7,812 research outputs found
Constrained Molecular Dynamics II: a N-body approach to nuclear systems
In this work we illustrate the basic development of the constrained molecular
dynamics applied to the N-body problem in nuclear physics. The heavy
computational taskes related to quantum effects, to the presence of the "hard
core" repulsive interaction have been worked out by defining a set of
transformations based on the concept of impulsive forces. In particular in the
implemented version II of the Constrained Molecular Dynamics model the problem
related to the non conservation of the total angular momentum has been solved.
This problem can affect others semiclassical microscopic approaches as due to
the "hard core" repulsive interaction or to the use of stochastic forces. The
effect of the restored conservation law on the fusion cross section for
40Ca+40Ca system is also briefly discussed.Comment: Tex version 3.1459 (Web2C 7.3.1);main text+fig.cap in .tex 13 page;
+4 figures .ps;the order and the numerical label of the figure files reflect
the figure numbers in the main tex and captions, Submited to Journal of
computational physic
Real-time extraction of growth rates from rotating substrates during molecular-beam epitaxy
We present a method for measuring molecular‐beam epitaxy growth rates in near real‐time on rotating substrates. This is done by digitizing a video image of the reflection high‐energy electron diffraction screen, automatically tracking and measuring the specular spot width, and using numerical techniques to filter the resulting signal. The digitization and image and signal processing take approximately 0.4 s to accomplish, so this technique offers the molecular‐beam epitaxy grower the ability to actively adjust growth times in order to deposit a desired layer thickness. The measurement has a demonstrated precision of approximately 2%, which is sufficient to allow active control of epilayer thickness by counting monolayers as they are deposited. When postgrowth techniques, such as frequency domain analysis, are also used, the reflection high‐energy electron diffraction measurement of layer thickness on rotating substrates improves to a precision of better than 1%. Since all of the components in the system described are commercially available, duplication is straightforward
Nuclear higher-twist effects in eA DIS
We discuss the relation between the treatments of the higher twist nuclear
effects in eA DIS based on the pQCD collinear approximation and the light-cone
path integral formalism. We show that in the collinear approximation the N=1
rescattering contribution to the gluon emission vanishes. It is demonstrated
that the nonzero gluon spectrum obtained by Guo, Wang and Zhang is a
consequence of unjustified neglect of some terms in the collinear expansion.Comment: Talk given at Diffraction 2008: International Workshop on Diffraction
in High Energy Physics, La Londe-les-Maures, France, 9-14 Sep 200
Measuring walking accessibility to public transport for the elderly: the case of Naples
Demographic ageing represents an essential challenge for local authorities and public transport providers. Decision-makers should not ignore the speci c needs of this weak segment of the population and should implement appropriate policies. This paper develops a GIS-based method to analyse public transport accessibility of elderly people to support policies and planning strategies. To test the proposed method, we propose an application to the city of Naples in Italy. We selected this study case because it represents an example of high population density, complex urban structure and low level of quality of life, especially for the elderly. The application to the city of Naples showed that the urban accessibility changes dramatically for different age segments. Results also reveal patterns of public transport coverage that are signi cantly low particularly in suburban settings. The structure of this paper is organised into four sections: in the rst section, we introduce the main topic of mobility of elderly; in the second section, we describe and discuss the GIS-based method proposed; in the third section, we report on the application to the city of Naples; in the last section, we analyse the results and discuss future research developments
Mass gap in the 2D O(3) non-linear sigma model with a theta=pi term
By analytic continuation to real theta of data obtained from numerical
simulation at imaginary theta we study the Haldane conjecture and show that the
O(3) non-linear sigma model with a theta term in 2 dimensions becomes massless
at theta=3.10(5). A modified cluster algorithm has been introduced to simulate
the model with imaginary theta. Two different definitions of the topological
charge on the lattice have been used; one of them needs renormalization to
match the continuum operator. Our work also offers a successful test for
numerical methods based on analytic continuation.Comment: Latex file, 4 pages. To appear in PRD; it contains the justification
of analicity, more details about the fits, more references, et
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