258 research outputs found

    Tunneling and Non-Universality in Continuum Percolation Systems

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    The values obtained experimentally for the conductivity critical exponent in numerous percolation systems, in which the interparticle conduction is by tunnelling, were found to be in the range of t0t_0 and about t0+10t_0+10, where t0t_0 is the universal conductivity exponent. These latter values are however considerably smaller than those predicted by the available ``one dimensional"-like theory of tunneling-percolation. In this letter we show that this long-standing discrepancy can be resolved by considering the more realistic "three dimensional" model and the limited proximity to the percolation threshold in all the many available experimental studiesComment: 4 pages, 2 figure

    Theory of continuum percolation I. General formalism

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    The theoretical basis of continuum percolation has changed greatly since its beginning as little more than an analogy with lattice systems. Nevertheless, there is yet no comprehensive theory of this field. A basis for such a theory is provided here with the introduction of the Potts fluid, a system of interacting ss-state spins which are free to move in the continuum. In the s1s \to 1 limit, the Potts magnetization, susceptibility and correlation functions are directly related to the percolation probability, the mean cluster size and the pair-connectedness, respectively. Through the Hamiltonian formulation of the Potts fluid, the standard methods of statistical mechanics can therefore be used in the continuum percolation problem.Comment: 26 pages, Late

    Percolation-to-hopping crossover in conductor-insulator composites

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    Here, we show that the conductivity of conductor-insulator composites in which electrons can tunnel from each conducting particle to all others may display both percolation and tunneling (i.e. hopping) regimes depending on few characteristics of the composite. Specifically, we find that the relevant parameters that give rise to one regime or the other are D/ξD/\xi (where DD is the size of the conducting particles and ξ\xi is the tunneling length) and the specific composite microstructure. For large values of D/ξD/\xi, percolation arises when the composite microstructure can be modeled as a regular lattice that is fractionally occupied by conducting particle, while the tunneling regime is always obtained for equilibrium distributions of conducting particles in a continuum insulating matrix. As D/ξD/\xi decreases the percolating behavior of the conductivity of lattice-like composites gradually crosses over to the tunneling-like regime characterizing particle dispersions in the continuum. For D/ξD/\xi values lower than D/ξ5D/\xi\simeq 5 the conductivity has tunneling-like behavior independent of the specific microstructure of the composite.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure

    Solution of the tunneling-percolation problem in the nanocomposite regime

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    We noted that the tunneling-percolation framework is quite well understood at the extreme cases of percolation-like and hopping-like behaviors but that the intermediate regime has not been previously discussed, in spite of its relevance to the intensively studied electrical properties of nanocomposites. Following that we study here the conductivity of dispersions of particle fillers inside an insulating matrix by taking into account explicitly the filler particle shapes and the inter-particle electron tunneling process. We show that the main features of the filler dependencies of the nanocomposite conductivity can be reproduced without introducing any \textit{a priori} imposed cut-off in the inter-particle conductances, as usually done in the percolation-like interpretation of these systems. Furthermore, we demonstrate that our numerical results are fully reproduced by the critical path method, which is generalized here in order to include the particle filler shapes. By exploiting this method, we provide simple analytical formulas for the composite conductivity valid for many regimes of interest. The validity of our formulation is assessed by reinterpreting existing experimental results on nanotube, nanofiber, nanosheet and nanosphere composites and by extracting the characteristic tunneling decay length, which is found to be within the expected range of its values. These results are concluded then to be not only useful for the understanding of the intermediate regime but also for tailoring the electrical properties of nanocomposites.Comment: 13 pages with 8 figures + 10 pages with 9 figures of supplementary material (Appendix B

    The influence of strength of hyperon-hyperon interactions on neutron star properties

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    An equation of state of neutron star matter with strange baryons has been obtained. The effects of the strength of hyperon-hyperon interactions on the equations of state constructed for the chosen parameter sets have been analyzed. Numerous neutron star models show that the appearance of hyperons is connected with the increasing density in neutron star interiors. The performed calculations have indicated that the change of the hyperon-hyperon coupling constants affects the chemical composition of a neutron star. The obtained numerical hyperon star models exclude large population of strange baryons in the star interior.Comment: 18 pages, 22 figures, accepted to be published in Journal of Physics G: Nuclear and Particle Physic

    Exact solution of a one-dimensional continuum percolation model

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    I consider a one dimensional system of particles which interact through a hard core of diameter \si and can connect to each other if they are closer than a distance dd. The mean cluster size increases as a function of the density ρ\rho until it diverges at some critical density, the percolation threshold. This system can be mapped onto an off-lattice generalization of the Potts model which I have called the Potts fluid, and in this way, the mean cluster size, pair connectedness and percolation probability can be calculated exactly. The mean cluster size is S = 2 \exp[ \rho (d -\si)/(1 - \rho \si)] - 1 and diverges only at the close packing density \rho_{cp} = 1 / \si . This is confirmed by the behavior of the percolation probability. These results should help in judging the effectiveness of approximations or simulation methods before they are applied to higher dimensions.Comment: 21 pages, Late

    Theory of continuum percolation III. Low density expansion

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    We use a previously introduced mapping between the continuum percolation model and the Potts fluid (a system of interacting s-states spins which are free to move in the continuum) to derive the low density expansion of the pair connectedness and the mean cluster size. We prove that given an adequate identification of functions, the result is equivalent to the density expansion derived from a completely different point of view by Coniglio et al. [J. Phys A 10, 1123 (1977)] to describe physical clustering in a gas. We then apply our expansion to a system of hypercubes with a hard core interaction. The calculated critical density is within approximately 5% of the results of simulations, and is thus much more precise than previous theoretical results which were based on integral equations. We suggest that this is because integral equations smooth out overly the partition function (i.e., they describe predominantly its analytical part), while our method targets instead the part which describes the phase transition (i.e., the singular part).Comment: 42 pages, Revtex, includes 5 EncapsulatedPostscript figures, submitted to Phys Rev

    Microscopic study of neutrino trapping in hyperon stars

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    Employing the most recent parametrization of the baryon-baryon interaction of the Nijmegen group, we investigate, in the framework of the Brueckner--Bethe--Goldstone many-body theory at zero temperature, the influence of neutrino trapping on the composition, equation of state, and structure of neutron stars, relevant to describe the physical conditions of a neutron star immediately after birth (protoneutron star). We find that the presence of neutrinos changes significantly the composition of matter delaying the appearance of hyperons and making the equation of state stiffer. We explore the consequences of neutrino trapping on the early evolution of a neutron star and on the nature of the final compact remnant left by the supernova explosion.Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics, 399, 687-693 (2003

    Two-dimensional Packing in Prolate Granular Materials

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    We investigate the two-dimensional packing of extremely prolate (aspect ratio α=L/D>10\alpha=L/D>10) granular materials, comparing experiments with Monte-Carlo simulations. The average packing fraction of particles with aspect ratio α=12\alpha=12 is 0.68±0.030.68\pm0.03. We quantify the orientational correlation of particles and find a correlation length of two particle lengths. The functional form of the decay of orientational correlation is the same in both experiments and simulations spanning three orders of magnitude in aspect ratio. This function decays over a distance of two particle lengths. It is possible to identify voids in the pile with sizes ranging over two orders of magnitude. The experimental void distribution function is a power law with exponent β=2.43±0.08-\beta=-2.43\pm0.08. Void distributions in simulated piles do not decay as a power law, but do show a broad tail. We extend the simulation to investigate the scaling at very large aspect ratios. A geometric argument predicts the pile number density to scale as α2\alpha^{-2}. Simulations do indeed scale this way, but particle alignment complicates the picture, and the actual number densities are quite a bit larger than predicted.Comment: 6 pages + 10 ps/eps figure

    A microquasar shot out from its birth place

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    We show that the microquasar LSI+61303 is running away from its birth place in a young complex of massive stars. The supernova explosion that formed the compact object shot out the x-ray binary with a linear momentum of 430 +/- 140 Msun km/s, which is comparable to the linear momenta found in solitary runaway neutron stars and millisecond pulsars. The properties of the binary system and its runaway motion of 27 +/- 6 km/s imply that the natal supernova was asymmetric and that the upper limit for the mass that could have been suddenly ejected in the explosion is ~2 Msun. The initial mass of the progenitor star of the compact object that is inferred depends on whether the formation of massive stars in the parent stellar cluster was coeval or a sequential process.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure. Published in A&A, see http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?bibcode=2004A%26A...422L..29M and the NRAO press release at http://www.nrao.edu/pr/2004/shotout
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