visual
visual

세미나

  • HOME
  • >
  • 소식
  • >
  • 세미나
날짜 2015-08-04 11:00 
일시 2015/08/04, 11PM 
장소 B501, Room Red, KI bldg. 5nd fl. 
연사 Dr. Eric Jin Ser Lee(Univ. of Manitoba, Canada) 

Propagation of ultrasound through two- and three-dimensional strongly scattering media

2015/08/04(TUE), 11PM, B501(Room Red, KI bldg. 5nd fl.)
Dr. Eric Jin Ser Lee,  Department of Physics and Astronomy, Univ. of Manitoba, Canada

 

 

During my Ph. D study at the University of Manitoba, I have investigated the propagation of ultrasound through two- and three-dimensional strongly scattering media, with either random or ordered internal structures, through experiments and finite element simulations.  All media investigated have strong scattering resonances, leading to novel transport behaviour. 

 

The two-dimensional samples consist of nylon rods immersed in water.  Nylon fishing lines under tension are used as two-dimensional scatterers.  Note that since the rods are parallel and of uniform diameter, there is negligible scattering of waves out of the plane perpendicular to the rods, so that the system appears two-dimensional from the wave point of view for propagation in this plane.  When nylon rods are surrounded by water, they exhibit strong scattering resonances.  In such an environment, the nylon scattering resonance can couple with the propagating mode through water to create a bandgap.  This is a called hybridization gap.  When the nylon rods are arranged in a triangular lattice to form two-dimensional phononic crystals, very unusual dispersion properties are observed when the lattice constant is adjusted so that Bragg and hybridization gaps overlap in frequency.  This behaviour is attributed to the competition between two co-existing propagating modes, leading to a new method for tuning bandgap properties and adjusting the transmission by orders of magnitude. 

 

The three-dimensional media were fabricated by brazing aluminum beads together to form a disordered porous solid network with either vacuum in the pores.  This system is of particular interest because it has been shown to exhibit Anderson localization of ultrasound.  With such system, the density of states (DOS) was investigated.  It is the number of vibrational states per unit frequency range per unit volume.  The DOS is a fundamental property of any system and can influence not only wave transport but also the possibility of forming localized states.  The DOS was measured by directly counting the modes in the frequency domain.  At intermediate frequencies, the DOS was found to be approximately independent of frequency, while at higher frequencies, the frequency dependence was consistent with traditional DOS models.  Furthermore, the level statistics, which describe the distribution of the separations between neighbour modes in frequency, of the modes was investigated to determine the conditions under which level repulsion occurs.  As the sample becomes larger to have more modes, the modes start to overlap and repel each other so that level repulsion effects become important.  Consequently, the level statistics were observed to become closer to GOE predictions as the sample size increased.  For the last, as there is a transition from diffusive to localized regime around the lower bandgap edge, a transition from GOE to Poisson distribution is observed.

 

Contact: Prof. YongKeun Park, Physics Dept., (yk.park@kaist.ac.kr)

 

 

번호 날짜 장소 제목
546 2024-06-13 16:00  Zoom  [CAPP seminars]Simulation, design and fabrication of Josephson Parametric Amplifiers for axion search file
545 2024-06-12 16:00  E6-2, #1323  New high Tc superconductivity and symmetric pseudogap metal in the bilayer nickelate La3Ni2O7-Part2 file
544 2024-06-12 13:30  E6, #1501  Competition between superconductivity and density waves in spin-degenerate and spin-orbit-coupled Bernal bilayer graphene
543 2024-06-03 11:00  E6, #3441  New high Tc superconductivity and symmetric pseudogap metal in the bilayer nickelate La3Ni2O7-Part1 file
542 2024-05-30 10:00  E6-2, #2501  Quasiperiodic Effects in Quasicrystals
541 2024-05-29 16:00  E6-2, #2502  [High Energy Theory Seminar] Amplitudes Meet Cosmology: From Inflation to the Large-Scale Structure
540 2024-05-28 11:00  E6-2, #2501  동적평균장 이론 소개
539 2024-05-28 10:00  E6-2, #2501  Mixed-State Quantum Spin Liquids and Dynamical Anyon Condensations in Kitaev Lindbladians
538 2024-05-16 16:00  E6-2, #1323  [High Energy Theory Seminar] Conformal Collider Physics
537 2024-05-16 14:30  E6-2 #2502 & Zoom  [Astrophysics Seminar] Observational Cosmology with Superconducting Sensors
536 2024-05-14 16:00  E6-2, #2502  [High Energy Theory Seminar] Minimal Production of Prompt Gravitational Waves during Reheating.
535 2024-05-08 16:30  E6-2 #2502  [High Energy Theory Seminar] Black Holes from Heavy Operators in N=4 SYM
534 2024-05-01 16:00  E6-2 #2502  [High Energy Theory Seminar] Across the Mass Spectrum: Utilizing Small-Scale Structures to Probe Dark Matters
533 2024-04-19 15:00  E6-1, #1501  Engineering Physics for Semiconductor Equipment Innovation file
532 2024-04-11 16:00  E6-2, Rm#1323  Theoretical Studies of the Electric Field Induced Thermal Hall Effect in the Quantum Dimer Magnets XCuCl3 (X = Tl, K)
531 2024-03-28 11:00  E6, #2501  Geometric characterization of thermoelectric performance of two-dimensional quadratic band-crossing semimetals
530 2024-03-27 16:00  E6-2, #2502  [High Energy Theory Seminar] The Callan Rubakov Effect
529 2024-03-20 16:00  E6-2 #2502  [High-Energy Theory Seminar] Black hole states at finite N
528 2024-03-13 16:00  E6-2 #2502  [High-Energy Theory Seminar] The Schwarzschild Black Hole from Perturbation Theory to all Orders
527 2024-03-08 11:00  E6-2 #1323  2024 봄학기 광학분야 및 응집물리 특별세미나 전체 일정 file