586 research outputs found
Collective dynamics of molecular motors pulling on fluid membranes
The collective dynamics of weakly coupled processive molecular motors are
considered theoretically. We show, using a discrete lattice model, that the
velocity-force curves strongly depend on the effective dynamic interactions
between motors and differ significantly from a simple mean field prediction.
They become essentially independent of if it is large enough. For strongly
biased motors such as kinesin this occurs if . The study of a
two-state model shows that the existence of internal states can induce
effective interactions.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Transient Nucleation near the Mean-Field Spinodal
Nucleation is considered near the pseudospinodal in a one-dimensional
model with a non-conserved order parameter and long-range
interactions. For a sufficiently large system or a system with slow relaxation
to metastable equilibrium, there is a non-negligible probability of nucleation
occurring before reaching metastable equilibrium. This process is referred to
as transient nucleation. The critical droplet is defined to be the
configuration of maximum likelihood that is dynamically balanced between the
metastable and stable wells. Time-dependent droplet profiles and nucleation
rates are derived, and theoretical results are compared to computer simulation.
The analysis reveals a distribution of nucleation times with a distinct peak
characteristic of a nonstationary nucleation rate. Under the quench conditions
employed, transient critical droplets are more compact than the droplets found
in metastable equilibrium simulations and theoretical predictions.Comment: 7 Pages, 5 Figure
Energy extraction from extremal charged black holes due to the BSW effect
Two particles can collide in the vicinity of a rotating black hole producing
the divergent energy in the centre of mass frame (the BSW effect). However, it
was shown recently that an observer at infinity can register quite modest
energies E and masses m which obey some upper bounds. In the present work the
counterpart of the original BSW effect is considered that may occur even for
radial motion of colliding particles near charged static black holes. It is
shown that in some scenarios there are no upper bound on E and m . Thus the
high-energetic and superheavy products of the BSW effect in this situation are,
in principle, detectable at infinity.Comment: 7 page
Mass of Clusters in Simulations
We show that dark matter haloes, in n--body simulations, have a boundary
layer (BL) with precise features. In particular, it encloses all dynamically
stable mass while, outside it, dynamical stability is lost soon. Particles can
pass through such BL, which however acts as a confinement barrier for dynamical
properties. BL is set by evaluating kinetic and potential energies (T(r) and
W(r)) and calculating R=-2T/W. Then, on BL, R has a minimum which closely
approaches a maximum of w= -dlog W/dlog r. Such ``requirement'' is
consistent with virial equilibrium, but implies further regularities. We test
the presence of a BL around haloes in spatially flat CDM simulations, with or
without cosmological constant. We find that the mass M_c, enclosed within the
radius r_c, where the requirement is fulfilled, closely approaches the
mass M_{dyn}, evaluated from the velocities of all particles within r_c,
according to the virial theorem. Using r_c we can then determine an individual
density contrast Delta_c for each virialized halo, which can be compared with
the "virial" density contrast (Omega_m: matter
density parameter) obtained assuming a spherically symmetric and unperturbed
fluctuation growth. The spread in Delta_c is wide, and cannot be neglected when
global physical quantities related to the clusters are calculated, while the
average Delta_c is ~25 % smaller than the corresponding Delta_v; moreover if
is defined from the radius linked to Delta_v, we have a much worse
fit with particle mass then starting from {\it Rw} requirement.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, contribution to the XXXVIIth Rencontres de
Moriond, The Cosmological Model, Les Arc March 16-23 2002, to appear in the
proceeding
Theory of optomechanics: Oscillator-field model of moving mirrors
In this paper we present a model for the kinematics and dynamics of
optomechanics which describe the coupling between an optical field, here
modeled by a massless scalar field, and the internal (e.g., determining its
reflectivity) and mechanical (e.g., displacement) degrees of freedom of a
moveable mirror. As opposed to implementing boundary conditions on the field we
highlight the internal dynamics of the mirror which provides added flexibility
to describe a variety of setups relevant to current experiments. The inclusion
of the internal degrees of freedom in this model allows for a variety of
optical activities of mirrors from those exhibiting broadband reflective
properties to the cases where reflection is suppressed except for a narrow band
centered around the characteristic frequency associated with the mirror's
internal dynamics. After establishing the model and the reflective properties
of the mirror we show how appropriate parameter choices lead to useful
optomechanical models such as the well known Barton-Calogeracos model [G.
Barton and A. Calogeracos, Ann. Phys. 238, 227 (1995)] and the important yet
lesser explored nonlinear models (e.g., coupling) for small photon numbers
, which present models based on side-band approximations [H. Kimble et al.,
Phys. Rev. D 65, 022002 (2001)] cannot cope with. As a simple illustrative
application we consider classical radiation pressure cooling with this model.
To expound its theoretical structure and physical meanings we connect our model
to field-theoretical models using auxiliary fields and the ubiquitous Brownian
motion model of quantum open systems. Finally we describe the range of
applications of this model, from a full quantum mechanical treatment of
radiation pressure cooling, quantum entanglement between macroscopic mirrors,
to the backreaction of Hawking radiation on black hole evaporation in a moving
mirror analog.Comment: 27 pages, 3 figure
Shell to shell energy transfer in MHD, Part II: Kinematic dynamo
We study the transfer of energy between different scales for forced
three-dimensional MHD turbulent flows in the kinematic dynamo regime. Two
different forces are examined: a non-helical Taylor Green flow with magnetic
Prandtl number P_M=0.4, and a helical ABC flow with P_M=1. This analysis allows
us to examine which scales of the velocity flow are responsible for dynamo
action, and identify which scales of the magnetic field receive energy directly
from the velocity field and which scales receive magnetic energy through the
cascade of the magnetic field from large to small scales. Our results show that
the turbulent velocity fluctuations are responsible for the magnetic field
amplification in the small scales (small scale dynamo) while the large scale
field is amplified mostly due to the large scale flow. A direct cascade of the
magnetic field energy from large to small scales is also present and is a
complementary mechanism for the increase of the magnetic field in the small
scales. Input of energy from the velocity field in the small magnetic scales
dominates over the energy that is cascaded down from the large scales until the
large-scale peak of the magnetic energy spectrum is reached. At even smaller
scales, most of the magnetic energy input is from the cascading process.Comment: Submitted to PR
Fock space relativistic coupled-Cluster calculations of Two-Valence Atoms
We have developed an all particle Fock-space relativistic coupled-cluster
method for two-valence atomic systems. We then describe a scheme to employ the
coupled-cluster wave function to calculate atomic properties. Based on these
developments we calculate the excitation energies, magnetic hyperfine constants
and electric dipole matrix elements of Sr, Ba and Yb. Further more, we
calculate the electric quadrupole HFS constants and the electric dipole matrix
elements of Sr, Ba and Yb. For these we use the one-valence
coupled-cluster wave functions obtained as an intermediate in the two-valence
calculations. We also calculate the magnetic dipole hyperfine constants of
Yb.Comment: 23 pages, 12 figures, 10 tables typos are corrected and some minor
modifications in some of the section
Light propagation through closed-loop atomic media beyond the multiphoton resonance condition
The light propagation of a probe field pulse in a four-level double-lambda
type system driven by laser fields that form a closed interaction loop is
studied. Due to the finite frequency width of the probe pulse, a
time-independent analysis relying on the multiphoton resonance assumption is
insufficient. Thus we apply a Floquet decomposition of the equations of motion
to solve the time-dependent problem beyond the multiphoton resonance condition.
We find that the various Floquet components can be interpreted in terms of
different scattering processes, and that the medium response oscillating in
phase with the probe field in general is not phase-dependent. The phase
dependence arises from a scattering of the coupling fields into the probe field
mode at a frequency which in general differs from the probe field frequency. We
thus conclude that in particular for short pulses with a large frequency width,
inducing a closed loop interaction contour may not be advantageous, since
otherwise the phase-dependent medium response may lead to a distortion of the
pulse shape. Finally, using our time-dependent analysis, we demonstrate that
both the closed-loop and the non-closed loop configuration allow for sub- and
superluminal light propagation with small absorption or even gain. Further, we
identify one of the coupling field Rabi frequencies as a control parameter that
allows to conveniently switch between sub- and superluminal light propagation.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
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