5,439 research outputs found

    Driven flux-line lattices in the presence of weak random columnar disorder: Finite-temperature behavior and dynamical melting of moving Bose glass

    Full text link
    We use 3D numerical simulations to explore the phase diagram of driven flux line lattices in presence of weak random columnar disorder at finite temperature and high driving force. We show that the moving Bose glass phase exists in a large range of temperature, up to its melting into a moving vortex liquid. It is also remarkably stable upon increasing velocity : the dynamical transition to the correlated moving glass expected at a critical velocity is not found at any velocity accessible to our simulations. Furthermore, we show the existence of an effective static tin roof pinning potential in the direction transverse to motion, which originates from both the transverse periodicity of the moving lattice and the localization effect due to correlated disorder. Using a simple model of a single elastic line in such a periodic potential, we obtain a good description of the transverse field penetration at surfaces as a function of thickness in the moving Bose glass phase.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, New title and minor changes in text and figures. Accepted for publication in Physical Review

    Chaotic dynamics of superconductor vortices in the plastic phase

    Full text link
    We present numerical simulation results of driven vortex lattices in presence of random disorder at zero temperature. We show that the plastic dynamics is readily understood in the framework of chaos theory. Intermittency "routes to chaos" have been clearly identified, and positive Lyapunov exponents and broad-band noise, both characteristic of chaos, are found to coincide with the differential resistance peak. Furthermore, the fractal dimension of the strange attractor reveals that the chaotic dynamics of vortices is low-dimensional.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures Accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter

    Sputtered gold mask for deep chemical etching of silicon

    Get PDF
    Sputtered mask resists chemical attack from acid and has adherence to withstand prolonged submergence in etch solution without lifting from silicon surface. Even under prolonged etch conditions with significant undercutting, gold mask maintained excellent adhesion to silicon surface and imperviousness to acid

    Scalar leptoquarks and the rare B meson decays

    Full text link
    We study some rare decays of BB meson involving the quark level transition bql+l(q=d,s)b \to q l^+l^- (q=d,s) in the scalar leptoquark model. We constrain the leptoquark parameter space using the recently measured branching ratios of Bs,dμ+μB_{s,d} \to \mu^+ \mu^- processes. Using such parameters, we obtain the branching ratios, direct CP violation parameters and isospin asymmetries in BKμ+μB \to K \mu^+ \mu^- and Bπμ+μB \to \pi \mu^+ \mu^- processes. We also obtain the branching ratios for some lepton flavour violating decays Bli+ljB \to l_i^+ l_j^-. We find that the various anomalies associated with the isospin asymmetries of BKμ+μB \to K \mu^+ \mu^- process can be explained in the scalar leptoquark model.Comment: 28 pages, 7 figures. typos corrected, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Critical behavior of plastic depinning of vortex lattices in two dimensions: Molecular dynamics simulations

    Full text link
    Using molecular dynamics simulations, we report a study of the dynamics of two-dimensional vortex lattices driven over a disordered medium. In strong disorder, when topological order is lost, we show that the depinning transition is analogous to a second order critical transition: the velocity-force response at the onset of motion is continuous and characterized by critical exponents. Combining studies at zero and nonzero temperature and using a scaling analysis, two critical expo- nents are evaluated. We find v\sim (F-F_c)^\beta with \beta=1.3\pm0.1 at T=0 and F>F_c, and v\sim T^{1/\delta} with \delta^{-1}=0.75\pm0.1 at F=F_c, where F_c is the critical driving force at which the lattice goes from a pinned state to a sliding one. Both critical exponents and the scaling function are found to exhibit universality with regard to the pinning strength and different disorder realizations. Furthermore, the dynamics is shown to be chaotic in the whole critical region.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figure

    Chaos and plasticity in superconductor vortices: a low-dimensional dynamics

    Full text link
    We present new results of numerical simulations for driven vortex lattices in presence of random disorder at zero temperature. We show that the plastic dynamics of vortices display dissipative chaos. Intermittency "routes to chaos" have been clearly identified below the differential resistance peak. The peak region is characterized by positive Lyapunov exponents characteristic of chaos, and low frequency broad-band noise. Furthermore we find a low fractal dimension of the strange attractor, which suggests that only a few dynamical variables are sufficient to model the complex plastic dynamics of vortices.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in The Physical Review

    Vertex Operators and Soliton Time Delays in Affine Toda Field Theory

    Get PDF
    In a space-time of two dimensions the overall effect of the collision of two solitons is a time delay (or advance) of their final trajectories relative to their initial trajectories. For the solitons of affine Toda field theories, the space-time displacement of the trajectories is proportional to the logarithm of a number XX depending only on the species of the colliding solitons and their rapidity difference. XX is the factor arising in the normal ordering of the product of the two vertex operators associated with the solitons. XX is shown to take real values between 00 and 11. This means that, whenever the solitons are distinguishable, so that transmission rather than reflection is the only possible interpretation of the classical scattering process, the time delay is negative and so an indication of attractive forces between the solitons.Comment: p. 24 Latex, Swansea-SWAT/93-94/3

    Comparative US-MRI evaluation of the Insall–Salvati index

    Get PDF
    Purpose: To investigate whether the universally accepted range of normal patellar height ratio derived from MRI for the Insall–Salvati (IS) method could be similarly applied to ultrasound (US). Materials and methods: This study included 52 patients (age range 11–75 years) who underwent a bi-modality (US and MRI) examination, with a total of 60 knees evaluated. IS index (ratio of the patella tendon length to length of the patella) was acquired with both methods. Two operators, with different experiences of musculoskeletal imaging and blinded to the results of other investigators, separately performed the MRI and US measurements. Results: For the two operators, MRI reported a mean value of patellar height ratio of 1.10 ± 0.16 (mean ± standard deviation SD), while US a mean value of 1.17 ± 0.16 (mean ± SD). For comparable results, the small addition of 0.16 is needed for the measurements on US compared with MRI. Inter-observer agreements using intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) was, respectively, 0.97 for MRI and 0.98 for US. The difference of mean values in patellar height ratios between MRI and US was not statistically significant (p = 0.15). The ICC between the two modalities was 0.94. Conclusion: According to our experience, IS index can be appropriately evaluated on US images, reducing the need of other imaging techniques

    Environmental Dependence of Masses and Coupling Constants

    Full text link
    We construct a class of scalar field models coupled to matter that lead to the dependence of masses and coupling constants on the ambient matter density. Such models predict a deviation of couplings measured on the Earth from values determined in low-density astrophysical environments, but do not necessarily require the evolution of coupling constants with the redshift in the recent cosmological past. Additional laboratory and astrophysical tests of \Delta \alpha and \Delta(m_p/m_e) as functions of the ambient matter density are warranted.Comment: 20 pages, no figures, references added, minor editorial change

    SCRIPTKELL : a tool for measuring cognitive effort and time processing in writing and other complex cognitive activities

    Get PDF
    We present SCRIPTKELL, a computer-assisted experimental tool that makes it possible to measure the time and cognitive effort allocated to the subprocesses of writing and other cognitive activities, SCRIPTKELL was designed to easily use and modulate Kellogg's (1986) triple-task procedure,.which consists of a combination of three tasks: a writing task (or another task), a reaction time task (auditory signal detection), and a directed retrospection task (after each signal detection during writing). We demonstrate how this tool can be used to address several novel empirical and theoretical issues. In sum, SCRIPTKELL should facilitate the flexible realization of experimental designs and the investigation of critical issues concerning the functional characteristics of complex cognitive activities
    corecore