576,038 research outputs found
The finite-temperature thermodynamics of a trapped unitary Fermi gas within fractional exclusion statistics
We utilize a fractional exclusion statistics of Haldane and Wu hypothesis to
study the thermodynamics of a unitary Fermi gas trapped in a harmonic
oscillator potential at ultra-low finite temperature. The entropy per particle
as a function of the energy per particle and energy per particle versus
rescaled temperature are numerically compared with the experimental data. The
study shows that, except the chemical potential behavior, there exists a
reasonable consistency between the experimental measurement and theoretical
attempt for the entropy and energy per particle. In the fractional exclusion
statistics formalism, the behavior of the isochore heat capacity for a trapped
unitary Fermi gas is also analyzed.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Macroscale boundary conditions for a non-linear heat exchanger
Multiscale modelling methodologies build macroscale models of materials with
complicated fine microscale structure. We propose a methodology to derive
boundary conditions for the macroscale model of a prototypical non-linear heat
exchanger. The derived macroscale boundary conditions improve the accuracy of
macroscale model. We verify the new boundary conditions by numerical methods.
The techniques developed here can be adapted to a wide range of multiscale
reaction-diffusion-advection systems
Structural analysis of viscoelastic materials under thermal and pressure loading
Technique computes stresses resulting from axisymmetric transient thermal loading in circular solid-propellant grain section with circular ports. Propellant is assumed to be linear, thermal rheologically simple, viscoelastic material; material properties are represented by exponential series in time
High-order harmonic generation from diatomic molecules with large internuclear distance: The effect of two-center interference
In the present paper, we investigate the high-order harmonic generation (HHG)
from diatomic molecules with large internuclear distance using a strong field
approximation (SFA) model. We find that the hump and dip structure emerges in
the plateau region of the harmonic spectrum, and the location of this striking
structure is sensitive to the laser intensity. Our model analysis reveals that
two-center interference as well as the interference between different
recombination electron trajectories are responsible for the unusual enhanced or
suppressed harmonic yield at a certain order, and these interference effects
are greatly influenced by the laser parameters such as intensity.Comment: 5 pages,4 figure
Rethinking bank business models: the role of intangibles
<p>Purpose:
This paper provides a new way of rethinking banking models by using qualitative research on intangibles.
This is required because the banking sector has been transformed significantly by the changing environment over the past two decades. The 2007-2009 financial crisis also added to concerns about existing bank business models.</p>
<p>Design/Methodology approach:
Using qualitative data collected from interviews with bank managers and analysts in the UK, this paper develops a grounded theory of bank intangibles.</p>
<p>Findings:
The model reveals how intangibles and tangible/financial resources interact in the bank value creation process, how they actively respond to environmental changes, how bank intangibles are understood by external observers such as analysts, and how bankers and analysts differ in their views.</p>
<p>Research implications:
Grounded theory provides the means to further develop bank models as business models and theoretical models. This provides the means to think beyond conventional finance constructs and to relate bank models to a wider theoretical literature concerning intellectual capital, organisational and social systems theory, and âperformativityâ.</p>
<p>Practical implications:
Such development of bank models and of a systems perspective is critical to the understanding of banks by bankers, by observers and for their âcritical and reflexive performativityâ. It also has implications for systemic risk and bank regulation.</p>
<p>Social implications:
Improvement in bank models and their use in open and transparent processes are key means to improve public accountability of banks.</p>
<p>Originality:
The paper reveals the core role of intellectual capital (IC) in banks, in markets, and in developing theory and research at firm and system levels. </p>
Ground state energy of unitary fermion gas with the Thomson Problem approach
The dimensionless universal coefficient defines the ratio of the
unitary fermions energy density to that for the ideal non-interacting ones in
the non-relativistic limit with T=0. The classical Thomson Problem is taken as
a nonperturbative quantum many-body arm to address the ground state energy
including the low energy nonlinear quantum fluctuation/correlation effects.
With the relativistic Dirac continuum field theory formalism, the concise
expression for the energy density functional of the strongly interacting limit
fermions at both finite temperature and density is obtained. Analytically, the
universal factor is calculated to be . The energy gap is
\Delta=\frac{{5}{18}{k_f^2}/(2m).Comment: Identical to published version with revisions according to comment
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