4,659 research outputs found
Hopping in a Supercooled Lennard-Jones Liquid: Metabasins, Waiting Time Distribution, and Diffusion
We investigate the jump motion among potential energy minima of a
Lennard-Jones model glass former by extensive computer simulation. From the
time series of minima energies, it becomes clear that the energy landscape is
organized in superstructures, called metabasins. We show that diffusion can be
pictured as a random walk among metabasins, and that the whole temperature
dependence resides in the distribution of waiting times. The waiting time
distribution exhibits algebraic decays: for very short times and
for longer times, where near . We
demonstrate that solely the waiting times in the very stable basins account for
the temperature dependence of the diffusion constant.Comment: to be published in Phys. Rev.
Relaxation dynamics of multi-level tunneling systems
A quantum mechanical treatment of an asymmetric double-well potential (DWP)
interacting with a heat bath is presented for circumstances where the
contribution of higher vibrational levels to the relaxation dynamics cannot be
excluded from consideration. The deep quantum limit characterized by a discrete
energy spectrum near the barrier top is considered. The investigation is
motivated by simulations on a computer glass which show that the considered
parameter regime is ``typical'' for DWPs being responsible for the relaxation
peak of sound absorption in glasses. Relaxation dynamics resembling the
spatial- and energy-diffusion-controlled limit of the classical Kramers'
problem, and Arrhenius-like behavior is found under specific conditions.Comment: 23 pages, RevTex, 2 figures can be received from the Authors upon
reques
How Cooperative are the Dynamics in Tunneling Systems? A Computer Study for an Atomic Model Glass
Via computer simulations of the standard binary Lennard-Jones glass former we
have obtained in a systematic way a large set of close-by pairs of minima on
the potential energy landscape, i.e. double-well potentials (DWP). We analyze
this set of DWP in two directions. At low temperatures the symmetric DWP give
rise to tunneling systems. We compare the resulting low-temperature anomalies
with those, predicted by the standard tunneling model. Deviations can be traced
back to the energy dependence of the relevant quantities like the number of
tunneling systems. Furthermore we analyze the local structure around a DWP as
well as the translational pattern during the transition between both minima.
Local density anomalies are crucial for the formation of a tunneling system.
Two very different kinds of tunneling systems are observed, depending on the
type of atom (small or large) which forms the center of the tunneling system.
In the first case the tunneling system can be interpreted as a single-particle
motion, in the second case it is more collective
On the convergence of the hp-BEM with quasi-uniform meshes for the electric field integral equation on polyhedral surfaces
In this paper the hp-version of the boundary element method is applied to the electric field integral equation on a piecewise plane (open or closed) Lipschitz surface. The underlying meshes are supposed to be quasi-uniform. We use \bH(\div)-conforming discretisations with quadrilateral elements of Raviart-Thomas type and establish quasi-optimal convergence of hp-approximations. Main ingredient of our analysis is a new \tilde\bH^{-1/2}(\div)-conforming p-interpolation operator that assumes only \bH^r\cap\tilde\bH^{-1/2}(\div)-regularity () and for which we show quasi-stability with respect to polynomial degrees
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