4,119,304 research outputs found
Two-dimensional melting far from equilibrium in a granular monolayer
We report an experimental investigation of the transition from a hexagonally
ordered solid phase to a disordered liquid in a monolayer of vibrated spheres.
The transition occurs as the intensity of the vibration amplitude is increased.
Measurements of the density of dislocations and the positional and
orientational correlation functions show evidence for a dislocation-mediated
continuous transition from a solid phase with long-range order to a liquid with
only short-range order. The results show a strong similarity to simulations of
melting of hard disks in equilibrium, despite the fact that the granular
monolayer is far from equilibrium due to the effects of interparticle
dissipation and the vibrational forcing.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Functional determinants on certain domains
Functional determinants on various domains of the sphere and flat space are
presented for scalar and spinor fields.Comment: 14p, plain TeX, talk presented at the 6th Moscow Quantum Gravity
Seminar, Moscow, June 12-19, 1995.(Minor errors corrected.
Dynamics of colloidal particles in ice
We use X-ray Photon Correlation Spectroscopy (XPCS) to probe the dynamics of colloidal particles in polycrystalline ice. During freezing, the dendritic ice morphology and rejection of particles from the ice created regions of high-particle-density, where some of the colloids were forced into contact and formed disordered aggregates. We find that the particles in these high density regions underwent ballistic motion coupled with both stretched and compressed exponential decays of the intensity autocorrelation function, and that the particles’ characteristic velocity increased with temperature. We explain this behavior in terms of ice grain boundary migration
Correlation functions, Bell's inequalities and the fundamental conservation laws
I derive the correlation function for a general theory of two-valued spin
variables that satisfy the fundamental conservation law of angular momentum.
The unique theory-independent correlation function is identical to the quantum
mechanical correlation function. I prove that any theory of correlations of
such discrete variables satisfying the fundamental conservation law of angular
momentum violates the Bell's inequalities. Taken together with the Bell's
theorem, this result has far reaching implications. No theory satisfying
Einstein locality, reality in the EPR-Bell sense, and the validity of the
conservation law can be constructed. Therefore, all local hidden variable
theories are incompatible with fundamental symmetries and conservation laws.
Bell's inequalities can be obeyed only by violating a conservation law. The
implications for experiments on Bell's inequalities are obvious. The result
provides new insight regarding entanglement, and its measures.Comment: LaTeX, 12pt, 11 pages, 2 figure
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Clarifying interoperability: The SISO CSPI PDG standard for commercial off-the-shelf simulation package interoperability reference models
Commercial-off-the-shelf simulation packages (CSPs), visual interactive modelling environments such as Arena, Anylogic, Flexsim, Simul8, Witness, etc., are important "black box" software tools that support the development, experimentation and visualization of simulation models. They are widely used in commerce, defence, health, manufacturing and logistics. There is a growing need to link together, or to interoperate, models developed in these CSPs across computer networks. The motivation for this includes data sensitivity, difficult to move resources and speed up
Low-frequency method for magnetothermopower and Nernst effect measurements on single crystal samples at low temperatures and high magnetic fields
We describe an AC method for the measurement of the longitudinal (Sxx) and
transverse (Sxy, i.e. Nernst) thermopower of mm-size single crystal samples at
low temperatures (T30 T). A low-frequency (33
mHz) heating method is used to increase the resolution, and to determine the
temperature gradient reliably in high magnetic fields. Samples are mounted
between two thermal blocks which are heated by a sinusoidal frequency f0 with a
p/2 phase difference. The phase difference between two heater currents gives a
temperature gradient at 2f0. The corresponding thermopower and Nernst effect
signals are extracted by using a digital signal processing method due. An
important component of the method involves a superconducting link, YBa2Cu3O7+d
(YBCO), which is mounted in parallel with sample to remove the background
magnetothermopower of the lead wires. The method is demonstrated for the quasi
two-dimensional organic conductor a-(BEDT-TTF)2KHg(SCN)4, which exhibits a
complex, magnetic field dependent ground state above 22.5 T at low
temperatures.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 15 reference
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