1,819 research outputs found
Ion Species Stratification Within Strong Shocks in Two-Ion Plasmas
Strong collisional shocks in multi-ion plasmas are featured in many
environments, with Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) experiments being one
prominent example. Recent work [Keenan , PRE , 053203
(2017)] answered in detail a number of outstanding questions concerning the
kinetic structure of steady-state, planar plasma shocks, e.g., the shock width
scaling by Mach number, . However, it did not discuss shock-driven
ion-species stratification (e.g., relative concentration modification, and
temperature separation). These are important effects, since many recent ICF
experiments have evaded explanation by standard, single-fluid,
radiation-hydrodynamic (rad-hydro) numerical simulations, and shock-driven fuel
stratification likely contributes to this discrepancy. Employing the
state-of-the-art Vlasov-Fokker-Planck code, iFP, along with multi-ion hydro
simulations and semi-analytics, we quantify the ion stratification by planar
shocks with arbitrary Mach number and relative species concentration for
two-ion plasmas in terms of ion mass and charge ratios. In particular, for
strong shocks, we find that the structure of the ion temperature separation has
a nearly universal character across ion mass and charge ratios. Additionally,
we find that the shock fronts are enriched with the lighter ion species, and
the enrichment scales as for .Comment: 12 pages, 19 figures; submitted to Physics of Plasma
An Arbitrary Curvilinear Coordinate Method for Particle-In-Cell Modeling
A new approach to the kinetic simulation of plasmas in complex geometries,
based on the Particle-in- Cell (PIC) simulation method, is explored. In the two
dimensional (2d) electrostatic version of our method, called the Arbitrary
Curvilinear Coordinate PIC (ACC-PIC) method, all essential PIC operations are
carried out in 2d on a uniform grid on the unit square logical domain, and
mapped to a nonuniform boundary-fitted grid on the physical domain. As the
resulting logical grid equations of motion are not separable, we have developed
an extension of the semi-implicit Modified Leapfrog (ML) integration technique
to preserve the symplectic nature of the logical grid particle mover. A
generalized, curvilinear coordinate formulation of Poisson's equations to solve
for the electrostatic fields on the uniform logical grid is also developed. By
our formulation, we compute the plasma charge density on the logical grid based
on the particles' positions on the logical domain. That is, the plasma
particles are weighted to the uniform logical grid and the self-consistent mean
electrostatic fields obtained from the solution of the logical grid Poisson
equation are interpolated to the particle positions on the logical grid. This
process eliminates the complexity associated with the weighting and
interpolation processes on the nonuniform physical grid and allows us to run
the PIC method on arbitrary boundary-fitted meshes.Comment: Submitted to Computational Science & Discovery December 201
Giant coherence in driven systems
We study the noise-induced currents and reliability or coherence of transport
in two different classes of rocking ratchets. For this, we consider the motion
of Brownian particles in the over damped limit in both adiabatic and
non-adiabatic regimes subjected to unbiased temporally symmetric and asymmetric
periodic driving force. In the case of a time symmetric driving, we find that
even in the presence of a spatially symmetric simple sinusoidal potential,
highly coherent transport occurs. These ratchet systems exhibit giant coherence
of transport in the regime of parameter space where unidirectional currents in
the deterministic case are observed. Outside this parameter range, i.e., when
current vanishes in the deterministic regime, coherence in transport is very
low. The transport coherence decreases as a function of temperature and is a
non-monotonic function of the amplitude of driving. The transport becomes
unreliable as we go from the adiabatic to the non-adiabatic domain of
operation.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, replaced by the version to appear in JSTA
Convergence of a semi-discretization scheme for the Hamilton--Jacobi equation: a new approach with the adjoint method
We consider a numerical scheme for the one dimensional time dependent Hamilton--Jacobi equation in the periodic setting. This scheme consists in a semi-discretization using monotone approximations of the Hamiltonian in the spacial variable. From classical viscosity solution theory, these schemes are known to converge. In this paper we present a new approach to the study of the rate of convergence of the approximations based on the nonlinear adjoint method recently introduced by L. C. Evans. We estimate the rate of convergence for convex Hamiltonians and recover the O(sqrt{h}) convergence rate in terms of the L^infty norm and O(h) in terms of the L^1 norm, where h is the size of the spacial grid. We discuss also possible generalizations to higher dimensional problems and present several other additional estimates. The special case of quadratic Hamiltonians is considered in detail in the end of the paper
The management of volunteers – what can human resources do? A review and research agenda
There is an increasing interest from scholars and practitioners in understanding how non-profit organizations can design and implement human resources (HR) practices to enhance desirable volunteer attitudes and behaviors. This paper presents a comprehensive overview of existing studies on the relationship between HR practices and volunteering outcomes. We use the ability-motivation-opportunity model (AMO) as a guiding framework to systematically integrate current knowledge on this topic. We identify gaps in existing research and offer detailed suggestions on how scholars can further enhance knowledge on how HR practices can lead to beneficial outcomes for both volunteers and non-profit organizations
The energy dependence of flow in Ni induced collisions from 400 to 1970A MeV
We study the energy dependence of collective (hydrodynamic-like) nuclear
matter flow in 400-1970 A MeV Ni+Au and 1000-1970 A MeV Ni+Cu reactions. The
flow increases with energy, reaches a maximum, and then gradually decreases at
higher energies. A way of comparing the energy dependence of flow values for
different projectile-target mass combinations is introduced, which demonstrates
a common scaling behaviour among flow values from different systems.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to Physical Review Letter
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