Search results for "Rotation"

showing 10 items of 935 documents

Vortex rings in two-dimensional harmonic traps

2006

We use the configuration interaction technique to study vortex formation in rotating systems of interacting spinless fermions and bosons trapped in a two-dimensional harmonic potential. In the fermionic case, the vortices appear as holes in the Fermi sea and localize in rings. The yrast spectrum is dominated by rigid rotation of the vortex ring, showing periodic oscillations. The Bose system shows a similar yrast spectrum and vortex formation. This can be explained by a one-to-one correspondence of the fermion and boson many-particle configurations. A simple mean-field model can reproduce the oscillations in the yrast spectrum, but fails to explain the localization of vortices.

Condensed Matter::Quantum GasesPhysicsCondensed matter physicsYrastFermionConfiguration interactionCondensed Matter PhysicsRotationAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsVortexVortex ringCondensed Matter::SuperconductivityQuantum electrodynamicsHarmonicMathematical PhysicsBosonPhysica Scripta
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Finite boson and fermion systems under extreme rotation: edge reconstruction and vortex formation

2006

Vortices can form when finite quantal systems are set rotating. In the limit of small particle numbers, the vortex formation in a harmonically trapped fermion system, with repulsively interacting particles, shows similarities to the corresponding boson system, with vortices entering the rotating cloud for increasing rotation. For a larger number of fermions, N greater than or similar to 15, the fermion vortices compete and co-exist with (Chamon-Wen) edge-reconstructed ground states, forcing some ground states, as for example the central single vortex, into the spectrum of excited states. Experimentally, the fermion system could, for instance, be electrons in a semiconductor heterostructure,…

Condensed Matter::Quantum GasesPhysicsFermionElectronCondensed Matter PhysicsRotationAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsVortexlaw.inventionlawQuantum mechanicsExcited stateMagneto-optical trapBose–Einstein condensateBosonJournal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics
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Universal vortex formation in rotating traps with bosons and fermions.

2004

When a system consisting of many interacting particles is set rotating, it may form vortices. This is familiar to us from every-day life: you can observe vortices while stirring your coffee or watching a hurricane. In the world of quantum mechanics, famous examples of vortices are superconducting films and rotating bosonic $^4$He or fermionic $^3$He liquids. Vortices are also observed in rotating Bose-Einstein condensates in atomic traps and are predicted to exist for paired fermionic atoms. Here we show that the rotation of trapped particles with a repulsive interaction leads to a similar vortex formation, regardless of whether the particles are bosons or (unpaired) fermions. The exact, qu…

Condensed Matter::Quantum GasesPhysicsStatistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale PhysicsCondensed matter physicsFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and AstronomyTourbillonStatistical mechanicsFermionRotationVortexPhysics::Fluid DynamicsCondensed Matter::SuperconductivityMesoscale and Nanoscale Physics (cond-mat.mes-hall)Wave functionQuantumCondensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsBosonPhysical review letters
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Anisotropic motion of toluene above and below the glass transition studied by 2H NMR

1995

Abstract 2 H nuclear magnetic resonance spin-lattice relaxation experiments on two selectively deuterated toluene molecules have been performed over a wide temperature range, spanning liquid and glassy states, to examine anisotropic molecular dynamics. In the liquid regime, the relaxation data are analyzed by the model of anisotropic rotational diffusion. A more phenomenological ansatz is used for the whole temperature regime to obtain information about anisotropic reorientation and its temperature dependence. We find that the anisotropy is reduced in the supercooled state and the motion becomes approximately isotropic below 140 K which is interpreted as the onset of cooperative reorientati…

Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterMolecular dynamicsCondensed matter physicsChemistryIsotropyRelaxation (NMR)General Physics and AstronomyRotational diffusionPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryAtmospheric temperature rangeAnisotropySupercoolingGlass transitionChemical Physics Letters
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Intramolecular caging in polybutadiene due to rotational barriers

2003

We present molecular dynamics simulations of a chemically realistic model of 1,4-polybutadiene and a freely rotating chain model derived from the first model by neglecting all dihedral potentials. We show that the presence of energy barriers hindering dihedral rotation leads to an intermediate plateau regime in the tagged particle mean-squared displacement reminiscent of the cage effect underlying the mode-coupling description of the liquid-glass transition. This intramolecular caging, however, occurs already at temperatures well above the glass transition regime. Because of its different physical origin, it also does not comply with the theoretical predictions of the mode-coupling theory. …

Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterMolecular dynamicsPolybutadieneClassical mechanicsMaterials scienceChemical physicsIntramolecular forceCage effectDihedral angleRotationGlass transitionDisplacement (fluid)Physical Review E
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ChemInform Abstract: Tuning the Defect Configurations in Nematic and Smectic Liquid Crystalline Shells

2013

Thin liquid crystalline shells surrounding and surrounded by aqueous phases can be conveniently produced using a nested capillary microfluidic system, as was first demonstrated by Fernandez-Nieves et al. in 2007. By choosing particular combinations of stabilizers in the internal and external phases, different types of alignment, uniform or hybrid, can be ensured within the shell. Here, we investigate shells in the nematic and smectic phases under varying boundary conditions, focusing in particular on textural transformations during phase transitions, on the interaction between topological defects in the director field and inclusions in the liquid crystal (LC), and on the possibility to relo…

Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterPhase transitionChemistryChemical physicsCapillary actionLiquid crystalPhase (matter)Shell (structure)General MedicineBoundary value problemRotationTopological defectChemInform
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Thermoreversible gelation of kappa-carrageenan: relation between conformational transition and aggregation.

2003

Abstract We have studied, by optical rotation dispersion, light scattering and rheology, the κ-Carrageenan system to elucidate the processes involved in gel formation (on decreasing the temperature) and gel melting (on increasing the temperature). Our results show that, on decreasing the temperature, a conformational transition from coils to double helices first occurs, followed by aggregation of the double helices into domains and gel formation at appropriate polymer concentration. Structural details of this sequence are better revealed by re-heating the system. Melting appears as a two-step process characterized by first a conformational change of helices involved in junction zones betwee…

Conformational changeGelationTime FactorsOptical RotationBiophysicsMolecular ConformationCarrageenanBiochemistryLight scatteringPhase TransitionRheologyScattering RadiationTransition TemperatureTexture (crystalline)Optical rotationchemistry.chemical_classificationChemistryOrganic ChemistryTemperatureSelf-assemblyPolymerCrystallographySelf-assemblyDispersion (chemistry)RheologyGelsBiophysical chemistry
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Effects of continuous and rotational grazing of different forage species on ewe milk production

2012

Abstract The aim of this research was to evaluate the effects of continuous and rotational grazing of different forage species on milk production in ewes. The forage species were chicory (Cichorium intybus L.), a mixture of oat (Avena sativa L.) and berseem clover (Trifolium alexandrinum L.), and sulla (Hedysarum coronarium L.). Forty ewes were divided into 5 groups, and subjected to one of the following treatments: continuous grazing on chicory, continuous grazing on the mixture, continuous grazing on sulla, rotational grazing on the mixture, or rotational grazing on sulla. Among the species continuously grazed, chicory showed a lower biomass than the mixture, or sulla. Ewes grazing chicor…

Continuous grazingBiomass (ecology)Settore AGR/19 - Zootecnica Specialefood.ingredientbiologyRotational grazingPhenologySulla forageanimal diseasesfood and beveragesForagebiology.organism_classificationChicorySettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni ErbaceeSheep milkAvenafoodFood AnimalsAgronomyCichoriumCaseinparasitic diseasesGrazingAnimal Science and ZoologyTrifolium alexandrinum
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Convectively driven vortex flows in the Sun

2008

We have discovered small whirlpools in the Sun, with a size similar to the terrestrial hurricanes (<~0.5 Mm). The theory of solar convection predicts them, but they had remained elusive so far. The vortex flows are created at the downdrafts where the plasma returns to the solar interior after cooling down, and we detect them because some magnetic bright points (BPs) follow a logarithmic spiral in their way to be engulfed by a downdraft. Our disk center observations show 0.009 vortexes per Mm^2, with a lifetime of the order of 5 min, and with no preferred sense of rotation. They are not evenly spread out over the surface, but they seem to trace the supergranulation and the mesogranulation. T…

ConvectionPhysicsAstrophysics (astro-ph)FOS: Physical sciencesAstronomy and AstrophysicsPlasmaAstrophysicsAstrophysicsRotationVortexSpace and Planetary ScienceAstrophysics::Solar and Stellar AstrophysicsSupergranulationAstrophysics::Earth and Planetary AstrophysicsLogarithmic spiralCooling down
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Three-Dimensional Core-Collapse Supernova Simulations with Multi-Dimensional Neutrino Transport Compared to the Ray-by-Ray-plus Approximation

2018

Self-consistent, time-dependent supernova (SN) simulations in three spatial dimensions (3D) are conducted with the Aenus-Alcar code, comparing, for the first time, calculations with fully multi-dimensional (FMD) neutrino transport and the ray-by-ray-plus (RbR+) approximation, both based on a two-moment solver with algebraic M1 closure. We find good agreement between 3D results with FMD and RbR+ transport for both tested grid resolutions in the cases of a 20 solar-mass progenitor, which does not explode with the employed simplified set of neutrino opacities, and of an exploding 9 solar-mass model. This is in stark contrast to corresponding axisymmetric (2D) simulations, which confirm previou…

ConvectionPhysicsHigh Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE)010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesAccretion (meteorology)Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical PhenomenaRotational symmetryFOS: Physical sciencesAstronomy and AstrophysicsType II supernova01 natural sciencesInstabilitySymmetry (physics)Computational physicsSupernovaSpace and Planetary Science0103 physical sciencesNeutrinoAstrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena010303 astronomy & astrophysics0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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