A cluster approach to the structure of imperfect materials and their relaxation spectroscopy

A new theory is proposed for the explanation of observed relaxation phenomena, which differs significantly from theories suggested by the authors before. The theory is based on a model of structural organization of macroscopically sized samples of imperfectly structured materials, both solids and liquids, and is intermediate in character. In terms of the model, a microscopic structure is maintained over a cluster containing a number of microscopic units, with an array of clusters described by a steady-state distribution completing the macroscopic picture. The structural regularity of each level of morphological organization is precisely defined by a coarse-grained index, which is given a thermodynamic interpretation in terms of binding energies and configurational entropy. The limiting cases of an ideal liquid and a perfect crystal are recovered as asymptotic extremes in terms of this definition. The consequences of this model for the relaxation dynamics of the structure are examined and it is shown that prepared fluctuations decay in a time-power law manner as coupled zero-point motions evolve either within clusters or between clusters, with a power determined by the relevant regularity index. As a result, the origin of power law noise in materials is explained in terms of configurational entropy, and its relation with gaussian and white noise, which appear as asymptotic limits, outlined. The shape of the steady-state distribution of the array of clusters is also determined without any a priori assumptions, and it is shown to range from an unbounded form to a δ function as the regularity of the array superstructure increases. Experimental examples of dielectric relaxation spectroscopy have been used to illustrate these structural concepts and outline the way in which this technique can be used to deduce the structural organization of the sample. Finally, a short description is given of some commonly observed forms of response and their structural interpretation.

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Clingingsmith

Scholars have conjectured that the return to speaking a language increases with the number of speakers. Long-run economic and political integration would accentuate this advantage, increasing the population share of the largest languages. I show that, to the contrary, language size and growth are uncorrelated except for very small languages (<35,000 speakers). I develop a model of local language coordination over a network. The steady-state distribution of language sizes follows a power law and precisely fits the empirical size distribution of languages with ≥35,000 speakers. Simulations suggest the extinction of 40% of languages with <35,000 speakers within 100 years.


1985 ◽  
Vol 248 (5) ◽  
pp. C498-C509 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Restrepo ◽  
G. A. Kimmich

Zero-trans kinetics of Na+-sugar cotransport were investigated. Sugar influx was measured at various sodium and sugar concentrations in K+-loaded cells treated with rotenone and valinomycin. Sugar influx follows Michaelis-Menten kinetics as a function of sugar concentration but not as a function of Na+ concentration. Nine models with 1:1 or 2:1 sodium:sugar stoichiometry were considered. The flux equations for these models were solved assuming steady-state distribution of carrier forms and that translocation across the membrane is rate limiting. Classical enzyme kinetic methods and a least-squares fit of flux equations to the experimental data were used to assess the fit of the different models. Four models can be discarded on this basis. Of the remaining models, we discard two on the basis of the trans sodium dependence and the coupling stoichiometry [G. A. Kimmich and J. Randles, Am. J. Physiol. 247 (Cell Physiol. 16): C74-C82, 1984]. The remaining models are terter ordered mechanisms with sodium debinding first at the trans side. If transfer across the membrane is rate limiting, the binding order can be determined to be sodium:sugar:sodium.


2017 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 420-435 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.-M. Fourneau ◽  
Y. Ait El Majhoub

We consider open networks of queues with Processor-Sharing discipline and signals. The signals deletes all the customers present in the queues and vanish instantaneously. The customers may be usual customers or inert customers. Inert customers do not receive service but the servers still try to share the service capacity between all the customers (inert or usual). Thus a part of the service capacity is wasted. We prove that such a model has a product-form steady-state distribution when the signal arrival rates are positive.


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