2,071 research outputs found
Partial survival and inelastic collapse for a randomly accelerated particle
We present an exact derivation of the survival probability of a randomly
accelerated particle subject to partial absorption at the origin. We determine
the persistence exponent and the amplitude associated to the decay of the
survival probability at large times. For the problem of inelastic reflection at
the origin, with coefficient of restitution , we give a new derivation of
the condition for inelastic collapse, , and determine
the persistence exponent exactly.Comment: 6 page
Casimir interaction of rod-like particles in a two-dimensional critical system
We consider the fluctuation-induced interaction of two thin, rod-like
particles or "needles" immersed in a two-dimensional critical fluid of Ising
symmetry right at the critical point. Conformally mapping the plane containing
the needles onto a simpler geometry in which the stress tensor is known, we
analyze the force and torque between needles of arbitrary length, separation,
and orientation. For infinite and semi-infinite needles we utilize the mapping
of the plane bounded by the needles onto the half plane, and for two needles of
finite length the mapping onto an annulus. For semi-infinite and infinite
needles the force is expressed in terms of elementary functions, and we also
obtain analytical results for the force and torque between needles of finite
length with separation much greater than their length. Evaluating formulas in
our approach numerically for several needle geometries and surface universality
classes, we study the full crossover from small to large values of the
separation to length ratio. In these two limits the numerical results agree
with results for infinitely long needles and with predictions of the
small-particle operator expansion, respectively.Comment: 68 pages, 9 figure
Radial Distribution Function for Semiflexible Polymers Confined in Microchannels
An analytic expression is derived for the distribution of the
end-to-end distance of semiflexible polymers in external potentials
to elucidate the effect of confinement on the mechanical and statistical
properties of biomolecules. For parabolic confinement the result is exact
whereas for realistic potentials a self-consistent ansatz is developed, so that
is given explicitly even for hard wall confinement. The
theoretical result is in excellent quantitative agreement with fluorescence
microscopy data for actin filaments confined in rectangularly shaped
microchannels. This allows an unambiguous determination of persistence length
and the dependence of statistical properties such as Odijk's deflection
length on the channel width . It is shown that neglecting the
effect of confinement leads to a significant overestimation of bending
rigidities for filaments
A nonperturbative Real-Space Renormalization Group scheme
Based on the original idea of the density matrix renormalization group
(DMRG), i.e. to include the missing boundary conditions between adjacent blocks
of the blocked quantum system, we present a rigorous and nonperturbative
mathematical formulation for the real-space renormalization group (RG) idea
invented by L.P. Kadanoff and further developed by K.G. Wilson. This is
achieved by using additional Hilbert spaces called auxiliary spaces in the
construction of each single isolated block, which is then named a superblock
according to the original nomenclature. On this superblock we define two maps
called embedding and truncation for successively integrating out the small
scale structure. Our method overcomes the known difficulties of the numerical
DMRG, i.e. limitation to zero temperature and one space dimension.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, late
Surface Critical Behavior of Binary Alloys and Antiferromagnets: Dependence of the Universality Class on Surface Orientation
The surface critical behavior of semi-infinite
(a) binary alloys with a continuous order-disorder transition and
(b) Ising antiferromagnets in the presence of a magnetic field is considered.
In contrast to ferromagnets, the surface universality class of these systems
depends on the orientation of the surface with respect to the crystal axes.
There is ordinary and extraordinary surface critical behavior for orientations
that preserve and break the two-sublattice symmetry, respectively. This is
confirmed by transfer-matrix calculations for the two-dimensional
antiferromagnet and other evidence.Comment: Final version that appeared in PRL, some minor stylistic changes and
one corrected formula; 4 pp., twocolumn, REVTeX, 3 eps fig
Spatial Constraint Corrections to the Elasticity of dsDNA Measured with Magnetic Tweezers
In this paper, we have studied, within a discrete WLC model, the spatial
constraints in magnetic tweezers used in single molecule experiments. Two
elements are involved: first, the fixed plastic slab on which is stuck the
initial strand, second, the magnetic bead which pulls (or twists) the attached
molecule free end. We have shown that the bead surface can be replaced by its
tangent plane at the anchoring point, when it is close to the bead south pole
relative to the force. We are led to a model with two parallel repulsive
plates: the fixed anchoring plate and a fluctuating plate, simulating the bead,
in thermal equilibrium with the system. The bead effect is a slight upper shift
of the elongation, about four times smaller than the similar effect induced by
the fixed plate. This rather unexpected result, has been qualitatively
confirmed within the soluble Gaussian model. A study of the molecule elongation
versus the countour length exhibits a significant non-extensive behaviour. The
curve for short molecules (with less than 2 kbp) is well fitted by a straight
line, with a slope given by the WLC model, but it does not go through the
origin. The non-extensive offset gives a 15% upward shift to the elongation of
a 2 kbp molecule stretched by a 0.3 pN force.Comment: 28 pages, 6 figures An explanatory figure has been added. The
physical interpretation of the results has been made somewhat more
transparen
Two-dimensional critical systems with mixed boundary conditions: Exact Ising results from conformal invariance and boundary-operator expansions
With conformal-invariance methods, Burkhardt, Guim, and Xue studied the
critical Ising model, defined on the upper half plane with different
boundary conditions and on the negative and positive axes. For
and , they determined the one and two-point averages of the spin
and energy . Here , , and stand for spin-up,
spin-down, and free-spin boundaries, respectively. The case , where
the boundary conditions switch between and at arbitrary points,
, , on the axis was also analyzed.
In this paper the alternating boundary conditions and the case
of three different boundary conditions are considered. Exact results for
the one and two-point averages of , , and the stress tensor
are derived. Using the results for , the critical Casimir
interaction with the boundary of a wedge-shaped inclusion is analyzed for mixed
boundary conditions.
The paper also includes a comprehensive discussion of boundary-operator
expansions in two-dimensional critical systems with mixed boundary conditions.
Two types of expansions - away from switching points of the boundary condition
and at switching points - are considered. The asymptotic behavior of two-point
averages is expressed in terms of one-point averages with the help of the
expansions. We also consider the strip geometry with mixed boundary conditions
and derive the distant-wall corrections to one-point averages near one edge due
to the other edge using the boundary-operator expansions. The predictions of
the boundary-operator expansions are consistent with exact results for Ising
systems.Comment: 50 pages, 1 figur
Simulation of a semiflexible polymer in a narrow cylindrical pore
The probability that a randomly accelerated particle in two dimensions has
not yet left a simply connected domain after a time decays as
for long times. The same quantity also determines the
confinement free energy per unit length of a
semiflexible polymer in a narrow cylindrical pore with cross section . From simulations of a randomly accelerated particle we estimate the
universal amplitude of for both circular and rectangular cross
sections.Comment: 10 pages, 2 eps figure
Casimir Forces between Spherical Particles in a Critical Fluid and Conformal Invariance
Mesoscopic particles immersed in a critical fluid experience long-range
Casimir forces due to critical fluctuations. Using field theoretical methods,
we investigate the Casimir interaction between two spherical particles and
between a single particle and a planar boundary of the fluid. We exploit the
conformal symmetry at the critical point to map both cases onto a highly
symmetric geometry where the fluid is bounded by two concentric spheres with
radii R_- and R_+. In this geometry the singular part of the free energy F only
depends upon the ratio R_-/R_+, and the stress tensor, which we use to
calculate F, has a particularly simple form. Different boundary conditions
(surface universality classes) are considered, which either break or preserve
the order-parameter symmetry. We also consider profiles of thermodynamic
densities in the presence of two spheres. Explicit results are presented for an
ordinary critical point to leading order in epsilon=4-d and, in the case of
preserved symmetry, for the Gaussian model in arbitrary spatial dimension d.
Fundamental short-distance properties, such as profile behavior near a surface
or the behavior if a sphere has a `small' radius, are discussed and verified.
The relevance for colloidal solutions is pointed out.Comment: 37 pages, 2 postscript figures, REVTEX 3.0, published in Phys. Rev. B
51, 13717 (1995
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