Weakly collisional Landau damping and three-dimensional
... BGK solutions. This is mainly due to 3D features of solitary wave structures in space-based observations that cannot be explained by 1D BGK wave theory18-20. There are also results from numerical simulations suggesting the possibility of higher-dimensional BGK solutions21-23. 3D BGK solutions have b ...
... BGK solutions. This is mainly due to 3D features of solitary wave structures in space-based observations that cannot be explained by 1D BGK wave theory18-20. There are also results from numerical simulations suggesting the possibility of higher-dimensional BGK solutions21-23. 3D BGK solutions have b ...
Gravitation and quantum interference experiments with neutrons
... discrepancies that depend on the interferometer or the mounting. For each wavelength, the phase difference 1(λ, φ) was obtained using a phase rotator, which is placed across both beams and rotated. A series of phase rotator scans was taken for various values of φ using the wavelengths 0.21440 and 0. ...
... discrepancies that depend on the interferometer or the mounting. For each wavelength, the phase difference 1(λ, φ) was obtained using a phase rotator, which is placed across both beams and rotated. A series of phase rotator scans was taken for various values of φ using the wavelengths 0.21440 and 0. ...
Statistical mechanics - University of Guelph Physics
... instability.) Since the first factor is evidently positive, we conclude that CP > CV . This is a very general result, which illustrates the power and usefulness of thermodynamics. For an ideal gas, it is easy to use the equation of state P V = N kT to show that CP − CV = N k. (Once we have mastered ...
... instability.) Since the first factor is evidently positive, we conclude that CP > CV . This is a very general result, which illustrates the power and usefulness of thermodynamics. For an ideal gas, it is easy to use the equation of state P V = N kT to show that CP − CV = N k. (Once we have mastered ...
Energy loss by a fast charged particle moving parallel to a surface
... value q-'. Therefore a fast particle interacts with surface plasmons whose wave vectors are q 5 l/lz,j. Thus, smallness of the spatial dispersion corresponds to the inequality /z,/ > v,/w,. It is just for S U C ~ Z ,values that Eq. (14)is valid. One can see from (14)that a surface plasmon is rather ...
... value q-'. Therefore a fast particle interacts with surface plasmons whose wave vectors are q 5 l/lz,j. Thus, smallness of the spatial dispersion corresponds to the inequality /z,/ > v,/w,. It is just for S U C ~ Z ,values that Eq. (14)is valid. One can see from (14)that a surface plasmon is rather ...
Arbitrary Steering of Multiple Particles Independently in an Electro-Osmotically Driven Microfluidic System
... field that will move all the particles from where they are to where they should be, and these inputs will be applied via the system actuators. This will allow us to replicate the capability of laser tweezers but with the following advantages: the entire system can be miniaturized (the microfluidics, ...
... field that will move all the particles from where they are to where they should be, and these inputs will be applied via the system actuators. This will allow us to replicate the capability of laser tweezers but with the following advantages: the entire system can be miniaturized (the microfluidics, ...
Quantum Information—S. Lloyd, L. Levitov, T. Orlando, J. H. Shapiro, N.C. Wong
... atoms to photons, transported through space, and moved back from photons to atoms, is a difficult one. Exactly because quantum information provides additional opportunities for storing and processing information, it also provides additional opportunities for errors, loss, and the corruption of that ...
... atoms to photons, transported through space, and moved back from photons to atoms, is a difficult one. Exactly because quantum information provides additional opportunities for storing and processing information, it also provides additional opportunities for errors, loss, and the corruption of that ...
Real-time resolution of the causality paradox of time
... corresponding to “Liouville space pathways.” The gist of these resolutions is that causality is not violated, but one must use a more abstract mathematical apparatus 共Keldysh formalism or the Liouville superoperator method兲 in order to connect functional derivatives of the action to causal response ...
... corresponding to “Liouville space pathways.” The gist of these resolutions is that causality is not violated, but one must use a more abstract mathematical apparatus 共Keldysh formalism or the Liouville superoperator method兲 in order to connect functional derivatives of the action to causal response ...
Pdf - Text of NPTEL IIT Video Lectures
... if we integrate it over the volume, that is the volume integral. This will be say rho dv and then the change of this mass with respect to time is equal to 0. That way also we can have our equation, that way also we can have our equation. This we are writing as say D D t, capital D D t because we ar ...
... if we integrate it over the volume, that is the volume integral. This will be say rho dv and then the change of this mass with respect to time is equal to 0. That way also we can have our equation, that way also we can have our equation. This we are writing as say D D t, capital D D t because we ar ...