18,246 research outputs found
Progress made in the construction of giant airplanes in Germany during the war
The construction of giant airplanes was begun in Germany in August, 1914. The tables annexed here show that a large number of airplanes weighing up to 15.5 tons were constructed and tested in Germany during the War, and it is certain that no other country turned out airplanes of this weight nor in such large numbers. An examination of the tables shows that by the end of the War all the manufacturers had arrived at a well-defined type, namely an airplane of about 12 tons with four engines of 260 horsepower each. The aircraft listed here are discussed with regard to useful weight and aerodynamic qualities
From Wires to Cosmology
We provide a statistical framework for characterizing stochastic particle
production in the early universe via a precise correspondence to current
conduction in wires with impurities. Our approach is particularly useful when
the microphysics is uncertain and the dynamics are complex, but only
coarse-grained information is of interest. We study scenarios with multiple
interacting fields and derive the evolution of the particle occupation numbers
from a Fokker-Planck equation. At late times, the typical occupation numbers
grow exponentially which is the analog of Anderson localization for disordered
wires. Some statistical features of the occupation numbers show hints of
universality in the limit of a large number of interactions and/or a large
number of fields. For test cases, excellent agreement is found between our
analytic results and numerical simulations.Comment: v3: minor changes and references added; matches published version in
JCA
A note on dark energy induced by D-brane motion
In this note we study the possibility of obtaining dark energy solution in a
D-brane scenario in a warped background that includes brane-position dependent
corrections for the non-perturbative superpotential. The volume modulus is
stabilized at instantaneous minima of the potential. Though the model can
account for the existence of dark energy within present observational bound -
fine-tuning of the model parameters becomes unavoidable. Moreover, the model
does not posses a tracker solution.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
B-modes and the Nature of Inflation
Observations of the cosmic microwave background do not yet determine whether
inflation was driven by a slowly-rolling scalar field or involved another
physical mechanism. In this paper we discuss the prospects of using the power
spectra of scalar and tensor modes to probe the nature of inflation. We focus
on the leading modification to the slow-roll dynamics, which entails a sound
speed for the scalar fluctuations. We derive analytically a lower bound
on in terms of a given tensor-to-scalar ratio , taking into account
the difference in the freeze-out times between the scalar and tensor modes. We
find that any detection of primordial B-modes with implies a lower
bound on that is stronger than the bound derived from the absence of
non-Gaussianity in the Planck data. For , the bound would be
tantalizingly close to a critical value for the sound speed, (corresponding to ), which we
show serves as a threshold for non-trivial dynamics beyond slow-roll. We also
discuss how an order-one level of equilateral non-Gaussianity is a natural
observational target for other extensions of the canonical paradigm.Comment: 25+7 pages, 9 figures. Published versio
New features in curvaton model
We demonstrate novel features in the behavior of the second and third order
non-linearity parameters of the curvature perturbation, namely, and
, arising from non-linear motion of curvaton field. We investigate two
classes of potentials for the curvaton - the first has tiny oscillations
super-imposed upon the quadratic potential. The second is characterized by a
single 'feature' separating two quadratic regimes with different mass scales.
The feature may either be a bump or a flattening of the potential. In the case
of the oscillatory potential we find that as the width and height of
superimposed oscillations increase, both and deviate strongly
from their expected values from a quadratic potential. changes sign
from positive to negative as the oscillations in the potential become more
prominent. Hence, this model can be severely constrained by convincing evidence
from observations that is positive. , on the other hand,
acquires very large negative values. For the the single feature potential, we
find that and exhibit oscillatory behavior as a function of
the parameter that controls the feature.Comment: 1+14 pages, 5 figure
The German Bight (North Sea) is a nursery area for both locally and externally produced sprat juveniles
To better understand the role of the German Bight (GB) as a nursery area for juvenile North Sea sprat Sprattus sprattus we sought to determine whether the area may receive only locally or also externally produced offspring. We sampled juveniles during 3 trawl surveys in the GB in August, September, and October 2004 and applied otolith microstructure analysis in order to reconstruct their distributions of the day-of-first-increment-formation (dif). These were contrasted with spatial and seasonal patterns of sprat egg abundance in the GB and its adjacent areas, observed during 6 monthly plankton surveys. It was found that the majority of juveniles originated mainly from April/May 2004, coinciding with high spawning activity west of the GB, whereas spawning and larval production inside the GB peaked notably later, in May/June. This indicated that a large proportion of juveniles was produced outside the GB and transported subsequently into it through passive and/or active migration. Shifts to later mean difs from one survey to the next and length distributions indicative of the simultaneous presence of multiple cohorts, supported the notion that the GB is a complex retention and nursery area for sprat offspring from different North Sea spawning grounds and times. Later born juveniles had significantly faster initial growth rates than earlier born conspecifics, which was likely temperature-mediated, given the strong correlation between back-calculated growth histories and sea surface temperature as a proxy for thermal histories of juveniles (r(2) = 0.52). (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
On the predictive power of Local Scale Invariance
Local Scale Invariance (LSI) is a theory for anisotropic critical phenomena
designed in the spirit of conformal invariance. For a given representation of
its generators it makes non-trivial predictions about the form of universal
scaling functions. In the past decade several representations have been
identified and the corresponding predictions were confirmed for various
anisotropic critical systems. Such tests are usually based on a comparison of
two-point quantities such as autocorrelation and response functions. The
present work highlights a potential problem of the theory in the sense that it
may predict any type of two-point function. More specifically, it is argued
that for a given two-point correlator it is possible to construct a
representation of the generators which exactly reproduces this particular
correlator. This observation calls for a critical examination of the predictive
content of the theory.Comment: 17 pages, 2 eps figure
A Field Range Bound for General Single-Field Inflation
We explore the consequences of a detection of primordial tensor fluctuations
for general single-field models of inflation. Using the effective theory of
inflation, we propose a generalization of the Lyth bound. Our bound applies to
all single-field models with two-derivative kinetic terms for the scalar
fluctuations and is always stronger than the corresponding bound for slow-roll
models. This shows that non-trivial dynamics can't evade the Lyth bound. We
also present a weaker, but completely universal bound that holds whenever the
Null Energy Condition (NEC) is satisfied at horizon crossing.Comment: 16 page
SLIPPERY SLOPE ? ASSESSING THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF THE 2002 WINTER OLYMPIC GAMES IN SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH
This paper provides an empirical examination of the 2002 Winter Olympic Games in Salt Lake City, Utah. Our analysis of taxable sales in the counties in which Olympic events took place finds that some sectors such as hotels and restaurants prospered while other retailers such as general merchandisers and department stores suffered. Overall the gains in the hospitality industry are lower than the losses experienced by other sectors in the economy. Given the experience of Utah, potential Olympic hosts should exercise caution before proceeding down the slippery slope of bidding for this event.OLYMPICS, IMPACT ANALYSIS, MEGA-EVENT
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