18,148 research outputs found

    Universal power law tails of time correlation functions

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    The universal power law tails of single particle and multi-particle time correlation functions are derived from a unifying point of view, solely using the hydrodynamic modes of the system. The theory applies to general correlation functions, and to systems more general than classical fluids. Moreover it is argued that the collisional transfer part of the stress-stress correlation function in dense classical fluids has the same long time tail t1d/2\sim t^{-1-d/2} as the velocity autocorrelation function in Lorentz gases.Comment: 10 pages, 0 figures, Revised version: old Eqs(7)-(8) are replaced by new Eqs (7)-(10), based on renormalization of the fluctuating heat conduction equation for systems with quenched disorder. The new power law tail vanishes on a periodic lattice, as it shoul

    Microscopic Theory for Long Range Spatial Correlations in Lattice Gas Automata

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    Lattice gas automata with collision rules that violate the conditions of semi-detailed-balance exhibit algebraic decay of equal time spatial correlations between fluctuations of conserved densities. This is shown on the basis of a systematic microscopic theory. Analytical expressions for the dominant long range behavior of correlation functions are derived using kinetic theory. We discuss a model of interacting random walkers with x-y anisotropy whose pair correlation function decays as 1/r^2, and an isotropic fluid-type model with momentum correlations decaying as 1/r^2. The pair correlation function for an interacting random walker model with interactions satisfying all symmetries of the square lattice is shown to have 1/r^4 density correlations. Theoretical predictions for the amplitude of the algebraic tails are compared with the results of computer simulations.Comment: 31 pages, 2 figures, final version as publishe

    Extension of Haff's cooling law in granular flows

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    The total energy E(t) in a fluid of inelastic particles is dissipated through inelastic collisions. When such systems are prepared in a homogeneous initial state and evolve undriven, E(t) decays initially as t^{-2} \aprox exp[ - 2\epsilon \tau] (known as Haff's law), where \tau is the average number of collisions suffered by a particle within time t, and \epsilon=1-\alpha^2 measures the degree of inelasticity, with \alpha the coefficient of normal restitution. This decay law is extended for large times to E(t) \aprox \tau^{-d/2} in d-dimensions, far into the nonlinear clustering regime. The theoretical predictions are quantitatively confirmed by computer simulations, and holds for small to moderate inelasticities with 0.6< \alpha< 1.Comment: 7 pages, 4 PostScript figures. To be published in Europhysics Letter

    Scaling Solutions of Inelastic Boltzmann Equations with Over-populated High Energy Tails

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    This paper deals with solutions of the nonlinear Boltzmann equation for spatially uniform freely cooling inelastic Maxwell models for large times and for large velocities, and the nonuniform convergence to these limits. We demonstrate how the velocity distribution approaches in the scaling limit to a similarity solution with a power law tail for general classes of initial conditions and derive a transcendental equation from which the exponents in the tails can be calculated. Moreover on the basis of the available analytic and numerical results for inelastic hard spheres and inelastic Maxwell models we formulate a conjecture on the approach of the velocity distribution function to a scaling form.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures. Accepted in J. Statistical Physic

    Asymptotic solutions of the nonlinear Boltzmann equation for dissipative systems

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    Analytic solutions F(v,t)F(v,t) of the nonlinear Boltzmann equation in dd-dimensions are studied for a new class of dissipative models, called inelastic repulsive scatterers, interacting through pseudo-power law repulsions, characterized by a strength parameter ν\nu, and embedding inelastic hard spheres (ν=1\nu=1) and inelastic Maxwell models (ν=0\nu=0). The systems are either freely cooling without energy input or driven by thermostats, e.g. white noise, and approach stable nonequilibrium steady states, or marginally stable homogeneous cooling states, where the data, v0d(t)F(v,t)v^d_0(t) F(v,t) plotted versus c=v/v0(t)c=v/v_0(t), collapse on a scaling or similarity solution f(c)f(c), where v0(t)v_0(t) is the r.m.s. velocity. The dissipative interactions generate overpopulated high energy tails, described generically by stretched Gaussians, f(c)exp[βcb]f(c) \sim \exp[-\beta c^b] with 0<b<20 < b < 2, where b=νb=\nu with ν>0\nu>0 in free cooling, and b=1+1/2νb=1+{1/2} \nu with ν0\nu \geq 0 when driven by white noise. Power law tails, f(c)1/ca+df(c) \sim 1/c^{a+d}, are only found in marginal cases, where the exponent aa is the root of a transcendental equation. The stability threshold depend on the type of thermostat, and is for the case of free cooling located at ν=0\nu=0. Moreover we analyze an inelastic BGK-type kinetic equation with an energy dependent collision frequency coupled to a thermostat, that captures all qualitative properties of the velocity distribution function in Maxwell models, as predicted by the full nonlinear Boltzmann equation, but fails for harder interactions with ν>0\nu>0.Comment: Submitted to: "Granular Gas Dynamics", T. Poeschel, N. Brilliantov (eds.), Lecture Notes in Physics, Vol. LNP 624, Springer-Verlag, Berlin-Heidelberg-New York, 200
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