3,002,493 research outputs found
Minimax Current Density Coil Design
'Coil design' is an inverse problem in which arrangements of wire are
designed to generate a prescribed magnetic field when energized with electric
current. The design of gradient and shim coils for magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI) are important examples of coil design. The magnetic fields that these
coils generate are usually required to be both strong and accurate. Other
electromagnetic properties of the coils, such as inductance, may be considered
in the design process, which becomes an optimization problem. The maximum
current density is additionally optimized in this work and the resultant coils
are investigated for performance and practicality. Coils with minimax current
density were found to exhibit maximally spread wires and may help disperse
localized regions of Joule heating. They also produce the highest possible
magnetic field strength per unit current for any given surface and wire size.
Three different flavours of boundary element method that employ different basis
functions (triangular elements with uniform current, cylindrical elements with
sinusoidal current and conic section elements with sinusoidal-uniform current)
were used with this approach to illustrate its generality.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables. To appear in Journal of Physics D:
Applied Physic
Semi-relativistic charge-current density operator
The charge-current density and two-photon operators consistent with a
single-particle semi-relativistic Hamiltonian are derived within a suitable
functional derivative formalism which preserves gauge invariance. An
application to electron scattering is presented and results are compared with a
fully relativistic case and the non-relativistic cases corrected through fourth
order in M^{-1}.Comment: 20 pages, 3 postscript figures, typos correcte
Current-density functional for disordered systems
The effective action for the current and density is shown to satisfy an
evolution equation, the functional generalization of Callan-Symanzik equation.
The solution describes the dependence of the one-particle irreducible vertex
functions on the strength of the quenched disorder and the annealed Coulomb
interaction. The result is non-perturbative, no small parameter is assumed. The
a.c. conductivity is obtained by the numerical solution of the evolution
equation on finite lattices in the absence of the Coulomb interaction. The
static limit is performed and the conductivity is found to be vanishing beyond
a certain threshold of the impurity strength.Comment: final version, 28 pages, 17 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Current Densities in Density Functional Theory
It is well known that any given density rho(x)can be realized by a
determinantal wave function for N particles. The question addressed here is
whether any given density rho(x) and current density j(x) can be simultaneously
realized by a (finite kinetic energy) determinantal wave function. In case the
velocity field v(x) =j(x)/rho(x) is curl free, we provide a solution for all N,
and we provide an explicit upper bound for the energy. If the velocity field is
not curl free, there is a finite energy solution for all N\geq 4, but we do not
provide an explicit energy bound in this case. For N=2 we provide an example of
a non curl free velocity field for which there is a solution, and an example
for which there is no solution. The case $N=3 with a non curl free velocity
field is left open.Comment: 21 pages, latex, reference adde
Critical Current Density and Resistivity of MgB2 Films
The high resistivity of many bulk and film samples of MgB2 is most readily
explained by the suggestion that only a fraction of the cross-sectional area of
the samples is effectively carrying current. Hence the supercurrent (Jc) in
such samples will be limited by the same area factor, arising for example from
porosity or from insulating oxides present at the grain boundaries. We suggest
that a correlation should exist, Jc ~ 1/{Rho(300K) - Rho(50K)}, where Rho(300K)
- Rho(50K) is the change in the apparent resistivity from 300 K to 50 K. We
report measurements of Rho(T) and Jc for a number of films made by hybrid
physical-chemical vapor deposition which demonstrate this correlation, although
the "reduced effective area" argument alone is not sufficient. We suggest that
this argument can also apply to many polycrystalline bulk and wire samples of
MgB2.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
Current Density Functional Theory for one-dimensional fermions
The frequency-dependent response of a one-dimensional fermion system is
investigated using Current Density Functional Theory (CDFT) within the local
approximation (LDA). DFT-LDA, and in particular CDFT-LDA, reproduces very well
the dispersion of the collective excitations. Unsurprisingly, however, the
approximation fails for details of the dynamic response for large wavevectors.
In particular, we introduce CDFT for the one-dimensional spinless fermion model
with nearest-neighbor interaction, and use CDFT-LDA plus exact (Bethe ansatz)
results for the groundstate energy as function of particle density and boundary
phase to determine the linear response. The successes and failures of this
approach are discussed in detail
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