4,874 research outputs found
The initial stages of cave formation: Beyond the one-dimensional paradigm
The solutional origin of limestone caves was recognized over a century ago,
but the short penetration length of an undersaturated solution made it seem
impossible for long conduits to develop. This is contradicted by field
observations, where extended conduits, sometimes several kilometers long, are
found in karst environments. However, a sharp drop in the dissolution rate of
CaCO_3 near saturation provides a mechanism for much deeper penetration of
reactant. The notion of a "kinetic trigger" - a sudden change in rate constant
over a narrow concentration range - has become a widely accepted paradigm in
speleogenesis modeling. However, it is based on one-dimensional models for the
fluid and solute transport inside the fracture, assuming that the dissolution
front is planar in the direction perpendicular to the flow. Here we show that
this assumption is incorrect; a planar dissolution front in an entirely uniform
fracture is unstable to infinitesimal perturbations and inevitably breaks up
into highly localized regions of dissolution. This provides an alternative
mechanism for cave formation, even in the absence of a kinetic trigger. Our
results suggest that there is an inherent wavelength to the erosion pattern in
dissolving fractures, which depends on the reaction rate and flow rate, but is
independent of the initial roughness. In contrast to one-dimensional models,
two-dimensional simulations indicate that there is only a weak dependence of
the breakthrough time on kinetic order; localization of the flow tends to keep
the undersaturation in the dissolution front above the threshold for non-linear
kinetics.Comment: to be published in Earth and Planetary Science Letter
Theory of physiological adaptation of poikilotherms to heat and cold
Cover title.Includes bibliographical references (pages 30-31)
Prosodic transcription of Glasgow English: an evaluation study of GlaToBI
GlaToBI, a version of the ToBI prosodic transcription system which can be used to transcribe the intonation patterns of western Scottish (Glasgow) English, is currently under development. An assessment of GlaToBI, similar to the evaluation studies that were undertaken for the original ToBI system [7], and for GToBI, a version developed for German [4], has been carried out to test the new system 's reliability, learnability and comprehensiveness. The results of this study show that this adaptation of the ToBI system can be applied with the expected level of reliability to the transcription of Glasgow English. 1. INTRODUCTION Very little corpus based work has been done on the prosodic features of English dialects other than Standard American and southern British (Received Pronunciation). However, with the creation of databases such as the University of Edinburgh's HCRC Map Task corpus [1], the predominant dialect of which is western Scottish (Glasgow) English, the opportunity has arisen..
A new model for simulating colloidal dynamics
We present a new hybrid lattice-Boltzmann and Langevin molecular dynamics
scheme for simulating the dynamics of suspensions of spherical colloidal
particles. The solvent is modeled on the level of the lattice-Boltzmann method
while the molecular dynamics is done for the solute. The coupling between the
two is implemented through a frictional force acting both on the solvent and on
the solute, which depends on the relative velocity. A spherical colloidal
particle is represented by interaction sites at its surface. We demonstrate
that this scheme quantitatively reproduces the translational and rotational
diffusion of a neutral spherical particle in a liquid and show preliminary
results for a charged spherical particle. We argue that this method is
especially advantageous in the case of charged colloids.Comment: For a movie click on the link below Fig
Electrophoretic mobility of a charged colloidal particle: A computer simulation study
We study the mobility of a charged colloidal particle in a constant
homogeneous electric field by means of computer simulations. The simulation
method combines a lattice Boltzmann scheme for the fluid with standard Langevin
dynamics for the colloidal particle, which is built up from a net of bonded
particles forming the surface of the colloid. The coupling between the two
subsystems is introduced via friction forces. In addition explicit counterions,
also coupled to the fluid, are present. We observe a non-monotonous dependence
of the electrophoretic mobility on the bare colloidal charge. At low surface
charge density we observe a linear increase of the mobility with bare charge,
whereas at higher charges, where more than half of the ions are co-moving with
the colloid, the mobility decreases with increasing bare charge.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figure
Reactive-infiltration instabilities in rocks. Fracture dissolution
A reactive fluid dissolving the surface of a uniform fracture will trigger an
instability in the dissolution front, leading to spontaneous formation of
pronounced well-spaced channels in the surrounding rock matrix. Although the
underlying mechanism is similar to the wormhole instability in porous rocks
there are significant differences in the physics, due to the absence of a
steadily propagating reaction front. In previous work we have described the
geophysical implications of this instability in regard to the formation of long
conduits in soluble rocks. Here we describe a more general linear stability
analysis, including axial diffusion, transport limited dissolution, non-linear
kinetics, and a finite length system.Comment: to be published in J. Fluid. Mec
Ultrafast optical spin echo for electron spins in semiconductors
Spin-based quantum computing and magnetic resonance techniques rely on the
ability to measure the coherence time, T2, of a spin system. We report on the
experimental implementation of all-optical spin echo to determine the T2 time
of a semiconductor electron-spin system. We use three ultrafast optical pulses
to rotate spins an arbitrary angle and measure an echo signal as the time
between pulses is lengthened. Unlike previous spin-echo techniques using
microwaves, ultrafast optical pulses allow clean T2 measurements of systems
with dephasing times T2* fast in comparison to the timescale for microwave
control. This demonstration provides a step toward ultrafast optical dynamic
decoupling of spin-based qubits.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Notions and subnotions in information structure
Three dimensions can be distinguished in a cross-linguistic account of information structure. First, there is the definition of the focus constituent, the part of the linguistic expression which is subject to some focus meaning. Second and third, there are the focus meanings and the array of structural devices that encode them. In a given language, the expression of focus is facilitated as well as constrained by the grammar within which the focus devices operate. The prevalence of focus ambiguity, the structural inability to make focus distinctions, will thus vary across languages, and within a language, across focus meanings
Multi-spin dynamics of the solid-state NMR Free Induction Decay
We present a new experimental investigation of the NMR free induction decay
(FID) in a lattice of spin-1/2 nuclei in a strong Zeeman field. Following a
pi/2 pulse, evolution under the secular dipolar Hamiltonian preserves coherence
number in the Zeeman eigenbasis, but changes the number of correlated spins in
the state. The observed signal is seen to decay as single-spin, single-quantum
coherences evolve into multiple-spin coherences under the action of the dipolar
Hamiltonian. In order to probe the multiple-spin dynamics during the FID, we
measured the growth of coherence orders in a basis other than the usual Zeeman
eigenbasis. This measurement provides the first direct experimental observation
of the growth of coherent multiple-spin correlations during the FID.
Experiments were performed with a cubic lattice of spins (19F in calcium
fluoride) and a linear spin chain (19F in fluorapatite). It is seen that the
geometrical arrangement of the spins plays a significant role in the
development of higher order correlations. The results are discussed in light of
existing theoretical models.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
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