2,442 research outputs found
A random walk description of the heterogeneous glassy dynamics of attracting colloids
We study the heterogeneous dynamics of attractive colloidal particles close
to the gel transition using confocal microscopy experiments combined with a
theoretical statistical analysis. We focus on single particle dynamics and show
that the self part of the van Hove distribution function is not the Gaussian
expected for a Fickian process, but that it reflects instead the existence, at
any given time, of colloids with widely different mobilities. Our confocal
microscopy measurements can be described well by a simple analytical model
based on a conventional continuous time random walk picture, as already found
in several other glassy materials. In particular, the theory successfully
accounts for the presence of broad tails in the van Hove distributions that
exhibit exponential, rather than Gaussian, decay at large distance.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figs. Submitted to special issue "Classical and Quantum
Glasses" of J. Phys.: Condens. Matter; v2: response to refere
Structure and dynamics in glass-formers: predictability at large length scales
Dynamic heterogeneity in glass-formers has been related to their static
structure using the concept of dynamic propensity. We re-examine this
relationship by analyzing dynamical fluctuations in two atomistic glass-formers
and two theoretical models. We introduce quantitative statistical indicators
which show that the dynamics of individual particles cannot be predicted on the
basis of the propensity, nor by any structural indicator. However, the spatial
structure of the propensity field does have predictive power for the spatial
correlations associated with dynamic heterogeneity. Our results suggest that
the quest for a connection between static and dynamic properties of
glass-formers at the particle level is vain, but they demonstrate that such
connection does exist on larger length scales.Comment: 7 pages; 4 figs - Extended, clarified versio
Prediction of transits of solar system objects in Kepler/K2 images: An extension of the Virtual Observatory service SkyBoT
All the fields of the extended space mission Kepler/K2 are located within the
ecliptic. Many solar system objects thus cross the K2 stellar masks on a
regular basis. We aim at providing to the entire community a simple tool to
search and identify solar system objects serendipitously observed by Kepler.
The SkyBoT service hosted at IMCCE provides a Virtual Observatory (VO)
compliant cone-search that lists all solar system objects present within a
field of view at a given epoch. To generate such a list in a timely manner,
ephemerides are pre-computed, updated weekly, and stored in a relational
database to ensure a fast access. The SkyBoT Web service can now be used with
Kepler. Solar system objects within a small (few arcminutes) field of view are
identified and listed in less than 10 sec. Generating object data for the
entire K2 field of view (14{\deg}) takes about a minute. This extension of the
SkyBot service opens new possibilities with respect to mining K2 data for solar
system science, as well as removing solar system objects from stellar
photometric time-series
Revisiting the slow dynamics of a silica melt using Monte Carlo simulations
We implement a standard Monte Carlo algorithm to study the slow, equilibrium
dynamics of a silica melt in a wide temperature regime, from 6100 K down to
2750 K. We find that the average dynamical behaviour of the system is in
quantitative agreement with results obtained from molecular dynamics
simulations, at least in the long-time regime corresponding to the
alpha-relaxation. By contrast, the strong thermal vibrations related to the
Boson peak present at short times in molecular dynamics are efficiently
suppressed by the Monte Carlo algorithm. This allows us to reconsider silica
dynamics in the context of mode-coupling theory, because several shortcomings
of the theory were previously attributed to thermal vibrations. A mode-coupling
theory analysis of our data is qualitatively correct, but quantitative tests of
the theory fail, raising doubts about the very existence of an avoided
singularity in this system. We discuss the emergence of dynamic heterogeneity
and report detailed measurements of a decoupling between translational
diffusion and structural relaxation, and of a growing four-point dynamic
susceptibility. Dynamic heterogeneity appears to be less pronounced than in
more fragile glass-forming models, but not of a qualitatively different nature.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures; to be published in Phys. Rev.
Criticality in Dynamic Arrest: Correspondence between Glasses and Traffic
Dynamic arrest is a general phenomenon across a wide range of dynamic
systems, but the universality of dynamic arrest phenomena remains unclear. We
relate the emergence of traffic jams in a simple traffic flow model to the
dynamic slow down in kinetically constrained models for glasses. In kinetically
constrained models, the formation of glass becomes a true (singular) phase
transition in the limit . Similarly, using the Nagel-Schreckenberg
model to simulate traffic flow, we show that the emergence of jammed traffic
acquires the signature of a sharp transition in the deterministic limit \pp\to
1, corresponding to overcautious driving. We identify a true dynamical
critical point marking the onset of coexistence between free flowing and jammed
traffic, and demonstrate its analogy to the kinetically constrained glass
models. We find diverging correlations analogous to those at a critical point
of thermodynamic phase transitions.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
NMR evidence for the persistence of spin-superlattice above the 1/8 magnetization plateau in SrCu2(BO3)2
We present 11B NMR studies of the 2D frustrated dimer spin system SrCu2(BO3)2
in the field range 27-31 T covering the upper phase boundary of the 1/8
magnetization plateau, identified at 28.4 T. Our data provide a clear evidence
that above 28.4 T the spin-superlattice of the 1/8 plateau is modified but does
not melt even though the magnetization increases. Although this is precisely
what is expected for a supersolid phase, the microscopic nature of this new
phase is much more complex. We discuss the field-temperature phase diagram on
the basis of our NMR data.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, published versio
Facilitated spin models: recent and new results
Facilitated or kinetically constrained spin models (KCSM) are a class of
interacting particle systems reversible w.r.t. to a simple product measure.
Each dynamical variable (spin) is re-sampled from its equilibrium distribution
only if the surrounding configuration fulfills a simple local constraint which
\emph{does not involve} the chosen variable itself. Such simple models are
quite popular in the glass community since they display some of the peculiar
features of glassy dynamics, in particular they can undergo a dynamical arrest
reminiscent of the liquid/glass transitiom. Due to the fact that the jumps
rates of the Markov process can be zero, the whole analysis of the long time
behavior becomes quite delicate and, until recently, KCSM have escaped a
rigorous analysis with the notable exception of the East model. In these notes
we will mainly review several recent mathematical results which, besides being
applicable to a wide class of KCSM, have contributed to settle some debated
questions arising in numerical simulations made by physicists. We will also
provide some interesting new extensions. In particular we will show how to deal
with interacting models reversible w.r.t. to a high temperature Gibbs measure
and we will provide a detailed analysis of the so called one spin facilitated
model on a general connected graph.Comment: 30 pages, 3 figure
Color changes upon cooling of Lepidoptera scales containing photonic nanoarchitectures, and a method for identifying the changes
The effects produced by the condensation of water vapor from the environment in the various intricate
nanoarchitectures occurring in the wing scales of several Lepidoptera species were
investigated by controlled cooling (from 23° C, room temperature to -5 to -10° C) combined with
in situ measurements of changes in the reflectance spectra. It was determined that all photonic
nanoarchitectures giving a reflectance maximum in the visible range and having an open
nanostructure exhibited alteration of the position of the reflectance maximum associated with the
photonic nanoarchitectures. The photonic nanoarchitectures with a closed structure exhibited little
to no alteration in color. Similarly, control specimens colored by pigments did not exhibit a
color change under the same conditions. Hence, this method can be used to identify species with
open photonic nanoarchitectures in their scales. For certain species, an almost complete disappearance
of the reflectance maximum was found. All specimens recovered their original colors
following warming and drying. Cooling experiments using thin copper wires demonstrated that
color alterations could be limited to a width of a millimeter or less. Dried museum specimens did
not exhibit color changes when cooled in the absence of a heat sink due to the low heat capacity
of the wings
NMR evidence for a strong modulation of the Bose-Einstein Condensate in BaCuSiO
We present a Cu and Si NMR study of the quasi-2D coupled
spin 1/2 dimer compound BaCuSiO in the magnetic field range 13-26 T and
at temperatures as low as 50 mK. NMR data in the gapped phase reveal that below
90 K different intra-dimer exchange couplings and different gaps
( = 1.16) exist in every second plane along
the c-axis, in addition to a planar incommensurate (IC) modulation. Si
spectra in the field induced magnetic ordered phase reveal that close to the
quantum critical point at = 23.35 T the average boson density
of the Bose-Einstein condensate is strongly modulated along the
c-axis with a density ratio for every second plane
. An IC modulation of the local
density is also present in each plane. This adds new constraints for the
understanding of the 2D value = 1 of the critical exponent describing
the phase boundary
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