465 research outputs found

    Local order and crystallization of dense polydisperse hard spheres

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    This dataset is associated with "Local order and crystallization of dense polydisperse hard spheres", Daniele Coslovich, Misaki Ozawa, and Ludovic Berthier, J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 30, 144004 (2018) [doi:10.1088/1361-648X/aab0c9 arXiv:1801.09638].                                                                                                                                                                                                                It include scripts and data files to allow for the replication of the figures. EPS figures were generated using gnuplot version 5.0.</p

    Hyperuniform Interfaces in Nonequilibrium Phase Coexistence

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    We show that long-wavelength interfacial fluctuations are strongly suppressed in nonequilibrium phase coexistence between bulk hyperuniform systems. Using simulations of three distinct microscopic models, we demonstrate that hyperuniform interfaces are much smoother than equilibrium ones, with a universal reduction of height fluctuations at large scale. We derive a nonequilibrium interface equation from the field theory of the bulk order parameter, and predict a reduction in height fluctuations, Sh(k)≡⟨|h(k)|2⟩∼|k|-1, in stark contrast to equilibrium capillary wave theory where Sh(k)∼|k|-2. Our results establish a new universality class for nonequilibrium interfaces, highlighting the fundamental role of suppressed bulk fluctuations in shaping interfacial dynamics far from equilibrium

    Scaling the glassy dynamics of active particles: Tunable fragility and reentrance

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    Understanding the influence of activity on dense amorphous assemblies is crucial for biological processes such as wound healing, embryogenesis, or cancer progression. Here, we study the effect of self-propulsion forces of amplitude [Formula: see text] and persistence time [Formula: see text] in dense assemblies of soft repulsive particles by simulating a model particle system that interpolates between particulate active matter and biological tissues. We identify the fluid and glass phases of the three-dimensional phase diagram obtained by varying [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], and the packing fraction [Formula: see text]. The morphology of the phase diagram accounts for a nonmonotonic evolution of the relaxation time with [Formula: see text], which is a direct consequence of the crossover in the dominant relaxation mechanism, from glassy to jamming. A second major consequence is the evolution of the glassy dynamics from sub-Arrhenius to super-Arrhenius. We show that this tunable glass fragility extends to active systems analogous observations reported for passive particles. This analogy allows us to apply a dynamic scaling analysis proposed for the passive case, in order to account for our results for active systems. Finally, we discuss similarities and differences between our results and recent findings in the context of computational models of biological tissues

    Bypassing sluggishness: SWAP algorithm and glassiness in high dimensions

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    Réf Journal: Phys. Rev. E 99, 031301 (2019)International audienceThe recent implementation of a swap Monte Carlo algorithm (SWAP) for polydisperse mixtures fully bypasses computational sluggishness and closes the gap between experimental and simulation timescales in physical dimensions d=2d=2 and 33. Here, we consider suitably optimized systems in d=2,3,,8d=2, 3,\dots, 8, to obtain insights into the performance and underlying physics of SWAP. We show that the speedup obtained decays rapidly with increasing the dimension. SWAP nonetheless delays systematically the onset of the activated dynamics by an amount that remains finite in the limit dd \to \infty. This shows that the glassy dynamics in high dimensions d>3d>3 is now computationally accessible using SWAP, thus opening the door for the systematic consideration of finite-dimensional deviations from the mean-field description

    A random walk description of the heterogeneous glassy dynamics of attracting colloids

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    We study the heterogeneous dynamics of attractive colloidal particles close to the gel transition using confocal microscopy experiments combined with a theoretical statistical analysis. We focus on single particle dynamics and show that the self-part of the van Hove distribution function is not the Gaussian expected for a Fickian process, but that it reflects instead the existence, at any given time, of colloids with widely different mobilities. Our confocal microscopy measurements can be described well by a simple analytical model based on a conventional continuous time random walk picture, as already found for several other glassy materials. In particular, the theory successfully accounts for the presence of broad tails in the van Hove distributions that exhibit exponential, rather than Gaussian, decay at large distance

    A localization transition underlies the mode-coupling crossover of glasses

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    This dataset is associated to "A localization transition underlies the mode-coupling crossover of glasses" by D. Coslovich, A. Ninarello and L. Berthier [https://arxiv.org/abs/1811.03171]. It includes post-processed data and workflow to reproduce the analysis and the figures of the article and of the supplemental information. The easiest way to reproduce the analysis and figures, and then check the results, is to use the make script: ./make all Alternatively, the analysis and figures can be reproduced in any of the following ways following the workflow described in the org-mode project file project.org using the individual bash and gnuplot scripts in src/ and plots/ Folders and files description: analysis/: post-processed data src/: bash, python and gnuplot scripts needed to reproduce the analysis plots/: eps figures that appear in the paper and supplemental information and associated gnuplot scripts make: convenience script to setup the python environment, analyze the data and reproduce the figures project.org: org-mode project file with workflow and supplemental information project.pdf: pdf version of the org-mode project file project.bib: bibtex bibliography associated to the project Dependencies: numpy (1.16.3) argh (0.26.2) atooms (1.9.1) gnuplot (5.0.0) The analysis scripts have been tested with python versions 2.7 and 3.5. The org-mode project file has been tested with org version 9.1.13. Note: this dataset does not contain (at least yet) the particle configurations associated to saddle points, only the post-processed files containing selected properties of their normal modes. Changelog: 1.0.0 initial submission 1.1.0 add "all" target to ./make fix ./make check improve setup description </ul

    On the History of Alexander Lvovich Berthier-Delagarde’s Private Collections (With Reference to Documentary Materials)

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    Статья поступила в редакцию 10.06.2016 г.Received 10 June 2016.В статье рассмотрена история передачи книжного и рукописного собраний крупного крымоведа Александра Львовича Бертье-Делагарда в Центральный музей Тавриды, а также история продажи части нумизматической и этнографической коллекций в частные руки. Автор использует неопубликованные документы центральных (Москва, Санкт-Петербург) и региональных (Симферополь, Одесса) архивов. Исследование основано на изучении эпистолярного наследия И. А. Линниченко, А. И. Маркевича, А. В. Орешникова. Автор рассматривает биографию А. Л. Бертье-Делагарда, его вклад в изучение истории и археологии Северного Причерноморья, увлечение коллекционированием древностей. Особое внимание уделено деятельности членов Таврической ученой архивной комиссии по сохранению в революционные годы уникальных коллекций. Прослежен интерес к рукописным документам со стороны археологов в конце 20-х гг. ХХ в. В условиях революционного времени часть нумизматической коллекции А. Л. Бертье-Делагарда была утрачена, другая часть — продана европейскому антиквару. Ювелирные изделия и торевтику «готского стиля» из собрания крымского ученого приобрел Британский музей. Библиотека и личный архив А. Л. Бертье-Делагарда были переданы в Центральный музей Тавриды.The article explores the events behind the donation of the collection of books and manuscripts belonging to a prominent scholar of Crimea Alexander Lvovich Berthier-Delagarde to the Central Museum of Taurida, as well as how part of his numismatic and ethnographic collection was sold to a private owner. The analysis is made with reference to unpublished documents of central (Moscow, Saint Petersburg) and regional (Simferopol, Odessa) archives. The author refers to the epistolary legacy of I. A. Linnichenko, A. I. Markevich, and A. V. Oreshnikov. The author considers A. L. Berthier-Delagarde’s biography, his contribution to the study of the history and archaeology of Northern Circum-Pontic Region, and his enthusiasm in collecting artefacts. Special attention is paid to the activity of members of the Tauric Learned Archival Commission meant to preserve unique collections during the revolutionary years. Additionally, the author focuses on archaeologists’ interest in the handwritten documents in the late 1920s. During the Revolution, part of A. L. Berthier-Delagarde’s numismatic collection was lost, and the other part was sold to a European antiquarian. The Crimean scholar’s jewellery collection and the Gothic style Tauric items were purchased by the British Museum. A. L. Berthier-Delagarde’s library and private archive were given to the Central Museum of Taurida

    Dynamic Heterogeneity in Amorphous Materials

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    Dynamic heterogeneity in amorphous material

    Exploring the jamming transition over a wide range of critical densities

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    We numerically study the jamming transition of frictionless polydisperse spheres in three dimensions. We use an efficient thermalisation algorithm for the equilibrium hard sphere fluid and generate amorphous jammed packings over a range of critical jamming densities that is about three times broader than in previous studies. This allows us to reexamine a wide range of structural properties characterizing the jamming transition. Both isostaticity and the critical behavior of the pair correlation function hold over the entire range of jamming densities. At intermediate length scales, we find a weak, smooth increase of bond orientational order. By contrast, distorted icosahedral structures grow rapidly with increasing the volume fraction in both fluid and jammed states. Surprisingly, at large scale we observe that denser jammed states show stronger deviations from hyperuniformity, suggesting that the enhanced amorphous ordering inherited from the equilibrium fluid competes with, rather than enhances, hyperuniformity. Finally, finite size fluctuations of the critical jamming density are considerably suppressed in the denser jammed states, indicating an important change in the topography of the potential energy landscape. By considerably stretching the amplitude of the critical “J-line”, our work disentangles physical properties at the contact scale that are associated with jamming criticality, from those occurring at larger length scales, which have a different nature.</jats:p

    Out of equilibrium dynamics of magnetic monopoles in spin ice

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    Les glaces de spin, comme Dy2Ti2O7 et Ho2Ti2O7, sont des matériaux présentant un magnétisme particulièrement exotique. Ils constituent les premiers composés cristallins ferromagnétiques frustrés à avoir été découverts. Cette frustration permet la fractionnalisation des degrés de liberté de spin et l’émergence de monopôles magné-tiques, dont la physique est formalisée par le modèle des haltères.Dans cette thèse, nous étudions dans un premier temps le diagramme de phase de ce modèle grâce à un parallèle avec le modèle de Blume-Capel S = 2. On identifie dans ce diagramme la phase fragmentée observée expérimentalement dans Ho2Ir2O7,et on localise le point critique de la transition entre la phase glace de spin et la phase fragmentée.Dans un second temps, on montre numériquement que la dynamique du système autour de ce point critique appartient à la classe d’universalité du modèle d’Ising 3D. On utilise pour cela deux outils : les lois d’échelle de Kibble-Zurek et le rapport de fluctuation-dissipation. L’obtention de ce dernier a nécessité l’introduction d’une méthode novatrice pour le calcul des fonctions de réponse. Nous soulignons également que ces outils sont spécifiquement intéressants dans le cas des glaces de spin où les temps microscopiques sont de l’ordre de 1 μs, rendant le ralentissement critique observable expérimentalement.Dans un troisième temps, nous employons à nouveau la violation du théorème de fluctuation-dissipation pour caractériser un régime fortement hors équilibre de la phase glace de spin, où les degrés de liberté sont cinétiquement bloqués du fait de l’attraction coulombienne entre les monopôles.Spin ices, such as Dy2Ti2O7 and Ho2Ti2O7, are materials exhibiting exotic magnetic properties. They were the first frustrated ferromagnetic crystalline compounds to be discovered. The frustration leads to the fractionnalisation of the spin degrees of freedom and the emergence of magnetic monopoles, whose physics is formalised in the dumbbell model. In this thesis, we study the full phase diagram of this model in analogy with theS=2 Blume-Capel model. We identify in this diagram the fragmented phase observed experimentally in Ho2Ir2O7, and we localise the critical point of the transition between the spin ice phase and the fragmented phase.In a second part, we show numerically that the dynamics of this system at thecritical point belongs to the 3D Ising university class. We use for this two tools :the Kibble-Zurek scaling law and the fluctuation-dissipation ratio. For the latter, ithas been necessary to introduce a novel method to measure response functions. Wealso emphasize that these tools are specifically interesting for spin ice materials, as the unusually long microscopic time scale (1 μs) should make it possible to experimentallyobserve out-of-equilibrium phenomena related to critical slowing down.In a third part, we use the violation of the fluctuation-dissipation theorem to characterise a strongly out-of-equilibrium regime of spin ice - a thermal quench from high to low temperature, where degrees of freedom are kinetically blocked because ofthe Coulombic attraction between the monopoles
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