66,283 research outputs found
Power Counting of Contact-Range Currents in Effective Field Theory
We analyze the power counting of two-body currents in nuclear effective field
theories (EFTs). We find that the existence of non-perturbative physics at low
energies, which is manifest in the existence of the deuteron and the 1S0 NN
virtual bound state, combined with the appearance of singular potentials in
versions of nuclear EFT that incorporate chiral symmetry, modifies the
renormalization-group flow of the couplings associated with contact operators
that involve nucleon-nucleon pairs and external fields. The order of these
couplings is thereby enhanced with respect to the naive-dimensional-analysis
estimate. Consequently, short-range currents enter at a lower order in the
chiral EFT than has been appreciated up until now, and their impact on
low-energy observables is concomitantly larger. We illustrate the changes in
the power counting with a few low-energy processes involving external probes
and the few-nucleon systems, including electron-deuteron elastic scattering and
radiative neutron capture by protons.Comment: 5 pages. Minor revisions. Conclusions unchanged. Version to appear in
Physical Review Letter
Nanoindentation and incipient plasticity
This paper presents a large-scale atomic resolution simulation of nanoindentation into a thin aluminum film using the recently introduced quasicontinuum method. The purpose of the simulation was to study the initial stages of plastic deformation under the action of an indenter. Two different crystallographic orientations of the film and two different indenter geometries (a rectangular prism and a cylinder) were studied. We obtained both macroscopic load versus indentation depth curves, as well as microscopic quantities, such as the Peierls stress and density of geometrically necessary dislocations beneath the indenter. In addition, we obtain detailed information regarding the atomistic mechanisms responsible for the macroscopic curves. A strong dependence on geometry and orientation is observed. Two different microscopic mechanisms are observed to accommodate the applied loading: (i) nucleation and subsequent propagation into the bulk of edge dislocation dipoles and (ii) deformation twinning
Quasicontinuum simulation of fracture at the atomic scale
We study the problem of atomic scale fracture using the recently developed quasicontinuum method in which there is a systematic thinning of the atomic-level degrees of freedom in regions where they are not needed. Fracture is considered in two distinct settings. First, a study is made of cracks in single crystals, and second, we consider a crack advancing towards a grain boundary (GB) in its path. In the investigation of single crystal fracture, we evaluate the competition between simple cleavage and crack-tip dislocation emission. In addition, we examine the ability of analytic models to correctly predict fracture behaviour, and find that the existing analytical treatments are too restrictive in their treatment of nonlinearity near the crack tip. In the study of GB-crack interactions, we have found a number of interesting deformation mechanisms which attend the advance of the crack. These include the migration of the GB, the emission of dislocations from the GB, and deflection of the crack front along the GB itself. In each case, these mechanisms are rationalized on the basis of continuum mechanics arguments
What is the problem to which interactive multimedia is the solution?
This is something of an unusual paper. It serves as both the reason for and the result of a small number of leading academics in the field, coming together to focus on the question that serves as the title to this paper: What is the problem to which interactive multimedia is the solution? Each of the authors addresses this question from their own viewpoint, offering informed insights into the development, implementation and evaluation of multimedia. The result of their collective work was also the focus of a Western Australian Institute of Educational Research seminar, convened at Edith Cowan University on 18 October, 1994.
The question posed is deliberately rhetorical - it is asked to allow those represented here to consider what they think are the significant issues in the fast-growing field of multimedia. More directly, the question is also asked here because nobody else has considered it worth asking: for many multimedia is done because it is technically possible, not because it offers anything that is of value or provides the solution to a particular problem.
The question, then, is answered in various ways by each of the authors involved and each, in their own way, consider a range of fundamental issues concerning the nature, place and use of multimedia - both in education and in society generally. By way of an introduction, the following provides a unifying context for the various contributions made here
Models, measurements, and effective field theory: proton capture on Beryllium-7 at next-to-leading order
We employ an effective field theory (EFT) that exploits the separation of
scales in the p-wave halo nucleus to describe the process
up to a center-of-mass energy of 500 keV.
The calculation, for which we develop the lagrangian and power counting, is
carried out up to next-to-leading order (NLO) in the EFT expansion. The power
counting we adopt implies that Coulomb interactions must be included to all
orders in . We do this via EFT Feynman diagrams computed in
time-ordered perturbation theory, and so recover existing quantum-mechanical
technology such as the two-potential formalism for the treatment of the
Coulomb-nuclear interference. Meanwhile the strong interactions and the E1
operator are dealt with via EFT expansions in powers of momenta, with a
breakdown scale set by the size of the Be core, MeV.
Up to NLO the relevant physics in the different channels that enter the
radiative capture reaction is encoded in ten different EFT couplings. The
result is a model-independent parametrization for the reaction amplitude in the
energy regime of interest. To show the connection to previous results we fix
the EFT couplings using results from a number of potential model and
microscopic calculations in the literature. Each of these models corresponds to
a particular point in the space of EFTs. The EFT structure therefore provides a
very general way to quantify the model uncertainty in calculations of
. We also demonstrate that the only
NLO corrections in come from an
inelasticity that is practically of NLO size in the energy range of
interest, and so the truncation error in our calculation is effectively
NLO. We also discuss the relation of our extrapolated to the
previous standard evaluation.Comment: 68 pages, 10 figures, and 4 table
Deuteron Compton Scattering in Chiral Perturbation Theory
Compton scattering on the deuteron is studied in the framework of baryon
chiral perturbation theory to third order in small momenta, for photon energies
of order the pion mass. The scattering amplitude is a sum of one- and
two-nucleon mechanisms with no undetermined parameters. Our results are in good
agreement with the intermediate energy experimental data, and a comparison is
made with the recent higher-energy data obtained at SAL.Comment: 4 pages, uses sprocl.sty, 5 eps figure
Finite-Temperature Quasicontinuum: Molecular Dynamics without All the Atoms
Using a combination of statistical mechanics and finite-element interpolation, we develop a coarse-grained (CG) alternative to molecular dynamics (MD) for crystalline solids at constant temperature. The new approach is significantly more efficient than MD and generalizes earlier work on the quasicontinuum method. The method is validated by recovering equilibrium properties of single crystal Ni as a function of temperature. CG dynamical simulations of nanoindentation reveal a strong dependence on temperature of the critical stress to nucleate dislocations under the indenter
Quasicontinuum Models of Interfacial Structure and Deformation
Microscopic models of the interaction between grain boundaries (GBs) and both
dislocations and cracks are of importance in understanding the role of
microstructure in altering the mechanical properties of a material. A recently
developed mixed atomistic and continuum method is extended to examine the
interaction between GBs, dislocations and cracks. These calculations elucidate
plausible microscopic mechanisms for these defect interactions and allow for
the quantitative evaluation of critical parameters such as the stress to
nucleate a dislocation at a step on a GB and the force needed to induce GB
migration.Comment: RevTex, 4 pages, 4 figure
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