We are presenting an experimental setup based on polarized light, enabling the visualization of the magnetic field of magnetic assemblies using a Hele-Shaw cell filled with ferrofluids. We have simulated the observed patterns with hypergeometric polynomials.
We present experimental results for the ultrasound transmission spectra and standing wave patterns of a rectangular block of fused quartz. A comparison is made between our data and an approximation of the theoretical staircase function for three-dimensional isotropic elasticity. The main emphasis of our study is on the role of mode conversion in regular ray-splitting billiards. We present the fluctuation statistics and find that these are described by the Gaussian orthogonal ensemble of random matrix theory, despite the fact that the system is not classically chaotic, as demonstrated with numerical simulation. Using temperature perturbation, we find that the vast majority of the resonances are mixtures of transverse and longitudinal wave motion, yet a small number of special resonances remain pure. We further illuminate this by presenting standing wave patterns measured on one face of the block.
Jumping sun dogs are rapid light flashes changing over clouds, with some of them located close to the places of halo formation in thunder storms clouds. This paper presents an outline of some aspects that are required for understanding the jumping sun dogs, using some experiments with light scattering in complex fluids. In our analogy, we have observed the jumping laser dogs, in which the ice crystals are replaced by needlelike structures of ferrofluid, the electric field in the atmosphere is represented by an external magnetic field, and the laser beam scattered by the ferrofluid structure has the same role of the sun as the source of light scattered by the ice crystals subjected to changing electric fields in thunderstorm clouds.
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