Differences in plasticity between hard and soft spheres
Peter K. Morse, Sven Wijtmans, Merlijn van Deen, Martin van Hecke, M. Lisa Manning
Abstract
This paper shows that soft and hard spheres exhibit qualitatively and quantitatively different behavior under shear. These differences occur because the network of contacts in hard spheres changes precisely when the system traverses a saddle point, while contact changes are much more frequent in soft spheres. Moreover, the scaling relations associated with nonlinear saddle points in soft spheres are similar to scaling relations found previously for the linear response of soft spheres.
Topics & Concepts
SPHERESSaddle pointScalingHard spheresPlasticitySaddleNonlinear systemStatistical physicsPhysicsClassical mechanicsMaterials scienceMechanicsMathematicsGeometryMathematical optimizationThermodynamicsAstronomyQuantum mechanicsMaterial Dynamics and PropertiesSports Dynamics and BiomechanicsTheoretical and Computational Physics