scholarly journals Quantum thermodynamics of single particle systems

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Md. Manirul Ali ◽  
Wei-Ming Huang ◽  
Wei-Min Zhang
2005 ◽  
Vol 414 (4-6) ◽  
pp. 468-472 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Romera ◽  
P. Sánchez-Moreno ◽  
J.S. Dehesa

2012 ◽  
Vol 82 (7) ◽  
pp. 655-666 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiahua Zhang ◽  
George Baciu ◽  
Justin Cameron ◽  
Jin lian Hu

Woven fabrics are widely used in clothing because of their parallel and interlaced properties, which are formed by weaving. A wide range of applications, from 3D games to textile design, adopt woven fabrics for cloth animation due to the fact that weaving can be immediately shown on the cloth. Today, cloth animation at the macro scale is successfully accomplished using single particle systems, processes of treating the cloths as sheets of single particles interconnected with spring-dampers. However, the existing single particle systems become limited when applied to show the interlaced structures between the yarns. In this paper, we introduce the particle pair system, a dynamics system of particle pairs for woven fabric simulation. It treats the woven fabric as an interlaced crimp network of weft particles and warp particles. Each weave point of the woven fabric is represented as a particle pair rather than a single particle, providing independent behaviors of particles in the weft direction and the warp direction, respectively. The particles are connected dynamically according to a connectivity matrix which allows for tearing. The atom of the system is the particle pair, a flexible representation that can be tessellated to panel quads at the macro scale, interlaced yarn segments at the meso scale and intertwisted fibers at the micro scale, according to the view distance, for fast rendering. The particle pair system can be easily implemented in current graphics pipelines. We can achieve more than 100 frames per second for a 256 × 256 woven fabric. This allows for large-scale physical animation of woven fabrics that maintain the geometric variances of real 3D yarn and fibers.


Author(s):  
Bjoern Bringmann ◽  
Dana Mendelson

AbstractThis paper revisits the proof of Anderson localization for multi-particle systems. We introduce a multi-particle version of the eigensystem multi-scale analysis by Elgart and Klein, which had previously been used for single-particle systems.


1999 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qinsheng Zhu ◽  
Peter E. Clark

Abstract The settling of particles in non-Newtonian fluids is an important topic in industries from pharmaceuticals and foods to mineral extraction and construction. A large body of experimental work is available on single particle settling in both Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluids. Multi-particle systems are less well studied. Most reported work in multiparticle systems has been in Newtonian fluids. Recently, there has been increasing interest in multiparticle settling in non-Newtonian fluids. This paper will review some of the more important of these studies and present some new data on periodic motion observed in systems of three or more particles.


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