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The modeling of the elastic properties of granular or nanoscale systems requires the foundations of the theory of elasticity to be revisited, as one explores scales at which this theory may no longer hold. The only cases for which a microscopic justification of elasticity exists are (nearly) uniformly strained lattices. A microscopic theory of elasticity, as well as simulations, reveal that standard continuum elasticity applies only at sufficiently large scales (typically 100 particle diameters). Interestingly, force chains, which have been observed in experiments on granular systems, and attributed to non-elastic effects, are shown to exist in systems composed of harmonically interacting constituents. The corresponding stress field, which is a continuum mechanical (averaged) entity, exhibits no chain structures even at near-microscopic resolutions, but it does reflect macroscopic anisotropy, when present.
The task of finding the smallest energy needed to bring a solid to its onset of mechanical instability arises in many problems in materials science, from the determination of the elasticity limit to the consistent assignment of free energies to mecha
We analyze correlations in step-edge fluctuations using the Bortz-Kalos-Lebowitz kinetic Monte Carlo algorithm, with a 2-parameter expression for energy barriers, and compare with our VT-STM line-scan experiments on spiral steps on Pb(111). The scali
We have made experimental observations of the force networks within a two-dimensional granular silo similar to the classical system of Janssen. Models like that of Janssen predict that pressure within a silo saturates with depth as the result of vert
The terminology granular matter refers to systems with a large number of hard objects (grains) of mesoscopic size ranging from millimeters to meters. Geological examples include desert sand and the rocks of a landslide. But the scope of such systems
We demonstrate that a highly frustrated anisotropic Josephson junction array(JJA) on a square lattice exhibits a zero-temperature jamming transition, which shares much in common with those in granular systems. Anisotropy of the Josephson couplings al