9,649 research outputs found
Stability of Parallel Bubbly and Cavitating Flows
This paper examines the bubble dynamic effects on the stability of parallel bubbly and cavitating flows of low void fraction. Inertial effects associated with the bubble response and energy dissipation due to the viscosity of the liquid, the heat transfer between the two phases, and the liquid compressibility are included. The equations of motion are linearized for small perturbations and a modified Rayleigh equation for the inviscid stability of the two-dimensional parallel flow is derived. Numerical solutions of the characteristic problem for the modified Rayleigh equation of a free shear layer are obtained by means of a multiple shooting method. Depending on the dispersion of the gaseous phase in the bubbly mixture, the ambient pressure and the free stream velocities, the pressure of air bubbles can induce significant departures from the classical solution for a single phase fluid. Results are presented to illustrate the influence of the relevant flow parameters
Computing Shock Waves in Cloud Cavitation
This paper presents a numerical investigation of some of the phenomena involved in the nonlinear dynamics of a homogeneous bubbly mixture bounded by an oscillatory wall. This problem represents an idealization of the flow in a typical vibratory cavitation damage device. Results are presented showing that wave steepening and ultimately shock wave formation occur as the magnitude of the excitation increases. The propagation characteristics of the waves through the bubbly medium have also been studied. Strong pressure peaks of short duration, corresponding to the coherent collapse of the bubble clusters, are computed and accurately resolved, both in space and time. As the amplitude of the excitation is increased a series of period doubling bifurcations occurs. The nonlinear dynamics of the oscillating bubble cluster are observed to follow a subharmonic route to chaos
Theory of the Metal-Paramagnetic Mott-Jahn-Teller Insulator Transition in A_4C_{60}
We study the unconventional insulating state in A_4C_{60} with a variety of
approaches, including density functional calculations and dynamical mean-field
theory. While the former predicts a metallic state, in disagreement with
experiment, the latter yields a (paramagnetic) Mott-Jahn-Teller insulator. In
that state, conduction between molecules is blocked by on-site Coulomb
repulsion, magnetism is suppressed by intra-molecular Jahn-Teller effect, and
important excitations (such as optical and spin gap) should be essentially
intra-molecular. Experimental gaps of 0.5 eV and 0.1 eV respectively compare
well with molecular ion values, in agreement with this picture.Comment: 4 pages, 2 postscript figure
Ising transition in a one-dimensional quarter-filled electron system with dimerization
We examine critical properties of the quarter-filled one-dimensional Hubbard
model with dimerization and with the onsite and nearest-neighbor Coulomb
repulsion U and V. By utilizing the bosonization method, it is shown that the
system exhibits an Ising quantum phase transition from the Mott insulating
state to the charge-ordered insulating state. It is also shown that the
dielectric permittivity exhibits a strong enhancement as decreasing temperature
with power-law dependence at the Ising critical point.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, uses elsart.cls, Proc. Int. Symp. ISSP-Kashiwa
2001, submitted to J. Phys. Chem. Solid
An Exploratory Study of Field Failures
Field failures, that is, failures caused by faults that escape the testing
phase leading to failures in the field, are unavoidable. Improving verification
and validation activities before deployment can identify and timely remove many
but not all faults, and users may still experience a number of annoying
problems while using their software systems. This paper investigates the nature
of field failures, to understand to what extent further improving in-house
verification and validation activities can reduce the number of failures in the
field, and frames the need of new approaches that operate in the field. We
report the results of the analysis of the bug reports of five applications
belonging to three different ecosystems, propose a taxonomy of field failures,
and discuss the reasons why failures belonging to the identified classes cannot
be detected at design time but shall be addressed at runtime. We observe that
many faults (70%) are intrinsically hard to detect at design-time
Spine-sheath layer radiative interplay in subparsec-scale jets and the TeV emission from M87
Simple one-zone homogeneous synchrotron self-Compton models have severe
difficulties in explaining the TeV emission observed in the radiogalaxy M87.
Also the site of the TeV emission region is uncertain: it could be the
unresolved jet close to the nucleus, analogously to what proposed for blazars,
or an active knot, called HST-1, tens of parsec away. We explore the
possibility that the TeV emission of M87 is produced in the misaligned subpc
scale jet. We base our modelling on a structured jet, with a fast spine
surrounded by a slower layer. In this context the main site responsible for the
emission of the TeV radiation is the layer, while the (debeamed) spine accounts
for the emission from the radio to the GeV band: therefore we expect a more
complex correlation with the TeV component than that expected in one-zone
scenarios, in which both components are produced by the same region. Observed
from small angles, the spine would dominate the emission, with an overall
Spectral Energy Distribution close to those of BL Lac objects with a
synchrotron peak located at low energy (LBLs).Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
Possible phases of two coupled n-component fermionic chains
A two-leg ladder with -component fermionic fields in the chains has been
considered using an analytic renormalization group method. The fixed points and
possible phases have been determined for generic filling as well as for a
half-filled system and for the case when one of the subbands is half filled. A
weak-coupling Luttinger-liquid phase and several strong-coupling gapped phases
have been found. In the Luttinger liquid phase, for the most general spin
dependence of the couplings, all modes have different velocities if the
interband scattering processes are scaled out, while doubly degenerate
modes appear if the interband scattering processes remain finite. The role of
backward-scattering, charge-transfer and umklapp processes has been analysed
using their bosonic form and the possible phases are characterized by the
number of gapless modes. As a special case the SU() symmetric Hubbard ladder
has been investigated numerically. It was found that this model does not scale
to the Luttinger liquid fixed point. Even for generic filling gaps open up in
the spectrum of the spin or charge modes, and the system is always insulator in
the presence of umklapp processes
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