electric field gradients
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2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Claude Amsler ◽  
Massimiliano Antonello ◽  
Alexander Belov ◽  
Germano Bonomi ◽  
Roberto Sennen Brusa ◽  
...  

AbstractAntihydrogen atoms with K or sub-K temperature are a powerful tool to precisely probe the validity of fundamental physics laws and the design of highly sensitive experiments needs antihydrogen with controllable and well defined conditions. We present here experimental results on the production of antihydrogen in a pulsed mode in which the time when 90% of the atoms are produced is known with an uncertainty of ~250 ns. The pulsed source is generated by the charge-exchange reaction between Rydberg positronium atoms—produced via the injection of a pulsed positron beam into a nanochanneled Si target, and excited by laser pulses—and antiprotons, trapped, cooled and manipulated in electromagnetic traps. The pulsed production enables the control of the antihydrogen temperature, the tunability of the Rydberg states, their de-excitation by pulsed lasers and the manipulation through electric field gradients. The production of pulsed antihydrogen is a major landmark in the AE$$\bar{g}$$ ḡ IS experiment to perform direct measurements of the validity of the Weak Equivalence Principle for antimatter.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan R. Thompson ◽  
Logan M. Wilder ◽  
Richard M. Crooks

Water electrolysis at a bipolar electrode in the absence of buffer forms electric field gradients in a fundamentally new way. These electric field gradients are useful for continuously separating microplastics from water.


Materials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (11) ◽  
pp. 2527
Author(s):  
Jan Sladek ◽  
Vladimir Sladek ◽  
Pihua H. Wen

The meshless local Petrov–Galerkin (MLPG) method was developed to analyze 2D problems for flexoelectricity and higher-grade thermoelectricity. Both problems were multiphysical and scale-dependent. The size effect was considered by the strain and electric field gradients in the flexoelectricity, and higher-grade heat flux in the thermoelectricity. The variational principle was applied to derive the governing equations within the higher-grade theory of considered continuous media. The order of derivatives in the governing equations was higher than in their counterparts in classical theory. In the numerical treatment, the coupled governing partial differential equations (PDE) were satisfied in a local weak-form on small fictitious subdomains with a simple test function. Physical fields were approximated by the moving least-squares (MLS) scheme. Applying the spatial approximations in local integral equations and to boundary conditions, a system of algebraic equations was obtained for the nodal unknowns.


2020 ◽  
Vol 496 (1) ◽  
pp. L133-L137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Krzysztof Stasiewicz

Abstract The analysis of the wave content inside a perpendicular bow shock indicates that heating of ions is related to the lower hybrid drift (LHD) instability, and heating of electrons is related to the electron cyclotron drift (ECD) instability. Both processes represent stochastic acceleration caused by the electric field gradients on the electron gyroradius scales, produced by the two instabilities. Stochastic heating is a single-particle mechanism where large gradients break adiabatic invariants and expose particles to direct acceleration by the direct current and wave fields. The acceleration is controlled by function $\chi = m_iq_i^{-1} B^{-2}$div(E), which represents a general diagnostic tool for processes of energy transfer between electromagnetic fields and particles, and the measure of the local charge non-neutrality. The identification was made with multipoint measurements obtained from the Magnetospheric Multiscale spacecraft. The source for the LHD instability is the diamagnetic drift of ions, and for the ECD instability the source is ExB drift of electrons. The conclusions are supported by laboratory diagnostics of the ECD instability in Hall ion thrusters.


Author(s):  
Jan Sladek ◽  
Vladimir Sladek ◽  
Pihua H. Wen

The meshless Petrov-Galerkin (MLPG) method is developed to analyse 2-D problems for flexoelectricity and thermoelectricity. Both problems are multiphysical and scale dependent. The size-effect is considered by the strain- and electric field-gradients in the flexoelecricity and higher-grade heat flux in the thermoelectricity. The variational principle is applied to de-rive the governing equations considered constitutive equations. The order of derivatives in governing equations is higher than in equations obtained from classical theory. The coupled governing partial differential equations (PDE) are satisfied in a local weak-form on small fic-titious subdomains with a simple test function. Physical fields are approximated by the mov-ing least-squares (MLS) scheme. Applying the spatial approximations in local integral equa-tions a system of algebraic is obtained for the nodal unknowns.


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