1,028 research outputs found
Ising analogue to compact-star matter
By constructing an Ising analogue of compact-star matter at sub-saturation
density we explored the effect of Coulomb frustration on the nuclear liquid-gas
phase transition. Our conclusions is twofold. First, the range of temperatures
where inhomogeneous phases form expands with increasing Coulomb-field strength.
Second, within the approximation of uniform electron distribution, the limiting
point upon which the phase-coexistence region ends does not exhibit any
critical behaviour. Possible astrophysics consequences and thermodynamical
connections are discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
From multifragmentation to supernovae and neutron stars
The thermodynamics properties of globally neutral dense stellar matter are
analyzed both in terms of mean field instabilities and structures beyond the
mean field. The mean field response to finite wavelenght fluctuations is
calculated with the realistic Sly230a effective interaction. A Monte Carlo
simulation of a schematic lattice Hamiltonian shows the importance of
calculations beyond the mean field to calculate the phase diagram of stellar
matter. The analogies and differences respect to the thermodynamics of nuclear
matter and finite nuclei are stressed.Comment: To be published in Acta Phys. Hung.
Distribution of the largest fragment in the Lattice Gas Model
The distribution of the largest fragment is studied in different regions of the Lattice Gas model phase diagram. We show that first and second order transitions can be clearly distinguished in the grancanonical ensemble, while signals typical of a continuous transition are seen inside the coexistence region if a mass conservation constraint is applied. Some possible implications of these findings for heavy ion multifragmentation experiments are discussed
Freeze-out volume in multifragmentation - dynamical simulations
Stochastic mean-field simulations for multifragmenting sources at the same
excitation energy per nucleon have been performed. The freeze-out volume, a
concept which needs to be precisely defined in this dynamical approach, was
shown to increase as a function of three parameters: freeze-out instant,
fragment multiplicity and system size.Comment: Submitted to Eur. Phys. J. A - march 200
Enhancement of kinetic energy fluctuations due to expansion
Global equilibrium fragmentation inside a freeze out constraining volume is a
working hypothesis widely used in nuclear fragmentation statistical models. In
the framework of classical Lennard Jones molecular dynamics, we study how the
relaxation of the fixed volume constraint affects the posterior evolution of
microscopic correlations, and how a non-confined fragmentation scenario is
established. A study of the dynamical evolution of the relative kinetic energy
fluctuations was also performed. We found that asymptotic measurements of such
observable can be related to the number of decaying channels available to the
system at fragmentation time.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Pairing Vibrations Study with the Time-Dependent Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov theory
International audienceWe study pairing vibrations in O and Ca nuclei solving the time-dependent Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov equation in coordinate space with spherical symmetry. We use the SLy4 Skyrme functional in the normal part of the energy density functional and a local density dependent functional in its pairing part. Pairing vibrations are excited by two-neutron transfer operators. Strength distributions are obtained using the Fourier transform of the time-dependent response of two-neutron pair-transfer observables in the linear regime. Results are in overall agreement with quasiparticle random phase approximation calculations for Oxygen isotopes, though differences appear when increasing the neutron number. Both low lying pairing modes and giant pairing vibrations (GPV) are discussed. The GPV is observed in the Oxygen but not in the Calcium isotopes
Low density expansion and isospin dependence of nuclear energy functional: comparison between relativistic and Skyrme models
In the present work we take the non relativistic limit of relativistic models
and compare the obtained functionals with the usual Skyrme parametrization.
Relativistic models with both constant couplings and with density dependent
couplings are considered. While some models present very good results already
at the lowest order in the density, models with non-linear terms only reproduce
the energy functional if higher order terms are taken into account in the
expansion.Comment: 16 pages,6 figures,5 table
Absolute instability in axisymmetric wakes: Compressible and density variation effects
International audienceLesshafft & Huerre (Phys. Fluids, 2007; vol. 19, 024102) have recently studied the transition from convective to absolute instability in hot round jets, for which absolute instability is led by axisymmetric perturbations and enhanced when lowering the jet density. The present paper analyses similarly the counterpart problem of wake flows, and establishes that absolute instability is then led by a large-scale helical wake mode favoured when the wake is denser than the surrounding fluid. This generalizes to variable density and compressible wakes the results of Monkewitz (J. Fluid Mech. vol 192, 1988, p. 561). Furthermore, we show that in a particular range of density ratios, the large-scale helical wake mode can become absolutely unstable by increasing only the Mach number up to high subsonic values. This possibility of an absolute instability triggered by an increase of the Mach number is opposite to the behaviour previously described in shear flows such as plane mixing layers and axisymmetric jets. A physical interpretation based on the action of the baroclinic torque is proposed. An axisymmetric short-scale mode, similar to that observed in plane mixing layers, leads the transition in light wakes, but the corresponding configurations require large counterflow for the instability to be absolute. These results suggest that the low-frequency oscillation present in afterbody wakes may be due to a nonlinear global mode triggered by a local absolute instability, since the azimuthal wavenumber and absolute frequency of the helical wake mode agree qualitatively with observations. © 2008 Cambridge University Press
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