by applying the RF phase rotation on the muon beam in the dedicated FFAG ring, which was proposed for the PRISM project.This allows to reduce the momentum spread of the beam and to purify from the unwanted components like pions or secondary protons. A PRISM Task Force is addressing the accelerator and detector issues that need to be solved in order to realize the PRISM experiment. The parameters of the required proton beam, the principles of the PRISM experiment and the baseline FFAG design are introduced. The spectrum of alternative designs for the PRISM FFAG ring are shown. Progress on ring main systems like injection and RF are presented. The current status of the study and its future directions are discussed.Comment: Studies performed within the PRISM Task Force initiativ
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