Search results for "WTO"
showing 10 items of 163 documents
Digital rock physics: Effect of fluid viscosity on effective elastic properties
2011
Abstract This paper is concerned with the effect of pore fluid viscosity on effective elastic properties using digitized rocks. We determine a significant velocity dispersion in wave propagation simulations by the variation of the pore fluid viscosity. Several attenuation regimes are considered which may contribute to this observation. Starting point is a virtual rock physics approach. Numerical simulations of effective transport and effective mechanical properties are applied to statistically representative rock samples. The rock microstructure is imaged by 3D X-ray tomography. Permeability values were estimated through Lattice-Boltzmann flow simulations. The dry rock moduli and the tortuo…
L-Rigidity in Newtonian approximation
2008
Newtonian limit of L-Rigidity is obtained. In this formalism, L-Rigidity is reduced to steady Newtonian rigid motions in a Newtonian frame of reference in which the observer is at rest.
Mass dimension one fermions and their gravitational interaction
2019
We investigate in detail the interaction between the spin-${1/2}$ fields endowed with mass dimension one and the graviton. We obtain an interaction vertex that combines the characteristics of scalar-graviton and Dirac's fermion-graviton vertices, due to the scalar-dynamic attribute and the fermionic structure of this field. It is shown that the vertex obtained obeys the Ward-Takahashi identity, ensuring the gauge invariance for this interaction. In the contribution of the mass dimension one fermion to the graviton propagator at one-loop, we found the conditions for the cancellation of the tadpole term by a cosmological counter-term. We calculate the scattering process for arbitrary momentum…
Probing Models of Extended Gravity using Gravity Probe B and LARES experiments
2014
We consider models of Extended Gravity and in particular, generic models containing scalar-tensor and higher-order curvature terms, as well as a model derived from noncommutative spectral geometry. Studying, in the weak-field approximation, the geodesic and Lense-Thirring processions, we impose constraints on the free parameters of such models by using the recent experimental results of the Gravity Probe B and LARES satellites.
Kinetic-Ising-model description of Newtonian dynamics: A one-dimensional example.
1993
We show that the Newtonian dynamics of a chain of particles with an anharmonic on-site potential and harmonic nearest-neighbor interactions can be described by a one-dimensional kinetic Ising model with most general Glauber transition rates, provided the temperature is low enough compared to the minimum barrier height. The transition rates are calculated by use of the transition-state theory. At higher temperatures, memory effects occur which invalidate this kinetic description. These memory effects are due to the appearance of dynamically correlated clusters of particles performing periodic oscillations over a certain time scale.
How Does the Relaxation of a Supercooled Liquid Depend on Its Microscopic Dynamics?
1998
Using molecular dynamics computer simulations we investigate how the relaxation dynamics of a simple supercooled liquid with Newtonian dynamics differs from the one with a stochastic dynamics. We find that, apart from the early beta-relaxation regime, the two dynamics give rise to the same relaxation behavior. The increase of the relaxation times of the system upon cooling, the details of the alpha-relaxation, as well as the wave vector dependence of the Edwards-Anderson-parameters are independent of the microscopic dynamics.
Newtonian and relativistic location systems
2008
The theory of location systems involves the geometric and physical description of the protocols allowing the realization of coordinate systems. In this communication, the incidence of the space-time causal structure (Newtonian or relativistic) on the construction of location systems is remarked. Specifically, we focus our attention: (i) on the construction of Newtonian emission coordinates that are contrasted with those associated with relativistic positioning systems, and (ii) on the role played by non-absolute synchronizations (like the one provided by the local Solar time) in the comprehension of Newtonian and relativistic location systems.
Extended thermodynamics of polymers and superfluids
2008
Abstract Polymer solutions and turbulent superfluids have in common the presence of a complex tangle of lines – macromolecules in the former, quantized vortex lines in the latter – which contribute to the internal friction and viscous pressure of the system and make them typical non-Newtonian fluids. Here we briefly review some recent studies on such tangles and their consequences on the dynamics and thermodynamics of the whole system, using the framework of extended irreversible thermodynamics. For polymer solutions, we deal with the coupling of diffusion and viscous pressure and its effects on the stability of the solution and shear-induced phase separation; for superfluids, we focus our …
Status of the EPIC thin and medium filters on-board XMM-Newton after more than 10 years of operation I: laboratory measurements on back-up filters
2013
After more than ten years of operation of the EPIC camera on board the X-ray observatory XMM-Newton, we have reviewed the status of its Thin and Medium filters by performing both laboratory measurements on back-up filters, and analysis of data collected in-flight. We have selected a set of Thin and Medium back-up filters among those still available in the EPIC consortium, and have started a program to investigate their status by different laboratory measurements including: UV/VIS transmission, X-ray transmission, RAMAN IR spectroscopy, X-Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy, and Atomic Force Microscopy. We report the results of the measurements conducted up to now, and point out some lessons lear…
Status of the EPIC thin and medium filters on-board XMM-Newton after more than 10 years of operation II: analysis of in-flight data
2013
After more than ten years of operation of the EPIC camera on board the X-ray observatory XMM-Newton we have reviewed the status of its thin and medium filters by performing both analysis of data collected in-flight and laboratory measurements on on-ground back-up filters. We have investigated the status of the EPIC thin and medium filters by performing an analysis of the optical loading in the PN offset maps to gauge variations in the optical and UV transmission of the filters. We both investigated repeated observations of single optically bright targets and performed a statistical analysis of the extent of loading versus visual magnitude at different epochs. We report the results of these …