48,189 research outputs found

    Natural flow patterns and structured people dynamics: a constructal view

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    Constructal theory that has been successfully applied to planetary circulations and climate and to river basin morphology is shown to provide a useful framework for describing flows of people. We showed here, with simple examples, that intuitive rules of traffic organization can be anticipated based on principle, i.e., based on the Constructal Law. In addition, and similarly to the case of flows of inanimate matter, in the case of flows of people, flow patterns emerge as a necessary consequence of reduction of global flow resistances. These flow patterns point to decreasing resistivity to flows of people and commodities. Pathway length varies inversely with resistivity while pathway number increases with resistivity

    The changing energy paradigm, challenges, and new developments

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    Editorial of the Special Issue of the International Journal of Energy Researc

    Role of Sorption Isotherms in the Analysis of Coupled Heat and Mass Fluxes in Porous Media

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    The aim of this work is to show the importance of the sorption isotherms in the study of the heat and mass fluxes in unsaturated porous media. General forms of the heat and mass fluxes are presented in terms of experimentally accessible quantities. The role of the isotherm slope in the coupling of heat and mass fluxes and its influence on the effective permeability are shown. Separate relations for vapor and liquid fluxes through the porous medium are presented as functions of the temperature and the isotherm slopes. Nonstationary isothermal mass flux is also analyzed, a relaxation time for this process is identifled, and its relation to the isotherm slope is also discussed

    Effects of porosity in a model of corrosion and passive layer growth

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    We introduce a stochastic lattice model to investigate the effects of pore formation in a passive layer grown with products of metal corrosion. It considers that an anionic species diffuses across that layer and reacts at the corrosion front (metal-oxide interface), producing a random distribution of compact regions and large pores, respectively represented by O (oxide) and P (pore) sites. O sites are assumed to have very small pores, so that the fraction Φ\Phi of P sites is an estimate of the porosity, and the ratio between anion diffusion coefficients in those regions is Dr<1D_{\text r}<1. Simulation results without the large pores (Φ=0\Phi =0) are similar to those of a formerly studied model of corrosion and passivation and are explained by a scaling approach. If Φ>0\Phi >0 and Dr1D_{\text r}\ll 1, significant changes are observed in passive layer growth and corrosion front roughness. For small Φ\Phi, a slowdown of the growth rate is observed, which is interpreted as a consequence of the confinement of anions in isolated pores for long times. However, the presence of large pores near the corrosion front increases the frequency of reactions at those regions, which leads to an increase in the roughness of that front. This model may be a first step to represent defects in a passive layer which favor pitting corrosion.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure

    Coal and fuel burning effects on the atmosphere as mediated by the atmospheric electric field and galactic cosmic rays flux

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    Abstract: Emissions into the atmosphere of Greenhouse Gases (GHGs) and particulate matter resulting from fossil fuel burning are considered to be the main anthropogenic forcing on the global climate. We show here that the external cyclic influences of cosmic origin that modulate the earth’s climate may either reinforce or mitigate the ‘local’ terrestrial forcings. Among the external influences is cosmic radiation, whose intensity shows a cyclic variation of 11 years, accompanying the 11-year cycle of solar activity. We put forward a mechanism to explain how the emission of particulate matter into the atmosphere might influence global lightning activity. With respect to global lightning activity, we show why, during the 11-year cycle, the influence of an increase in particulate matter concentration in the atmosphere may be negligible in some years, while it will be reinforced in other years, depending on the place of the years in the cycle. We also remark that the effect on global warming of fossil fuel burning is also modulated by the cosmic ray flux, whose influence is mediated by the variation that it promotes on the cloud cover

    First-order classical Lagrangians for the nonminimal Standard-Model Extension

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    In this paper, we derive the general leading-order classical Lagrangian covering all fermion operators of the nonminimal Standard-Model Extension (SME). Such a Lagrangian is considered to be the point-particle analog of the effective field theory description of Lorentz violation that is provided by the SME. First of all, a suitable Ansatz is made for the Lagrangian of the spin-degenerate operators a^\hat{a}, c^\hat{c}, e^\hat{e}, and f^\hat{f} at leading order in Lorentz violation. The latter is shown to satisfy the set of five nonlinear equations that govern the map from the field theory to the classical description. After doing so, the second step is to propose results for the spin-nondegenerate operators b^\hat{b}, d^\hat{d}, H^\hat{H}, and g^\hat{g}. Although these are more involved than the Lagrangians for the spin-degenerate ones, an analytical proof of their validity is viable, nevertheless. The final step is to combine both findings to produce a generic Lagrangian for the complete set of Lorentz-violating operators that is consistent with the known minimal and nonminimal Lagrangians found in the literature so far. The outcome reveals the leading-order structure of the classical SME analog. It can be of use for both phenomenological studies of classical bodies in gravitational fields and conceptual work on explicit Lorentz violation in gravity. Furthermore, there may be a possible connection to Finsler geometry.Comment: 23 page

    Langevin equations for competitive growth models

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    Langevin equations for several competitive growth models in one dimension are derived. For models with crossover from random deposition (RD) to some correlated deposition (CD) dynamics, with small probability p of CD, the surface tension \nu and the nonlinear coefficient \lambda of the associated equations have linear dependence on p due solely to this random choice. However, they also depend on the regularized step functions present in the analytical representations of the CD, whose expansion coefficients scale with p according to the divergence of local height differences when p->0. The superposition of those scaling factors gives \nu ~ p^2 for random deposition with surface relaxation (RDSR) as the CD, and \nu ~ p, \lambda ~ p^{3/2} for ballistic deposition (BD) as the CD, in agreement with simulation and other scaling approaches. For bidisperse ballistic deposition (BBD), the same scaling of RD-BD model is found. The Langevin equation for the model with competing RDSR and BD, with probability p for the latter, is also constructed. It shows linear p-dependence of \lambda, while the quadratic dependence observed in previous simulations is explained by an additional crossover before the asymptotic regime. The results highlight the relevance of scaling of the coefficients of step function expansions in systems with steep surfaces, which is responsible for noninteger exponents in some p-dependent stochastic equations, and the importance of the physical correspondence of aggregation rules and equation coefficients.Comment: 8 pages with 1 figure include

    “Exergy based analysis of economic sustainability”

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    Exergy is presented here as the physical prime-mover of economic systems, and an exergy based concept of value is proposed in this paper. The main exergy fluxes are identified as those carried by raw exergy (primary sources), raw materials, usable exergy and exergy embodied in manufactured commodities. It is shown how efficiency of exergy use is the physical basis for competitiveness and how exergy content (value)can be assigned to skillfulness and expertise. Sustainability of economic systems is analyzed in the light of competitiveness and ability to take extra exergy taken from markets. It is also shown that in competitive economies the ratio (raw exergy)/(total value) tends to decrease, therefore indicating extra exergy from the markets, and this trend is illustrated with the case of the US economy. Finally, the average electricity price in the markets was proposed as a provisional correspondence between exergy content and price of commodities
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