56 research outputs found
Oscillatory disintegration of a trans-Alfvenic shock: A magnetohydrodynamic simulation
Nonlinear evolution of a trans-Alfvenic shock wave (TASW), at which the flow
velocity passes over the Alfven velocity, is computed in a magnetohydrodynamic
approximation. The analytical theory suggests that an infinitesimal
perturbation of a TASW results in its disintegration, i.e., finite variation of
the flow, or transformation into some other unsteady configuration. In the
present paper, this result is confirmed by numerical simulations. It is shown
that the disintegration time is close to its minimum value equal to the shock
thickness divided by a relative velocity of the emerging secondary structures.
The secondary TASW that appears after the disintegration is again unstable with
respect to disintegration. When the perturbation has a cyclic nature, the TASW
undergoes oscillatory disintegration, during which it repeatedly transforms
into another TASW. This process manifests itself as a train of shock and
rarefaction waves, which consecutively emerge at one edge of the train and
merge at the other edge.Comment: REVTEX, 8 pages, 13 PostScript figures, uses epsfig.st
Symmetry and magnetically driven ferroelectricity in rare-earth manganites RMnO3 (R=Gd, Tb, Dy)
This work investigates the magnetically driven ferroelectricity in
orthorhombic manganites RMnO3 (R=Gd, Dy or Tb) from the point of view of the
symmetry. The method adopted generalizes the one used to characterize the polar
properties of displacive modulated structures to the case of an irreducible
magnetic order parameter. The symmetry conditions for magnetically induced
ferroelectricity are established and the Landau-Devonshire free energy
functionals derived from general symmetry considerations. The ferroelectric
polarisation observed in DyMnO3 and TbMnO3 at zero magnetic field is explained
in terms of the symmetry of a reducible magnetic order parameter. The
polarisation rotation induced in these compounds by external magnetic fields
and the stabilization of a ferroelectric phase in GdMnO3 are accounted for by a
mechanism in which magnetization and polarization are secondary order
parameters that are not directly coupled but compete with each other through
their coupling to competing primary modulated order parameters.Comment: Article submitted to Physical Review B, 39 page
Magnetic superspace groups and symmetry constraints in incommensurate magnetic phases
Although superspace formalism has become the standard approach for the
analysis of structurally modulated crystals, it has remained during the last
thirty years almost unexplored as a practical tool to deal with magnetic
incommensurate structures. This situation has recently changed with the
development of new computer tools for magnetic phases based on this formalism.
In this context we show here that, as in the case of nonmagnetic incommensurate
systems, the concept of superspace symmetry provides a simple, efficient and
systematic way to characterize the symmetry and rationalize the structural and
physical properties of incommensurate magnetic materials. The method introduces
significant advantages over the most commonly employed method of representation
analysis for the description of the magnetic structure of a crystal. But, more
importantly, in contrast with that method, it consistently yields and
classifies all degrees of freedom of the system. The knowledge of the
superspace group of an incommensurate magnetic material allows to predict its
crystal tensor properties and to rationalize its phase diagram, previous to any
appeal to microscopic models or mechanisms. This is especially relevant when
the properties of incommensurate multiferroics are being studied. We present
first a summary of the superspace method under a very practical viewpoint
particularized to magnetic modulations. Its relation with the usual
representation analysis is then analyzed in detail, with the derivation of
important general rules for magnetic modulations with a single propagation
vector. The power and efficiency of the formalism is illustrated with various
selected examples, including some multiferroic materials
On the Internal Structure of Relativistic Jets
A magnetohydrodynamic model is constructed for a cylindrical jet immersed in
an external uniform magnetic field. It is shown that, as in the force-free
case, the total electric current within the jet can be zero. The particle
energetics and the magnetic field structure are determined in a self-consistent
way; all jet parameters depend on the physical conditions in the external
medium. In particular, we show that a region with subsonic flow can exist in
the central jet regions. In actual relativistic jets, most of the energy is
transferred by the electromagnetic field only when the magnetization parameter
is sufficiently large, . We also show that, in general, the
well-known solution with a central core, ,
can not be realized in the presence of an external medium.Comment: 19 pages, 2 figure
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