24,897 research outputs found
Alternative statistical-mechanical descriptions of decaying two-dimensional turbulence in terms of "patches" and "points"
Numerical and analytical studies of decaying, two-dimensional (2D)
Navier-Stokes (NS) turbulence at high Reynolds numbers are reported. The effort
is to determine computable distinctions between two different formulations of
maximum entropy predictions for the decayed, late-time state. Both formulations
define an entropy through a somewhat ad hoc discretization of vorticity to the
"particles" of which statistical mechanical methods are employed to define an
entropy, before passing to a mean-field limit. In one case, the particles are
delta-function parallel "line" vortices ("points" in two dimensions), and in
the other, they are finite-area, mutually-exclusive convected "patches" of
vorticity which in the limit of zero area become "points." We use
time-dependent, spectral-method direct numerical simulation of the
Navier-Stokes equations to see if initial conditions which should relax to
different late-time states under the two formulations actually do so.Comment: 21 pages, 24 figures: submitted to "Physics of Fluids
Sudden stoppage of rotor in a thermally driven rotary motor made from double-walled carbon nanotubes
In a thermally driven rotary motor made from double-walled carbon nanotubes, the rotor (inner tube) can be actuated to rotate within the stator (outer tube) when the environmental temperature is high enough. A sudden stoppage of the rotor can occur when the inner tube has been actuated to rotate at a stable high speed. To find the mechanisms of such sudden stoppages, eight motor models with the same rotor but different stators are built and simulated in the canonical NVT ensembles. Numerical results demonstrate that the sudden stoppage of the rotor occurs when the difference between radii is near 0.34 nm at a high environmental temperature. A smaller difference between radii does not imply easier activation of the sudden rotor stoppage. During rotation, the positions and electron density distribution of atoms at the ends of the motor show that a sp(1) bonded atom on the rotor is attracted by the sp(1) atom with the biggest deviation of radial position on the stator, after which they become two sp(2) atoms. The strong bond interaction between the two atoms leads to the loss of rotational speed of the rotor within 1 ps. Hence, the sudden stoppage is attributed to two factors: the deviation of radial position of atoms at the stator's ends and the drastic thermal vibration of atoms on the rotor in rotation. For a stable motor, sudden stoppage could be avoided by reducing deviation of the radial position of atoms at the stator's ends. A nanobrake can be, thus, achieved by adjusting a sp(1) atom at the ends of stator to stop the rotation of rotor quickly.The authors are grateful for financial support from the National Natural-Science-Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 50908190, 11372100)
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Multi-aspect, robust, and memory exclusive guest os fingerprinting
Precise fingerprinting of an operating system (OS) is critical to many security and forensics applications in the cloud, such as virtual machine (VM) introspection, penetration testing, guest OS administration, kernel dump analysis, and memory forensics. The existing OS fingerprinting techniques primarily inspect network packets or CPU states, and they all fall short in precision and usability. As the physical memory of a VM always exists in all these applications, in this article, we present OS-Sommelier+, a multi-aspect, memory exclusive approach for precise and robust guest OS fingerprinting in the cloud. It works as follows: given a physical memory dump of a guest OS, OS-Sommelier+ first uses a code hash based approach from kernel code aspect to determine the guest OS version. If code hash approach fails, OS-Sommelier+ then uses a kernel data signature based approach from kernel data aspect to determine the version. We have implemented a prototype system, and tested it with a number of Linux kernels. Our evaluation results show that the code hash approach is faster but can only fingerprint the known kernels, and data signature approach complements the code signature approach and can fingerprint even unknown kernels
Competing Phases, Strong Electron-Phonon Interaction and Superconductivity in Elemental Calcium under High Pressure
The observed "simple cubic" (sc) phase of elemental Ca at room temperature in
the 32-109 GPa range is, from linear response calculations, dynamically
unstable. By comparing first principle calculations of the enthalpy for five
sc-related (non-close-packed) structures, we find that all five structures
compete energetically at room temperature in the 40-90 GPa range, and three do
so in the 100-130 GPa range. Some competing structures below 90 GPa are
dynamically stable, i.e., no imaginary frequency, suggesting that these
sc-derived short-range-order local structures exist locally and can account for
the observed (average) "sc" diffraction pattern. In the dynamically stable
phases below 90 GPa, some low frequency phonon modes are present, contributing
to strong electron-phonon (EP) coupling as well as arising from the strong
coupling. Linear response calculations for two of the structures over 120 GPa
lead to critical temperatures in the 20-25 K range as is observed, and do so
without unusually soft modes.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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