69,484 research outputs found
Monte Carlo simulation of a hard-sphere gas in the planar Fourier flow with a gravity field
By means of the Direct Simulation Monte Carlo method, the Boltzmann equation
is numerically solved for a gas of hard spheres enclosed between two parallel
plates kept at different temperatures and subject to the action of a gravity
field normal to the plates. The profiles of pressure, density, temperature and
heat flux are seen to be quite sensitive to the value of the gravity
acceleration . If the gravity field and the heat flux are parallel (),
the magnitudes of both the temperature gradient and the heat flux are smaller
than in the opposite case (). When considering the actual heat flux
relative to the value predicted by the Fourier law, it is seen that, if ,
the ratio increases as the reduced local field strength increases, while the
opposite happens if . The simulation results are compared with theoretical
predictions for Maxwell moleculesComment: 18 pages (LaTex), 7 figures (eps
Non-equilibrium tube length fluctuations of entangled polymers
We investigate the nonequilibrium tube length fluctuations during the
relaxation of an initially stretched, entangled polymer chain. The
time-dependent variance of the tube length follows in the early-time
regime a simple universal power law originating in the
diffusive motion of the polymer segments. The amplitude is calculated
analytically both from standard reptation theory and from an exactly solvable
lattice gas model for reptation and its dependence on the initial and
equilibrium tube length respectively is discussed. The non-universality
suggests the measurement of the fluctuations (e.g. using flourescence
microscopy) as a test for reptation models.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures. Minor typos correcte
Noise-Free Measurement of Harmonic Oscillators with Instantaneous Interactions
We present a method of measuring the quantum state of a harmonic oscillator
through instantaneous probe-system selective interactions of the
Jaynes-Cummings type. We prove that this scheme is robust to general
decoherence mechanisms, allowing the possibility of measuring fast-decaying
systems in the weak-coupling regime. This method could be applied to different
setups: motional states of trapped ions, microwave fields in cavity/circuit
QED, and even intra-cavity optical fields.Comment: 4 pages, no figure, published in Physical Review Letter
Thermal van der Waals Interaction between Graphene Layers
The van de Waals interaction between two graphene sheets is studied at finite
temperatures. Graphene's thermal length controls
the force versus distance as a crossover from the zero temperature
results for , to a linear-in-temperature, universal regime for
. The large separation regime is shown to be a consequence of the
classical behavior of graphene's plasmons at finite temperature. Retardation
effects are largely irrelevant, both in the zero and finite temperature
regimes. Thermal effects should be noticeable in the van de Waals interaction
already for distances of tens of nanometers at room temperature.Comment: enlarged version, 9 pages, 4 figures, updated reference
A model for the time uncertainty measurements in the Auger surface detector array
The precise determination of the arrival direction of cosmic rays is a
fundamental prerequisite for the search for sources or the study of their
anisotropies on the sky. One of the most important aspects to achieve an
optimal measurement of these directions is to properly take into account the
measurement uncertainties in the estimation procedure. In this article we
present a model for the uncertainties associated with the time measurements in
the Auger surface detector array. We show that this model represents well the
measurement uncertainties and therefore provides the basis for an optimal
determination of the arrival direction. With this model and a description of
the shower front geometry it is possible to estimate, on an event by event
basis, the uncertainty associated with the determination of the arrival
directions of the cosmic rays
Preserving the validity of the Two-Higgs Doublet Model up to the Planck scale
We examine the constraints on the two Higgs doublet model (2HDM) due to the
stability of the scalar potential and absence of Landau poles at energy scales
below the Planck scale. We employ the most general 2HDM that incorporates an
approximately Standard Model (SM) Higgs boson with a flavor aligned Yukawa
sector to eliminate potential tree-level Higgs-mediated flavor changing neutral
currents. Using basis independent techniques, we exhibit robust regimes of the
2HDM parameter space with a 125 GeV SM-like Higgs boson that is stable and
perturbative up to the Planck scale. Implications for the heavy scalar spectrum
are exhibited.Comment: 36 pages, 4 figures, 4 tables (Version 3: typographical error in eq.
(A.28) corrected
Holographic Description of Finite Size Effects in Strongly Coupled Superconductors
Despite its fundamental and practical interest, the understanding of
mesoscopic effects in strongly coupled superconductors is still limited. Here
we address this problem by studying holographic superconductivity in a disk and
a strip of typical size . For , where depends on
the chemical potential and temperature, we have found that the order parameter
vanishes. The superconductor-metal transition at is controlled
by mean-field critical exponents which suggests that quantum and thermal
fluctuations induced by finite size effects are suppressed in holographic
superconductors. Intriguingly, the effective interactions that bind the order
parameter increases as decreases. Most of these results are consistent
with experimental observations in Pb nanograins at low temperature and
qualitatively different from the ones expected in a weakly coupled
superconductor.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
- …