particle vibrations
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2008 ◽  
Vol 605 ◽  
pp. 367-387 ◽  
Author(s):  
DEMOSTHENES KIVOTIDES ◽  
S. LOUISE WILKIN

We have performed self-consistent computations of the interactions between a superfluid vortex-ring and a solid particle for two different vortex-ring sizes and over a wide range of temperatures. In all cases, the particle and the vortex eventually separate. For temperature T = 0 K, larger rings tend to trap the particle more effectively than smaller rings. Trying to escape the vortex, the particle follows a spiralling trajectory that could be experimentally detected. The dominant dynamical process is the excitation and propagation of Kelvin waves along the vortices. For T > 0 K, particle–vortex collision induces particle vibrations that are normal to the particle's direction of motion and might be experimentally detectable. In contrast to the T = 0 K case, smaller rings induce larger particle oscillation velocities. With increasing temperature, enhanced mutual friction damping of Kelvin waves leads to the damping of both the intensity and frequency of post-collision particle vibrations. Moreover, higher temperatures increase the relative impact of the Stokes drag force on particle motion.


1981 ◽  
Vol 36 (12) ◽  
pp. 1319-1322
Author(s):  
Daniel M. Heffernan ◽  
Richard L. Liboff

AbstractThe BBKGY equations for N identical, impenetrable, charged particles which move in one dimension and lie in a charge neutralizing background, are shown to separate into N uncoupled equations for the sequence of N reduced distributions. The potential relevant to any subgroup of s adjoining particles is that of an «-dimensional harmonic oscillator whose frequency is the plasma frequency of the aggregate. The «-particle spatial equilibrium distribution reveals that particle vibrations remain centered about fixed, uniformly distributed sites as σ/T goes from zero to infinity, where σ is particle density and T is temperature. Thus it is concluded that the system suffers no change in phase for all σ and T.


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