5,719 research outputs found

    2D and 3D Dense-Fluid Shear Flows via Nonequilibrium Molecular Dynamics. Comparison of Time-and-Space-Averaged Tensor Temperature and Normal Stresses from Doll's, Sllod, and Boundary-Driven Shear Algorithms

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    Homogeneous shear flows (with constant strainrate du/dy) are generated with the Doll's and Sllod algorithms and compared to corresponding inhomogeneous boundary-driven flows. We use one-, two-, and three-dimensional smooth-particle weight functions for computing instantaneous spatial averages. The nonlinear stress differences are small, but significant, in both two and three space dimensions. In homogeneous systems the sign and magnitude of the shearplane stress difference, P(xx) - P(yy), depend on both the thermostat type and the chosen shearflow algorithm. The Doll's and Sllod algorithms predict opposite signs for this stress difference, with the Sllod approach definitely wrong, but somewhat closer to the (boundary-driven) truth. Neither of the homogeneous shear algorithms predicts the correct ordering of the kinetic temperatures, T(xx) > T(zz) > T(yy).Comment: 34 pages with 12 figures, under consideration by Physical Review

    Signal conditioner circuit for photomultiplier tube

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    Miniaturized circuit improves measurement of radiation dose absorbed in a scintillation crystal. The temperature coefficient of the field-effect transistor gate-source voltage in the isolation amplifier can be readily controlled

    Nonequilibrium Temperature and Thermometry in Heat-Conducting Phi-4 Models

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    We analyze temperature and thermometry for simple nonequilibrium heat-conducting models. We show in detail, for both two- and three-dimensional systems, that the ideal gas thermometer corresponds to the concept of a local instantaneous mechanical kinetic temperature. For the Phi-4 models investigated here the mechanical temperature closely approximates the local thermodynamic equilibrium temperature. There is a significant difference between kinetic temperature and the nonlocal configurational temperature. Neither obeys the predictions of extended irreversible thermodynamics. Overall, we find that kinetic temperature, as modeled and imposed by the Nos\'e-Hoover thermostats developed in 1984, provides the simplest means for simulating, analyzing, and understanding nonequilibrium heat flows.Comment: 20 pages with six figures, revised following review at Physical Review

    The Nose-hoover thermostated Lorentz gas

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    We apply the Nose-Hoover thermostat and three variations of it, which control different combinations of velocity moments, to the periodic Lorentz gas. Switching on an external electric field leads to nonequilibrium steady states for the four models with a constant average kinetic energy of the moving particle. We study the probability density, the conductivity and the attractor in nonequilibrium and compare the results to the Gaussian thermostated Lorentz gas and to the Lorentz gas as thermostated by deterministic scattering.Comment: 7 pages (revtex) with 10 figures (postscript), most of the figures are bitmapped with low-resolution. The originals are many MB, they can be obtained upon reques

    Remarks on NonHamiltonian Statistical Mechanics: Lyapunov Exponents and Phase-Space Dimensionality Loss

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    The dissipation associated with nonequilibrium flow processes is reflected by the formation of strange attractor distributions in phase space. The information dimension of these attractors is less than that of the equilibrium phase space, corresponding to the extreme rarity of nonequilibrium states. Here we take advantage of a simple model for heat conduction to demonstrate that the nonequilibrium dimensionality loss can definitely exceed the number of phase-space dimensions required to thermostat an otherwise Hamiltonian system.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, minor typos correcte

    Evangelical Visitor - January 01, 1945 Vol. LVIII. No. 1.

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    Vol. LVIII. No. 1

    Evangelical Visitor - March 24, 1947 Vol. LX. No. 6.

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    Vol. LX. No. 6

    Evangelical Visitor - October 21, 1946 Vol. LIX. No. 21.

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    Vol. LIX. No. 21

    Evangelical Visitor - October 07, 1946 Vol. LIX. No. 20.

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    Vol. LIX. No. 20
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