9,477 research outputs found
Electronic transport in AlMn(Si) and AlCuFe quasicrystals: Break-down of the semiclassical model
The semi-classical Bloch-Boltzmann theory is at the heart of our
understanding of conduction in solids, ranging from metals to semi-conductors.
Physical systems that are beyond the range of applicability of this theory are
thus of fundamental interest. It appears that in quasicrystals and related
complex metallic alloys, a new type of break-down of this theory operates. This
phenomenon is related to the specific propagation of electrons. We develop a
theory of quantum transport that applies to a normal ballistic law but also to
these specific diffusion laws. As we show phenomenological models based on this
theory describe correctly the anomalous conductivity in quasicrystals.
Ab-initio calculations performed on approximants confirm also the validity of
this anomalous quantum diffusion scheme. This provides us with an ab-initio
model of transport in approximants such as alpha-AlMnSi and AlCuFe 1/1 cubic
approximant.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure
Dark Matter annihilations in halos and high-redshift sources of reionization of the universe
It is well known that annihilations in the homogeneous fluid of dark matter
(DM) can leave imprints in the cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropy
power spectrum. However, the relevance of DM annihilations in halos for
cosmological observables is still subject to debate, with previous works
reaching different conclusions on this point. Also, all previous studies used a
single type of parameterization for the astrophysical reionization, and
included no astrophysical source for the heating of the intergalactic medium.
In this work, we revisit these problems. When standard approaches are adopted,
we find that the ionization fraction does exhibit a very particular (and
potentially constraining) pattern, but the currently measurable optical depth
to reionization is left almost unchanged: In agreement with the most of the
previous literature, for plausible halo models we find that the modification of
the signal with respect to the one coming from annihilations in the smooth
background is tiny, below cosmic variance within currently allowed parameter
space. However, if different and probably more realistic treatments of the
astrophysical sources of reionization and heating are adopted, a more
pronounced effect of the DM annihilation in halos is possible. We thus conclude
that within currently adopted baseline models the impact of the virialised DM
structures cannot be uncovered by CMB power spectra measurements, but a larger
impact is possible if peculiar models are invoked for the redshift evolution of
the DM annihilation signal or different assumptions are made for the
astrophysical contributions. A better understanding (both theoretical and
observational) of the reionization and temperature history of the universe,
notably via the 21 cm signal, seems the most promising way for using halo
formation as a tool in DM searches, improving over the sensitivity of current
cosmological probes.Comment: 30 pages, 11 figures. v2: extended version (notably astrophysical
source effects significantly expanded), references added, main conclusions
unchanged. Matches version accepted by JCA
A fresh look at linear cosmological constraints on a decaying dark matter component
We consider a cosmological model in which a fraction of the Dark Matter
(DM) is allowed to decay in an invisible relativistic component, and compute
the resulting constraints on both the decay width (or inverse lifetime)
and from purely gravitational arguments. We report a full
derivation of the Boltzmann hierarchy, correcting a mistake in previous
literature, and compute the impact of the decay --as a function of the
lifetime-- on the CMB and matter power spectra. From CMB only, we obtain that
no more than 3.8 % of the DM could have decayed in the time between
recombination and today (all bounds quoted at 95 % CL). We also comment on the
important application of this bound to the case where primordial black holes
constitute DM, a scenario notoriously difficult to constrain. For lifetimes
longer than the age of the Universe, the bounds can be cast as Gyr. For the first time, we also checked that
degeneracies with massive neutrinos are broken when information from the large
scale structure is used. Even secondary effects like CMB lensing suffice to
this purpose. Decaying DM models have been invoked to solve a possible tension
between low redshift astronomical measurements of and and the ones inferred by Planck. We reassess this claim finding that with
the most recent BAO, HST and data extracted from the CFHT survey,
the tension is only slightly reduced despite the two additional free
parameters, loosening the bound to Gyr.
The bound however improves to Gyr if only
data consistent with the CMB are included. This highlights the importance of
establishing whether the tension is due to real physical effects or unaccounted
systematics, for settling the reach of achievable constraints on decaying DM.Comment: 30p, 11 figures, comments welcom
Continuous-time average-preserving opinion dynamics with opinion-dependent communications
We study a simple continuous-time multi-agent system related to Krause's
model of opinion dynamics: each agent holds a real value, and this value is
continuously attracted by every other value differing from it by less than 1,
with an intensity proportional to the difference.
We prove convergence to a set of clusters, with the agents in each cluster
sharing a common value, and provide a lower bound on the distance between
clusters at a stable equilibrium, under a suitable notion of multi-agent system
stability.
To better understand the behavior of the system for a large number of agents,
we introduce a variant involving a continuum of agents. We prove, under some
conditions, the existence of a solution to the system dynamics, convergence to
clusters, and a non-trivial lower bound on the distance between clusters.
Finally, we establish that the continuum model accurately represents the
asymptotic behavior of a system with a finite but large number of agents.Comment: 25 pages, 2 figures, 11 tex files and 2 eps file
Transport efficiency of metachronal waves in 3d cilia arrays immersed in a two-phase flow
The present work reports the formation and the characterization of
antipleptic and symplectic metachronal waves in 3D cilia arrays immersed in a
two-fluid environment, with a viscosity ratio of 20. A coupled
lattice-Boltzmann-Immersed-Boundary solver is used. The periciliary layer is
confined between the epithelial surface and the mucus. Its thickness is chosen
such that the tips of the cilia can penetrate the mucus. A purely
hydrodynamical feedback of the fluid is taken into account and a coupling
parameter is introduced allowing the tuning of both the direction of
the wave propagation, and the strength of the fluid feedback. A comparative
study of both antipleptic and symplectic waves, mapping a cilia inter-spacing
ranging from 1.67 up to 5 cilia length, is performed by imposing the
metachrony. Antipleptic waves are found to systematically outperform sympletic
waves. They are shown to be more efficient for transporting and mixing the
fluids, while spending less energy than symplectic, random, or synchronized
motions
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