weak regime
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Senghor TAGOUEGNI ◽  
Fernande FOTSA-NGAFFO ◽  
Aurélien KENFACK-JIOTSA

Abstract We study a non-Hermitian electronic dimers system based on an imaginary resistor (Z) in a (N+2) level atomic multi-pod configuration. Non-Hermitian systems depend on a gain/loss parameter and are specifically marked by a degeneracy exhibited at an exceptional point (EP) separating different phases of complex modes dynamics. Interestingly, the structural characterization and the dispersive properties reveal a broad range of strong coupling where the interplay between the control and the probe field induce a simultaneous EIT, EIA and ATS. Here, by identifying the underlying physical mechanisms, we show that multiple windows of transparency can be strongly enhanced by the incorporation of several dimers in the multipod network. On the other hand, if the pumping field is resonant in the weak regime, multiple EIT and EIA windows result in the number of dimers. Remarkably, the proposed system embedded a multiple coupling mechanism whose modulation induces a couplingless point whereby the energy cross. At this point EIT and related phenomena vanish.


2021 ◽  
Vol 503 (1) ◽  
pp. 1290-1309
Author(s):  
R Santos-Lima ◽  
G Guerrero ◽  
E M de Gouveia Dal Pino ◽  
A Lazarian

ABSTRACT The rate of magnetic field diffusion plays an essential role in several astrophysical plasma processes. It has been demonstrated that the omnipresent turbulence in astrophysical media induces fast magnetic reconnection, which consequently leads to large-scale magnetic flux diffusion at a rate independent of the plasma microphysics. This process is called 'reconnection diffusion' (RD) and allows for the diffusion of fields, which are dynamically important. The current theory describing RD is based on incompressible magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence. In this work, we have tested quantitatively the predictions of the RD theory when magnetic forces are dominant in the turbulence dynamics (Alfvénic Mach number MA < 1). We employed the Pencil Code to perform numerical simulations of forced MHD turbulence, extracting the values of the diffusion coefficient ηRD using the test-field method. Our results are consistent with the RD theory ($\eta _{\rm RD} \sim M_{\rm A}^{3}$ for MA < 1) when turbulence approaches the incompressible limit (sonic Mach number MS ≲ 0.02), while for larger MS the diffusion is faster ($\eta _{\rm RD} \sim M_{\rm A}^{2}$). This work shows for the first time simulations of compressible MHD turbulence with the suppression of the cascade in the direction parallel to the mean magnetic field, which is consistent with incompressible weak turbulence theory. We also verified that in our simulations the energy cascading time does not follow the scaling with MA predicted for the weak regime, in contradiction with the RD theory assumption. Our results generally support and expand the RD theory predictions.


2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 442-471
Author(s):  
Mirza Satria Buana

This article examines the hypothesis that the developmental priorities of Indonesia in the post-Suharto era, in particular three legislative Acts that purport to protect indigenous peoples’ rights, in fact serve to undermine these rights. These Acts are: the Basic Agrarian Act, the Forestry Act, and the Plantation Act, and relate to land use for development purposes and also affect the autonomy of indigenous peoples. Despite being crucially important, these Acts have had detrimental effects on indigenous peoples’ lives. This article, using a qualitative socio-legal approach, analyses the historical and political contexts of the Acts to determine whether they enhance or undermine indigenous peoples’ rights, and how the government uses the Acts for suppression. This analysis identifies reasons for the weak regime, notably that the legislative Acts on land-related sectors are used as a political tool to suppress local communities, while allowing the government’s land market businesses to exploit natural resources.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roland Walz ◽  
Hella Garny ◽  
Thomas Birner

<p>A dry dynamical-core model is used to investigate the regime behavior of the polar vortex under the influence of tropical upper-tropospheric warming. Up to 5 K temperature increase in this region, the polar vortex strength and variability hardly changes. Only for temperature increases above 8 K the polar night jet speeds up by approximately 20 m s<sup>−1</sup> and the probability of sudden stratospheric warmings is strongly reduced.</p><p>A comparison of climatological-mean differences of the zonal-mean zonal winds between the two regimes and the first empirical orthogonal function of the zonal-mean zonal wind closest to the regime transition at around 7.5 K temperature increase reveals that the system oscillates between both regimes at the regime transition. Every regime is present for a long time accounting for the peaked autocorrelation time scale being distinctive of a regime transition. From a dynamical point of view the strong polar vortex regime is characterized by less negative Eliassen-Palm (EP) flux divergence in the stratosphere and an equatorward refraction of EP flux in the midlatitudes compared to the weak polar vortex regime.</p><p>In order to quantify the influence of the polar vortex on the tropospheric circulation during tropospheric warming, another set of tropical upper-tropospheric heating simulations without a polar vortex is performed. This reveals that the latitudes of the tropospheric jets in both sets of simulations coincide for tropical upper-tropospheric warmings up to 5 K, or equivalently, when the polar vortex is in its weak regime. However, when the polar vortex starts to transition to the strong regime, i.e. for tropospheric warmings above 5 K, the poleward contraction of the tropospheric jet is strongly enhanced compared to the set of simulations without polar vortex.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 205 ◽  
pp. 06019
Author(s):  
Tufan Ghosh ◽  
Sigalit Aharon ◽  
Lioz Etgar ◽  
Sanford Ruhman

Sub-10 fs pump-probe experiments on methylammonium lead halide (MAPbI3) perovskite films show hot exciton dissociation in 20 fs after photo-excitation with ~0.7 eV excess energy compared to its optical band gap (BG). Coherent wave packets were also detected in the form of spectral modulation, revealing electron-phonon coupling in these materials. The estimated electron-phonon coupling strengths from the frequency and amplitude of the detected spectral modulation are in the weak regime, suggesting formation of large polaron.


2018 ◽  
Vol 27 (02) ◽  
pp. 1750191
Author(s):  
M. Sharif ◽  
Iqra Nawazish

This paper investigates the dynamics of warm logamediate inflation for flat isotropic and homogeneous universe in Einstein frame representation of [Formula: see text] gravity. In this scenario, we study dissipative effects for weak and strong interactions of inflaton field via constant and generalized dissipative coefficient. In both interacting regimes, we find inflaton solution corresponding to scalar potential and radiation density of dissipating inflaton. Under slow-roll approximation, we formulate scalar and tensor power spectra, their spectral indices and tensor–scalar ratio for Starobinsky inflationary model and construct graphical analysis of these observational parameters. It is concluded that this model remains compatible with Planck 2015 constraints in weak and strong regimes for constant dissipative coefficient. For generalized dissipative coefficient, the inflationary model yields consistent results for [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] in strong regime while condition of warm inflation is violated for [Formula: see text] in weak regime.


2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (20) ◽  
pp. 4601-4617 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michelle I. Graco ◽  
Sara Purca ◽  
Boris Dewitte ◽  
Carmen G. Castro ◽  
Octavio Morón ◽  
...  

Abstract. Over the last decades, the Humboldt Current upwelling ecosystem, particularly the northern component off the coast of Peru, has drawn the interest of the scientific community because of its unique characteristics: it is the upwelling system with the biggest catch productivity despite the fact it is embedded in a shallow and intense oxygen minimum zone (OMZ). It is also an area of intense nitrogen loss and anammox activity and experiences large interannual variability associated with the equatorial remote forcing. In this context, we examined the oceanographic and biogeochemical variability associated with the OMZ off central Peru from a monthly time series (1996–2011) recorded off the coast of Callao (12° 02′ S, 77° 29′ W). The data reveal a rich spectrum of variability in the OMZ that includes frequencies ranging from seasonal to interannual scales. Due to the efficient oceanic teleconnection off Peru, the observed variability is interpreted in the light of an estimate of the equatorial Kelvin wave contribution to sea level anomalies considering the peculiarities of its vertical structure (i.e., the first two baroclinic modes). The span of the data set allows us to contrast two OMZ regimes. The strong regime is associated with the strong 1997–1998 equatorial Pacific El Niño, during which the OMZ adjusted to Kelvin-wave-induced downwelling conditions that switched off the upwelling and drastically reduced nutrient availability. The weak regime corresponds to the post-2000 period associated with the occurrence of moderate central Pacific El Niño events and enhanced equatorial Kelvin wave activity, in which mean upwelling conditions are maintained. It is shown that the characteristics of the coupling between physics and biogeochemistry is distinct between the two regimes with the weak regime being associated with a larger explained variance in biogeochemical properties not linearly related to the ENSO oceanic teleconnection. The data also reveal a long-term trend from 1999 corresponding to a deepening of the oxygen-deficient waters and warming. The implications of our results for understanding the OMZ dynamics off Peru are discussed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 31 (09) ◽  
pp. 1750058
Author(s):  
Hanqin Ding ◽  
Jun Zhang

Applying the bosonization and renormalization group techniques, we study a generalized Hubbard chain incorporating extra off-diagonal hopping processes in the weak regime, and determine rich ground-state phase diagrams. At half filling, in addition to the insulating phases (HI, MI and DI), there exist the superconducting phases (LE and LL). The off-diagonal hopping accounts for the occurrence of insulator–superconductor transition. Away from half filling, the transition from the LL to LE phase takes place, and the insulating phases disappear. The result provides an insignificant insight into unconventional scenarios for Cooper pairing and insulator-superconductor transition.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bhavin S. Khatri

The process of molecular evolution has been dominated by the Kimura paradigm for nearly 60 years; mutations arise at a certain rate in the population and they go to fixation with a probability given by Kimura’s classic formula, which assumes there are no further mutations that interfere with the fixation process. An alternative view is that rare variants exist in the population in a mutation-drift-selection balance and rise to fixation through a combination of chance (genetic drift), selection and mutation. When mutations increase in strength, but still in the weak regime, we would expect the Kimura rate approximation to be an overestimate, as a rare variant which grows in frequency will suffer a greater backward flux of mutations, slowing progress to fixation. However, to date calculating important quantities for a general model of selection and mutation, like the rate of fixation of these rare variants has not been tractable in the conventional diffusion approximation of population genetics. Here, we use Fisher’s angular transformation to convert the frequency-dependent diffusion inherent in population genetics to simple diffusion in an effective potential, which describes the forces of selection, drift and mutation. Once this potential is defined it is simple to show that the mean first passage time is given by a double integral which relate to populations at the barrier. Exact numerical integration shows excellent agreement with discrete Wright-Fisher simulations, which do show a slowing down of the fixation of mutants at higher mutation rates and for strong positive selection, compared to the Kimura prediction. We then seek a closed-form analytical expression for the rate of fixation of mutants, by adapting Kramer’s approximation for the mean first passage time. This overall gives an accurate approximation, but however, does not improve on the Kimura rate.


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