29,692 research outputs found
The Casimir effect for thin plasma sheets and the role of the surface plasmons
We consider the Casimir force betweeen two dielectric bodies described by the
plasma model and between two infinitely thin plasma sheets. In both cases in
addition to the photon modes surface plasmons are present in the spectrum of
the electromagnetic field. We investigate the contribution of both types of
modes to the Casimir force and confirm resp. find in both models large
compensations between the plasmon modes themselves and between them and the
photon modes especially at large distances. Our conclusion is that the
separation of the vacuum energy into plasmon and photon contributions must be
handled with care except for the case of small separations.Comment: submitted to JPhysA Special Issue QFEXT'05, replaced due to a wrong
Latex comman
Low-Energy Heavy-Ion Reactions and the Skyrme Effective Interaction
The Skyrme effective interaction, with its multitude of parameterisations,
along with its implemen- tation using the static and time-dependent density
functional (TDHF) formalism have allowed for a range of microscopic
calculations of low-energy heavy-ion collisions. These calculations allow
variation of the effective interaction along with an interpretation of the
results of this variation informed by a comparison to experimental data.
Initial progress in implementing TDHF for heavy-ion collisions necessarily used
many approximations in the geometry or the interaction. Over the last decade or
so, the implementations have overcome all restrictions, and studies have begun
to be made where details of the effective interaction are being probed. This
review surveys these studies in low energy heavy-ion reactions, finding
significant effects on observables from the form of the spin-orbit interaction,
the use of the tensor force, and the inclusion of time-odd terms in the density
functional.Comment: submitted to Prog. Part. Nucl. Phy
Quantifying and visualising change: strain monitoring of tapestries with digital image correlation
A three-year research project at the University of Southampton (2007â2010) investigated whether monitoring
techniques commonly used by engineers to assess the strength and durability of materials could be usefully
applied to inform the condition assessment of historic tapestries. To date it has not been possible to obtain an
objective picture of the overall condition of a tapestry; the study investigated whether it is possible to identify
precursors of structural damage. The two techniques, digital image correlation (DIC) and optical fibre
sensors, were used to monitor a representative wool fabric, specially woven tapestry samples, a newly
woven tapestry, and historic tapestries, both in the laboratory and in situ in a historic house. This study
first sets out to answer the question: can DIC be used to monitor and visualize strain in historic tapestries?
It is shown that DIC can be used successfully. Secondly, it discusses the map function, a novel
development which allowed the monitoring equipment to be moved, so that it could be used in situ in a
historic house. Thirdly, it provides further details of the experimental work using optical fibre sensors to
confirm the accuracy of the DIC technique
Renormalization group analysis of the Reynolds stress transport equation
The pressure velocity correlation and return to isotropy term in the Reynolds stress transport equation are analyzed using the Yakhot-Orszag renormalization group. The perturbation series for the relevant correlations, evaluated to lowest order in the epsilon-expansion of the Yakhot-Orszag theory, are infinite series in tensor product powers of the mean velocity gradient and its transpose. Formal lowest order Pade approximations to the sums of these series produce a fast pressure strain model of the form proposed by Launder, Reece, and Rodi, and a return to isotropy model of the form proposed by Rotta. In both cases, the model constant are computed theoretically. The predicted Reynolds stress ratios in simple shear flows are evaluated and compared with experimental data. The possibility is discussed of driving higher order nonlinear models by approximating the sums more accurately
Minimal Forbidden Factors of Circular Words
Minimal forbidden factors are a useful tool for investigating properties of
words and languages. Two factorial languages are distinct if and only if they
have different (antifactorial) sets of minimal forbidden factors. There exist
algorithms for computing the minimal forbidden factors of a word, as well as of
a regular factorial language. Conversely, Crochemore et al. [IPL, 1998] gave an
algorithm that, given the trie recognizing a finite antifactorial language ,
computes a DFA recognizing the language whose set of minimal forbidden factors
is . In the same paper, they showed that the obtained DFA is minimal if the
input trie recognizes the minimal forbidden factors of a single word. We
generalize this result to the case of a circular word. We discuss several
combinatorial properties of the minimal forbidden factors of a circular word.
As a byproduct, we obtain a formal definition of the factor automaton of a
circular word. Finally, we investigate the case of minimal forbidden factors of
the circular Fibonacci words.Comment: To appear in Theoretical Computer Scienc
Simulation tools for future interferometers
For the design and commissioning of the LIGO interferometer, simulation tools have been used explicitly and implicitly. The requirement of the advanced LIGO interferometer is much more demanding than the first generation interferometer. Development of revised simulation tools for future interferometers are underway in the LIGO Laboratory. The outline of those simulation tools and applications are discussed
A new model for evolution in a spatial continuum
We investigate a new model for populations evolving in a spatial continuum.
This model can be thought of as a spatial version of the Lambda-Fleming-Viot
process. It explicitly incorporates both small scale reproduction events and
large scale extinction-recolonisation events. The lineages ancestral to a
sample from a population evolving according to this model can be described in
terms of a spatial version of the Lambda-coalescent. Using a technique of
Evans(1997), we prove existence and uniqueness in law for the model. We then
investigate the asymptotic behaviour of the genealogy of a finite number of
individuals sampled uniformly at random (or more generally `far enough apart')
from a two-dimensional torus of side L as L tends to infinity. Under
appropriate conditions (and on a suitable timescale), we can obtain as limiting
genealogical processes a Kingman coalescent, a more general Lambda-coalescent
or a system of coalescing Brownian motions (with a non-local coalescence
mechanism).Comment: 63 pages, version accepted to Electron. J. Proba
Coalescent simulation in continuous space:Algorithms for large neighbourhood size
Many species have an essentially continuous distribution in space, in which there are no natural divisions between randomly mating subpopulations. Yet, the standard approach to modelling these populations is to impose an arbitrary grid of demes, adjusting deme sizes and migration rates in an attempt to capture the important features of the population. Such indirect methods are required because of the failure of the classical models of isolation by distance, which have been shown to have major technical flaws. A recently introduced model of extinction and recolonisation in two dimensions solves these technical problems, and provides a rigorous technical foundation for the study of populations evolving in a spatial continuum. The coalescent process for this model is simply stated, but direct simulation is very inefficient for large neighbourhood sizes. We present efficient and exact algorithms to simulate this coalescent process for arbitrary sample sizes and numbers of loci, and analyse these algorithms in detail
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