537 research outputs found
Pinning Induced Fluctuations on Driven Vortices
We use a simple model to study the long time fluctuations induced by random
pinning on the motion of driven non--interacting vortices. We find that vortex
motion seen from the co--moving frame is diffusive and anisotropic, with
velocity dependent diffusion constants. Longitudinal and transverse diffusion
constants cross at a characteristic velocity where diffusion is isotropic. The
diffusion front is elongated in the direction of the drive at low velocities
and elongated in the transverse direction at large velocities. We find that the
mobility in the driven direction is always larger than the transverse mobility,
and becomes isotropic only in the large velocity limit.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figs, Vortex IV Proceedings, Sep. 3-9, 2005, Crete, Greec
Nonequilibrium structures and dynamic transitions in driven vortex lattices with disorder
We review our studies of elastic lattices driven by an external force in
the presence of random disorder, which correspond to the case of vortices in
superconducting thin films driven by external currents. Above a critical force
we find two dynamical phase transitions at and , with
. At there is a transition from plastic flow to smectic flow
where the noise is isotropic and there is a peak in the differential
resistance. At there is a sharp transition to a frozen transverse solid
where both the transverse noise and the diffussion fall down abruptly and
therefore the vortex motion is localized in the transverse direction. From a
generalized fluctuation-dissipation relation we calculate an effective
transverse temperature in the fluid moving phases. We find that the effective
temperature decreases with increasing driving force and becomes equal to the
equilibrium melting temperature when the dynamic transverse freezing occurs.Comment: 8 pages, 3 fig
Transverse rectification of disorder-induced fluctuations in a driven system
We study numerically the overdamped motion of particles driven in a two
dimensional ratchet potential. In the proposed design, of the so-called
geometrical-ratchet type, the mean velocity of a single particle in response to
a constant force has a transverse component that can be induced by the presence
of thermal or other unbiased fluctuations. We find that additional quenched
disorder can strongly enhance the transverse drift at low temperatures, in
spite of reducing the transverse mobility. We show that, under general
conditions, the rectified transverse velocity of a driven particle fluid is
equivalent to the response of a one dimensional flashing ratchet working at a
drive-dependent effective temperature, defined through generalized Einstein
relations.Comment: 4.5 pages, 3 fig
Dynamics stabilization and transport coherency in a rocking ratchet for cold atoms
Cold atoms in optical lattices have emerged as an ideal system to investigate
the ratchet effect, as demonstrated by several recent experiments. In this work
we analyze theoretically two aspects of ac driven transport in cold atoms
ratchets. We first address the issue of whether, and to which extent, an ac
driven ratchet for cold atoms can operate as a motor. We thus study
theoretically a dissipative motor for cold atoms, as obtained by adding a load
to a 1D non-adiabatically driven rocking ratchet. We demonstrate that a current
can be generated also in the presence of a load, e.g. the ratchet device can
operate as a motor. Correspondingly, we determine the stall force for the
motor, which characterizes the range of loads over which the device can operate
as a motor, and the differential mobility, which characterizes the response to
a change in the magnitude of the load. Second, we compare our results for the
transport in an ac driven ratchet device with the transport in a dc driven
system. We observe a peculiar phenomenon: the bi-harmonic ac force stabilizes
the dynamics, allowing the generation of uniform directed motion over a range
of momentum much larger than what is possible with a dc bias. We explain such a
stabilization of the dynamics by observing that a non-adiabatic ac drive
broadens the effective cooling momentum range, and forces the atom trajectories
to cover such a region. Thus the system can dissipate energy and maintain a
steady-state energy balance. Our results show that in the case of a
finite-range velocity-dependent friction, a ratchet device may offer the
possibility of controlling the particle motion over a broader range of momentum
with respect to a purely biased system, although this is at the cost of a
reduced coherency
Critical region of long-range depinning transitions
The depinning transition of elastic interfaces with an elastic interaction kernel decaying as 1/rd+σ is characterized by critical exponents which continuously vary with σ. These exponents are expected to be unique and universal, except in the fully coupled (−d<σ≤0) limit, where they depend on the “smooth” or “cuspy” nature of the microscopic pinning potential. By accurately comparing the depinning transition for cuspy and smooth potentials in a specially devised depinning model, we explain such peculiar limits in terms of the vanishing of the critical region for smooth potentials, as we decrease σ from the short-range (σ≥2) to the fully coupled case. Our results have practical implications for the determination of critical depinning exponents and identification of depinning universality classes in concrete experimental depinning systems with nonlocal elasticity, such as contact lines of liquids and fractures.Fil: Kolton, Alejandro Benedykt. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Centro Atómico Bariloche; Argentina. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Gerencia del Área de Energía Nuclear. Instituto Balseiro; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Patagonia Norte; ArgentinaFil: Jagla, Eduardo Alberto. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Gerencia del Área de Energía Nuclear. Instituto Balseiro; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Patagonia Norte; Argentina. Comisión Nacional de Energía Atómica. Centro Atómico Bariloche; Argentin
Senior Class Speaker 96th Commencement Address
Senior class speaker Kolton Harris \u2714 tells his classmates and those assembled that we are not graduating from Connecticut College to be ordinary. Now, it is our responsibility to figure out exactly what our genius is, how it looks and what its purpose is. It is now in our hands to nurture that genius.
Anisotropic finite-size scaling of an elastic string at the depinning threshold in a random-periodic medium
We numerically study the geometry of a driven elastic string at its
sample-dependent depinning threshold in random-periodic media. We find that the
anisotropic finite-size scaling of the average square width and of
its associated probability distribution are both controlled by the ratio
, where is the
random-manifold depinning roughness exponent, is the longitudinal size of
the string and the transverse periodicity of the random medium. The
rescaled average square width displays a
non-trivial single minimum for a finite value of . We show that the initial
decrease for small reflects the crossover at from the
random-periodic to the random-manifold roughness. The increase for very large
implies that the increasingly rare critical configurations, accompanying
the crossover to Gumbel critical-force statistics, display anomalous roughness
properties: a transverse-periodicity scaling in spite that ,
and subleading corrections to the standard random-manifold longitudinal-size
scaling. Our results are relevant to understanding the dimensional crossover
from interface to particle depinning.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, Commentary from the reviewer available in Papers
in Physic
Non-equilibrium relaxation of an elastic string in random media
We study the relaxation of an elastic string in a two dimensional pinning
landscape using Langevin dynamics simulations. The relaxation of a line,
initially flat, is characterized by a growing length, , separating the
equilibrated short length scales from the flat long distance geometry that keep
memory of the initial condition. We find that, in the long time limit,
has a non--algebraic growth, consistent with thermally activated jumps over
barriers with power law scaling, .Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, Proceedings of ECRYS-2005 International Workshop
on Electronic Crysta
Non-steady relaxation and critical exponents at the depinning transition
We study the non-steady relaxation of a driven one-dimensional elastic
interface at the depinning transition by extensive numerical simulations
concurrently implemented on graphics processing units (GPUs). We compute the
time-dependent velocity and roughness as the interface relaxes from a flat
initial configuration at the thermodynamic random-manifold critical force.
Above a first, non-universal microscopic time-regime, we find a non-trivial
long crossover towards the non-steady macroscopic critical regime. This
"mesoscopic" time-regime is robust under changes of the microscopic disorder
including its random-bond or random-field character, and can be fairly
described as power-law corrections to the asymptotic scaling forms yielding the
true critical exponents. In order to avoid fitting effective exponents with a
systematic bias we implement a practical criterion of consistency and perform
large-scale (L~2^{25}) simulations for the non-steady dynamics of the continuum
displacement quenched Edwards Wilkinson equation, getting accurate and
consistent depinning exponents for this class: \beta = 0.245 \pm 0.006, z =
1.433 \pm 0.007, \zeta=1.250 \pm 0.005 and \nu=1.333 \pm 0.007. Our study may
explain numerical discrepancies (as large as 30% for the velocity exponent
\beta) found in the literature. It might also be relevant for the analysis of
experimental protocols with driven interfaces keeping a long-term memory of the
initial condition.Comment: Published version (including erratum). Codes and Supplemental
Material available at https://bitbucket.org/ezeferrero/qe
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