77,941 research outputs found
Cheap Space-Based Microlens Parallaxes for High-Magnification Events
We show that for high-magnification (Amax > 100) microlensing events,
accurate microlens parallaxes can be obtained from three or fewer photometric
measurements from a small telescope on a satellite in solar orbit at ~1 AU from
Earth. This is 1--2 orders of magnitude less observing resources than are
required for standard space-based parallaxes. Such microlens parallax
measurements would yield accurate mass and distance measurements to the lens
for all cases in which finite-source effects were observed from the ground over
peak. This would include virtually all high-magnification events with detected
planets and a substantial fraction of those without. Hence it would permit
accurate estimates of the Galactic distribution of planets.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, submitted to ApJ Letter
Can Heavy WIMPs Be Captured by the Earth?
If weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) in bound solar orbits are
systematically driven into the Sun by solar-system resonances (as Farinella et
al. have shown is the case for many Earth-crossing asteroids), then the capture
of high-mass WIMPs by the Earth would be affected dramatically because
high-mass WIMPs are captured primarily from bound orbits. WIMP capture would be
eliminated for M_x>630 GeV and would be highly suppressed for M_x>~150 GeV.
Annihilation of captured WIMPs and anti-WIMPs is expected to give rise to
neutrinos coming from the Earth's center. The absence of such a neutrino signal
has been used to place limits on WIMP parameters. At present, one does not know
if typical WIMP orbits are in fact affected by these resonances. Until this
question is investigated and resolved, one must (conservatively) assume that
they are. Hence, limits on high-mass WIMP parameters are significantly weaker
than previously believed.Comment: 8 pages + 1 figure. Submitted to Ap
Limits on the Gravity Wave Background From Microlensed Quasars
The paper previously submitted under this title is incorrect in that it
drastically overestimates the cumulative deflection due to a gravitational wave
(GW) background. Avi Loeb gives a simple argument that there can be no
enhancement: since the problem is linear in , one can
decompose the GWs into plane waves and for each of these there is no
enhancement.Comment: This paper was incorrect in that it drastically overestimated the
cumulative deflection due to a gravitational wave background. Withdraw
Are We Happy Yet?: Re-evaluating the Evaluation of Indigenous Community Development
As I was working on research into Indigenous community development, I wanted to get an overview of how things are going - are projects improving well-being? What is working and what isn\u27t? I found I couldn\u27t get a clear multi-dimensional picture. So I had to wonder, about evaluation criteria and what the alternatives were. How can we, as academics and researchers and allies, make sense of the available information in such a way that our work is meaningful to the Indigenous communities we work with
Microlensing and the Stellar Mass Function
Traditional approaches to measuring the stellar mass function (MF) are
fundamentally limited because objects are detected based on their luminosity,
not their mass. These methods are thereby restricted to luminous and relatively
nearby stellar populations. Gravitational microlensing promises to
revolutionize our understanding of the MF. It is already technologically
feasible to measure the MFs of the Galactic disk and Galactic bulge as
functions of position, although the actual execution of this program requires
aggressive ground-based observations including infrared interferometry, as well
as the launching of a small satellite telescope. Rapid developments in
microlensing, including the new technique of ``pixel lensing'' of unresolved
stars, will allow one to probe the MF and luminosity function of nearby
galaxies. Such observations of M31 are already underway, and pixel-lensing
observations of M87 with the {\it Hubble Space Telescope} would permit
detection of dark intra-cluster objects in Virgo. Microlensing techniques can
also be applied to investigate the star-formation history of the universe and
to search for planets with masses as small as the Earth's. Based on an invited
talk at the January 1996 AAS meeting in San Antonio. PASP (June 1996) in press,
(c) ASP, reproduced with permission.Comment: 31 pages with 7 embedded figures. PASP (June 1996) in press, (c) ASP,
reproduced with permissio
Coherence for Categorified Operadic Theories
It has long been known that every weak monoidal category A is equivalent via
monoidal functors and monoidal natural transformations to a strict monoidal
category st(A). We generalise the definition of weak monoidal category to give
a definition of weak P-category for any strongly regular (operadic) theory P,
and show that every weak P-category is equivalent via P-functors and
P-transformations to a strict P-category. This strictification functor is then
shown to have an interesting universal property.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure. Presented at 82nd PSSL, Glasgow, May 200
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