3,529 research outputs found
Experimental probes of axions
Experimental searches for axions or axion-like particles rely on
semiclassical phenomena resulting from the postulated coupling of the axion to
two photons. Sensitive probes of the extremely small coupling constant can be
made by exploiting familiar, coherent electromagnetic laboratory techniques,
including resonant enhancement of transitions using microwave and optical
cavities, Bragg scattering, and coherent photon-axion oscillations. The axion
beam may either be astrophysical in origin as in the case of dark matter axion
searches and solar axion searches, or created in the laboratory from laser
interactions with magnetic fields. This note is meant to be a sampling of
recent experimental results.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, proceedings of XXIX Physics in Collision
Conference, Kobe, Japan, August 30-September 2, 2009. An incorrect file was
accidentally submitted as V1. V2 is the version in the actual proceedings.
Difference: axion-fermion scattering is always suppressed by the Yukawa
coupling m_f/f_a. High kinetic energies do not overcome this suppressio
Designing dark energy afterglow experiments
Chameleon fields, which are scalar field dark energy candidates, can evade
fifth force constraints by becoming massive in high-density regions. However,
this property allows chameleon particles to be trapped inside a vacuum chamber
with dense walls. Afterglow experiments constrain photon-coupled chameleon
fields by attempting to produce and trap chameleon particles inside such a
vacuum chamber, from which they will emit an afterglow as they regenerate
photons. Here we discuss several theoretical and systematic effects underlying
the design and analysis of the GammeV and CHASE afterglow experiments. We
consider chameleon particle interactions with photons, Fermions, and other
chameleon particles, as well as with macroscopic magnetic fields and matter.
The afterglow signal in each experiment is predicted, and its sensitivity to
various properties of the experimental apparatus is studied. Finally, we use
CHASE data to exclude a wide range of photon-coupled chameleon dark energy
models.Comment: 29 pages, 31 figures, 1 tabl
A Faraway Quasar in the Direction of the Highest Energy Auger Event
The highest energy cosmic ray event reported by the Auger Observatory has an
energy of 148 EeV. It does not correlate with any nearby (z0.024) object
capable of originating such a high energy event. Intrigued by the fact that the
highest energy event ever recorded (by the Fly's Eye collaboration) points to a
faraway quasar with very high radio luminosity and large Faraday rotation
measurement, we have searched for a similar source for the Auger event. We find
that the Auger highest energy event points to a quasar with similar
characteristics to the one correlated to the Fly's Eye event. We also find the
same kind of correlation for one of the highest energy AGASA events. We
conclude that so far these types of quasars are the best source candidates for
both Auger and Fly's Eye highest energy events. We discuss a few exotic
candidates that could reach us from gigaparsec distances.Comment: 13 pages (version to be published in JCAP
On the anomalous afterglow seen in a chameleon afterglow search
We present data from our investigation of the anomalous orange-colored
afterglow that was seen in the GammeV Chameleon Afterglow Search (CHASE). These
data includes information about the broad band color of the observed glow, the
relationship between the glow and the temperature of the apparatus, and other
data taken prior to and during the science operations of CHASE. While differing
in several details, the generic properties of the afterglow from CHASE are
similar to luminescence seen in some vacuum compounds. Contamination from this,
or similar, luminescent signatures will likely impact the design of
implementation of future experiments involving single photon detectors and high
intensity light sources in a cryogenic environment.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, submitted to PR
Deep shower interpretation of the cosmic ray events observed in excess of the Greisen-Zatsepin-Kuzmin energy
We consider the possibility that the ultra-high-energy cosmic ray flux has a
small component of exotic particles which create showers much deeper in the
atmosphere than ordinary hadronic primaries. It is shown that applying the
conventional AGASA/HiRes/Auger data analysis procedures to such exotic events
results in large systematic biases in the energy spectrum measurement. SubGZK
exotic showers may be mis-reconstructed with much higher energies and mimick
superGZK events. Alternatively, superGZK exotic showers may elude detection by
conventional fluorescence analysis techniques.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figure
First measurements of high frequency cross-spectra from a pair of large Michelson interferometers
Measurements are reported of the cross-correlation of spectra of differential
position signals from the Fermilab Holometer, a pair of co-located 39 m long,
high power Michelson interferometers with flat, broadband frequency response in
the MHz range. The instrument obtains sensitivity to high frequency correlated
signals far exceeding any previous measurement in a broad frequency band
extending beyond the 3.8 MHz inverse light crossing time of the apparatus. The
dominant but uncorrelated shot noise is averaged down over
independent spectral measurements with 381 Hz frequency resolution to obtain
sensitivity to stationary
signals. For signal bandwidths kHz, the sensitivity to strain
or shear power spectral density of classical or exotic origin surpasses a
milestone where
is the Planck time.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Interferometric Constraints on Quantum Geometrical Shear Noise Correlations
Final measurements and analysis are reported from the first-generation
Holometer, the first instrument capable of measuring correlated variations in
space-time position at strain noise power spectral densities smaller than a
Planck time. The apparatus consists of two co-located, but independent and
isolated, 40 m power-recycled Michelson interferometers, whose outputs are
cross-correlated to 25 MHz. The data are sensitive to correlations of
differential position across the apparatus over a broad band of frequencies up
to and exceeding the inverse light crossing time, 7.6 MHz. By measuring with
Planck precision the correlation of position variations at spacelike
separations, the Holometer searches for faint, irreducible correlated position
noise backgrounds predicted by some models of quantum space-time geometry. The
first-generation optical layout is sensitive to quantum geometrical noise
correlations with shear symmetry---those that can be interpreted as a
fundamental noncommutativity of space-time position in orthogonal directions.
General experimental constraints are placed on parameters of a set of models of
spatial shear noise correlations, with a sensitivity that exceeds the
Planck-scale holographic information bound on position states by a large
factor. This result significantly extends the upper limits placed on models of
directional noncommutativity by currently operating gravitational wave
observatories.Comment: Matches the journal accepted versio
What’s in the “Black Box”? Balancing Financial Inclusion and Privacy in Digital Consumer Lending
The availability of credit is a foundation of the American economy, but not everyone has an avenue to credit. Financial Technology (“FinTech”) lending plays a sizable role in providing these avenues for Americans who would not otherwise have access to loans and are forced to turn to high-cost loan instruments like payday lending. Most scholars who have contributed to the topic of FinTech lending have focused on the risk of discrimination by Artificial Intelligence within FinTech lending platforms. This Note argues that given the recent history of data breaches in the credit industry, privacy issues should be a part of the larger discussion. Furthermore, balancing privacy with FinTech lending’s goal of financial inclusion will be a task required by regulation such as the Fair Credit Reporting Act.
This Note argues that the number of issues that might arise—the inherent invasiveness of FinTech and the unfairness of the contracts; the biased nature of their algorithms; the lack of transparency; and the danger of data breaches—should ultimately play second fiddle to the goal of financial inclusion. The reason is that although the two priorities of privacy and access to credit seem to offset one another, they actually balance in counterintuitive ways. Even though there are legitimate privacy concerns with the FinTech model, they can be softened by greater transparency. Toward this end, this Note discusses the solutions that have been offered to help eliminate the opacity of FinTech lending’s Artificial Intelligence and ultimately proposes the use of counterfactual explanations to develop accountability in FinTech lending while expanding financial inclusion
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