Max Ruth publishes on the instability of magnetic bion stripes in Phys. Rev. B

April 11, 2018

Stripe solitons are long solitary wave filaments which can be found in a variety of multidimensional contexts, e.g., in shallow water waves, Bose-Einstein condensates, and ferromagnetic materials. In a recent paper published in Physical Review B, a theory for modulations of a two-dimensional magnetic soliton filament, known as the bion...

Patrick Sprenger publishes on optical soliton tunneling in Phys. Rev. E

April 11, 2018

A widely celebrated feature of nonlinear optical materials is their support of optical solitons—localized, propagating pulses that maintain their shape over large distances. Light propagating in an optical fiber can be modeled effectively by the nonlinear Schrödinger equation (NLS), which can be cast into a hydrodynamic (fluid-like) system by a...

Vortex-antivortex proliferation in thin film ferromagnets highlighted in Physical Review B as editors' suggestion

April 5, 2017

Following the recent article on the dispersive hydrodynamic formulation of magnetization dynamics in thin film ferromagnets, Ezio Iacocca and Mark Hoefer explore the effect of finite-sized obstacles in this context. Thin film ferromagnets support uniform hydrodynamic states (UHSs) that can be parametrized by a fluid density and velocity. UHSs share...

Ezio Iacocca publishes the dispersive hydrodynamic formulation of thin film ferromagnets in Physical Review Letters

Jan. 5, 2017

Solid-state magnetic materials are intrinsically dynamic, stemming from the forces that act at the nanoscale and favor a macroscopic, collective order. In the case of a thin film ferromagnet, effectively a two dimensional magnetic medium, the equation describing its can be cast as a set of dispersive hydrodynamic equations. Remarkably,...

Patrick Sprenger publishes article on dispersive shock waves with non-convex dispersion in SIAM Journal of Applied Math

Jan. 3, 2017

Patrick Sprenger and Mark Hoefer publish a new paper in SIAM Journal of Applied Mathematics . The paper, Shock waves in dispersive hydrodynamics with non-convex dispersion , identifies new dispersive shock wave structures admitted by the fifth order Kawahara equation, a universal model for dispersive hydrodynamic systems with higher order...

The Dispersive Hydrodynamics Laboratory reflects on 2016

Dec. 30, 2016

As the year comes to an end, the Dispersive Hydrodynamics Laboratory reflects on a successful 2016. The lab was involved in Applied Mathematics’ first CU Wizards show, a 30+ year CU tradition. CU Wizards is a monthly, interactive show for children. The program brings the “magic of science” to kids...

Michelle Maiden publishes a theory of modulated viscous fluid conduit periodic waves in Proceedings of the Royal Society A

Dec. 14, 2016

Michelle Maiden and Mark Hoefer were published in Proceedings of the Royal Society A . Their paper, Modulations of viscous fluid conduit periodic waves , presents a theoretical investigation of the stability and dynamics of periodic waves in the viscous fluid conduit system. New coherent wave structures called envelope solitons...

Professor Mark Hoefer and Dispersive Hydrodynamics Laboratory Published in Physical Review Letters

June 16, 2016

Professor Mark Hoefer has been published in the esteemed physics journal Physical Review Letters. The journal publishes “short, high quality reports of significant and notable results in the full arc of fundamental and interdisciplinary physics research”. The publication, Observation of Dispersive Shock Waves, Solitons, and Their Interactions in Viscous Fluid...

Professor Mark Hoefer and Dr. Ezio Iacocca Published in Nature Communications

April 18, 2016

On the Christmas Eve of 2011, Mark Hoefer received an email linking one of his theories to experiments taking place in Gothenburg, Sweden. It was a momentous occasion. During his time with the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) as a postdoctoral fellow, Professor Hoefer and colleagues had proposed...

faculty picture

Assistant Professor Mark Hoefer Continues Work with His NSF Career Award

Feb. 3, 2015

Hoefer received in 2013 and continues to receive funding. Thus far, three publications have been produced as a result of the research. Hoefer said that, “I received the Career award in 2013 to study nonlinear wave dynamics theoretically and experimentally. The grant led to the formation of the Dispersive Hydrodynamics...

Pages