Lubachevsky–Stillinger algorithm: Difference between revisions

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'''Lubachevsky-Stillinger (compression) algorithm''' (LS algorithm, LSA,
or LS protocol) sometimes also called is
Lubachevsky-Stillinger compression algorithm
or protocol) is
a numerical procedure that simulates or imitates
a physical process of compressing an assembly
of hard particles. As the LSA may need thousands of arithmetic operations even for a few particles,
it is usually carried out on a digital computer.
A real physical process of compression typicallyoften
involves a contracting hard boundary of the container,
boundary, such as a piston pressing against the particles. The LSA is able to simulate just
such a scenario, like in ???.
However,
where the LSA was firstly
in a more frequently used setting and in the
introduced ??? in the setting with periodic
example reported in paper ???,
boundary conditions
where the LSA was firstly
where
introduced,
the virtual particles are compressed
the LSA compresses
the virtual particles by "swelling" or expanding them
in a fixed, final (but not necessarily bounded if a periodic
virtual volume without hard boundary.
boundary condition is adopted as is done in ???)
virtual volume.
The absolute sizes of the particles are increasing but particle-to-particle relative sizes remain constant.
As a result, in a final, compressed, or "jammed" state,
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== References ==
* (LS 90): B.D. Lubachevsky and F.H. Stillinger,
Geometric Properties of Random Disk Packings,
Journal of Statistical Physics 60, nos. 5/6 (1990)
[http://www.princeton.edu/~fhs/geodisk/geodisk.pdf]
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