We conduct a numerical study of the dynamic behavior of a dense hard-sphere fluid by deriving and integrating a set of Langevin equations. The statics of the system is described by a free-energy functional of the Ramakrishnan-Yussouff form. We find that the system exhibits glassy behavior as evidenced through a stretched exponential decay and a two-stage relaxation of the density correlation function. The characteristic times grow with increasing density according to the Vogel-Fulcher law. The wave-number dependence of the kinetics is extensively explored. The connection of our results with experiment, mode-coupling theory, and molecular-dynamics results is discussed
We use extensive event-driven molecular dynamics simulations to study the thermodynamic, structural ...
We demonstrate that the equations of hydrodynamics for a simple compressible fluid, including nonlin...
In paper II of this series we apply the center-of-mass version of Nonlinear Langevin Equation theory...
We conduct a numerical study of the dynamic behavior of a dense hard-sphere fluid by deriving and in...
The dynamic behavior of a dense hard-sphere liquid is studied by numerically integrating a set of La...
We review numerical results obtained by deriving and solving a set of Langevin equations correspondi...
The dynamic behavior of a dense hard-sphere liquid is studied by numerically integrating a set of La...
We study the fluctuating nonlinear hydrodynamics of compressible fluids. Development of the appropri...
We analyze the slow glassy structural relaxation as measured through collective and tagged-particle ...
The implications of a self-consistent mode-coupling theory of dense fluids for the liquid-glass tran...
The predictions of the mode-coupling theory of the glass transition (MCT) for the tagged-particle de...
We consider the stationary state of a fluid comprised of inelastic hard spheres or disks under the i...
A relation between equilibrium, steady state, and waiting-time-dependent dynamical two-time correlat...
A set of nonlinear Langevin equations for fluctuations of the local conserved densities in a fluid u...
11 pages, 8 figures Journal: Phys. Rev. E 81, 031505 (2010)International audienceWe combine the hype...
We use extensive event-driven molecular dynamics simulations to study the thermodynamic, structural ...
We demonstrate that the equations of hydrodynamics for a simple compressible fluid, including nonlin...
In paper II of this series we apply the center-of-mass version of Nonlinear Langevin Equation theory...
We conduct a numerical study of the dynamic behavior of a dense hard-sphere fluid by deriving and in...
The dynamic behavior of a dense hard-sphere liquid is studied by numerically integrating a set of La...
We review numerical results obtained by deriving and solving a set of Langevin equations correspondi...
The dynamic behavior of a dense hard-sphere liquid is studied by numerically integrating a set of La...
We study the fluctuating nonlinear hydrodynamics of compressible fluids. Development of the appropri...
We analyze the slow glassy structural relaxation as measured through collective and tagged-particle ...
The implications of a self-consistent mode-coupling theory of dense fluids for the liquid-glass tran...
The predictions of the mode-coupling theory of the glass transition (MCT) for the tagged-particle de...
We consider the stationary state of a fluid comprised of inelastic hard spheres or disks under the i...
A relation between equilibrium, steady state, and waiting-time-dependent dynamical two-time correlat...
A set of nonlinear Langevin equations for fluctuations of the local conserved densities in a fluid u...
11 pages, 8 figures Journal: Phys. Rev. E 81, 031505 (2010)International audienceWe combine the hype...
We use extensive event-driven molecular dynamics simulations to study the thermodynamic, structural ...
We demonstrate that the equations of hydrodynamics for a simple compressible fluid, including nonlin...
In paper II of this series we apply the center-of-mass version of Nonlinear Langevin Equation theory...