106,548 research outputs found
Quantum Cosmological Relational Model of Shape and Scale in 1-d
Relational particle models are useful toy models for quantum cosmology and
the problem of time in quantum general relativity. This paper shows how to
extend existing work on concrete examples of relational particle models in 1-d
to include a notion of scale. This is useful as regards forming a tight analogy
with quantum cosmology and the emergent semiclassical time and hidden time
approaches to the problem of time. This paper shows furthermore that the
correspondence between relational particle models and classical and quantum
cosmology can be strengthened using judicious choices of the mechanical
potential. This gives relational particle mechanics models with analogues of
spatial curvature, cosmological constant, dust and radiation terms. A number of
these models are then tractable at the quantum level. These models can be used
to study important issues 1) in canonical quantum gravity: the problem of time,
the semiclassical approach to it and timeless approaches to it (such as the
naive Schrodinger interpretation and records theory). 2) In quantum cosmology,
such as in the investigation of uniform states, robustness, and the qualitative
understanding of the origin of structure formation.Comment: References and some more motivation adde
New interpretation of variational principles for gauge theories. I. Cyclic coordinate alternative to ADM split
I show how there is an ambiguity in how one treats auxiliary variables in
gauge theories including general relativity cast as 3 + 1 geometrodynamics.
Auxiliary variables may be treated pre-variationally as multiplier coordinates
or as the velocities corresponding to cyclic coordinates. The latter treatment
works through the physical meaninglessness of auxiliary variables' values
applying also to the end points (or end spatial hypersurfaces) of the
variation, so that these are free rather than fixed. [This is also known as
variation with natural boundary conditions.] Further principles of dynamics
workings such as Routhian reduction and the Dirac procedure are shown to have
parallel counterparts for this new formalism. One advantage of the new scheme
is that the corresponding actions are more manifestly relational. While the
electric potential is usually regarded as a multiplier coordinate and Arnowitt,
Deser and Misner have regarded the lapse and shift likewise, this paper's
scheme considers new {\it flux}, {\it instant} and {\it grid} variables whose
corresponding velocities are, respectively, the abovementioned previously used
variables. This paper's way of thinking about gauge theory furthermore admits
interesting generalizations, which shall be provided in a second paper.Comment: 11 page
Assessment of lightweight mobile nuclear power systems
A review was made of lightweight mobile nuclear power systems (LMNPS). Data cover technical feasibility studies of LMNPS and airborne vehicles, mission studies, and non-technical conditions that are required to develop and use LMNPS
Helium Ionization in the Diffuse Ionized Gas surrounding UCHII regions
We present measurements of the singly ionized helium to hydrogen ratio
() toward diffuse gas surrounding three Ultra-Compact HII
(UCHII ) regions: G10.15-0.34, G23.46-0.20 \& G29.96-0.02. We observe radio
recombination lines (RRLs) of hydrogen and helium near 5 GHz using the GBT to
measure the ratio. The measurements are motivated by the low
helium ionization observed in the warm ionized medium (WIM) and in the inner
Galaxy diffuse ionized regions (DIR). Our data indicate that the helium is not
uniformly ionized in the three observed sources. Helium lines are not detected
toward a few observed positions in sources G10.15-0.34 \& G23.46-0.20 and the
upper limits of the ratio obtained are 0.03 and 0.05
respectively. The selected sources harbor stars of type O6 or hotter as
indicated by helium line detection toward the bright radio continuum emission
from the sources with mean value 0.060.02. Our data
thus show that helium in diffuse gas located a few pc away from the young
massive stars embedded in the observed regions is not fully ionized.We
investigate the origin of the non-uniform helium ionization and rule out the
possibilities : (a) that the helium is doubly ionized in the observed regions
and (b) that the low values are due to additional hydrogen
ionizing radiation produced by accreting low-mass stars (Smith 2014). We find
that selective absorption of ionizing photons by dust can result in low helium
ionization but needs further investigation to develop a self-consistent model
for dust in HII regions.Comment: 43 pages, 11 figures, 5 tables accepted to Ap
Small Fermi energy, zero point fluctuations and nonadiabaticity in MgB
Small Fermi energy effects are induced in MgB by the low hole doping in
the bands which are characterized by a Fermi energy eV. We show that, due to the particularly strong deformation
potential relative to the phonon mode, lattice fluctuations are
reflected in strong fluctuations in the electronic band structure. Quantum
fluctuations associated to the zero-point lattice motion are responsible for an
uncertainty of the Fermi energy of the order of the Fermi energy itself,
leading to the breakdown of the adiabatic principle underlying the
Born-Oppenheimer approximation in MgB even if , where are the characteristic phonon
frequencies. This amounts to a new nonadiabatic regime, which could be relevant
to other unconventional superconductors.Comment: to appear on Physical Review
Properties of the Charmed P-wave Mesons
Two broad charmed mesons, the D_0^* and D_1', have recently been observed. We
examine the quark model predictions for the D_0^* and D_1' properties and
discuss experimental measurements that can shed light on them. We find that
these states are well described as the broad, j=1/2 non-strange charmed P-wave
mesons. Understanding the D_0^* and D_1' states can provide important insights
into the D_{sJ}^*(2317), D_{sJ}(2460) states whose unexpected properties have
led to renewed interest in hadron spectroscopy.Comment: 7 pages. Some additional discussion and reference
Deterministic creation, pinning, and manipulation of quantized vortices in a Bose-Einstein condensate
We experimentally and numerically demonstrate deterministic creation and
manipulation of a pair of oppositely charged singly quantized vortices in a
highly oblate Bose-Einstein condensate (BEC). Two identical blue-detuned,
focused Gaussian laser beams that pierce the BEC serve as repulsive obstacles
for the superfluid atomic gas; by controlling the positions of the beams within
the plane of the BEC, superfluid flow is deterministically established around
each beam such that two vortices of opposite circulation are generated by the
motion of the beams, with each vortex pinned to the \emph{in situ} position of
a laser beam. We study the vortex creation process, and show that the vortices
can be moved about within the BEC by translating the positions of the laser
beams. This technique can serve as a building block in future experimental
techniques to create, on-demand, deterministic arrangements of few or many
vortices within a BEC for precise studies of vortex dynamics and vortex
interactions.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Identification of dividing, determined sensory neuron precursors in the mammalian neural crest
Sensory and autonomic neurons of the vertebrate peripheral nervous system are derived from the neural crest. Here we use the expression of lineage-specific transcription factors as a means to identify neuronal subtypes that develop in rat neural crest cultures grown in a defined medium. Sensory neurons, identified by expression of the POU-domain transcription factor Brn-3.0, develop from dividing precursors that differentiate within 2 days following emigration from the neural tube. Most of these precursors generate sensory neurons even when challenged with BMP2, a factor that induces autonomic neurogenesis in many other cells in the explants. Moreover, BMP2 fails to prevent expression of the sensory-specific basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) transcription factors neurogenin1, neurogenin2 and neuroD, although it induces expression of the autonomic-specific bHLH factor MASH1 and the paired homeodomain factor Phox2a in other cells. These data suggest that there are mitotically active precursors in the mammalian neural crest that can generate sensory neurons even in the presence of a strong autonomic-inducing cue. Further characterization of the neurons generated from such precursors indicates that, under these culture conditions, they exhibit a proprioceptive and/or mechanosensory, but not nociceptive, phenotype. Such precursors may therefore correspond to a lineally (Frank, E. and Sanes, J. (1991) Development 111, 895-908) and genetically (Ma, Q., Fode, C., Guillemot, F. and Anderson, D. J. (1999) Genes Dev. 13, in press) distinct subset of early-differentiating precursors of large-diameter sensory neurons identified in vivo
Triangleland. I. Classical dynamics with exchange of relative angular momentum
In Euclidean relational particle mechanics, only relative times, relative
angles and relative separations are meaningful. Barbour--Bertotti (1982) theory
is of this form and can be viewed as a recovery of (a portion of) Newtonian
mechanics from relational premises. This is of interest in the absolute versus
relative motion debate and also shares a number of features with the
geometrodynamical formulation of general relativity, making it suitable for
some modelling of the problem of time in quantum gravity. I also study
similarity relational particle mechanics (`dynamics of pure shape'), in which
only relative times, relative angles and {\sl ratios of} relative separations
are meaningful. This I consider firstly as it is simpler, particularly in 1 and
2 d, for which the configuration space geometry turns out to be well-known,
e.g. S^2 for the `triangleland' (3-particle) case that I consider in detail.
Secondly, the similarity model occurs as a sub-model within the Euclidean
model: that admits a shape--scale split. For harmonic oscillator like
potentials, similarity triangleland model turns out to have the same
mathematics as a family of rigid rotor problems, while the Euclidean case turns
out to have parallels with the Kepler--Coulomb problem in spherical and
parabolic coordinates. Previous work on relational mechanics covered cases
where the constituent subsystems do not exchange relative angular momentum,
which is a simplifying (but in some ways undesirable) feature paralleling
centrality in ordinary mechanics. In this paper I lift this restriction. In
each case I reduce the relational problem to a standard one, thus obtain
various exact, asymptotic and numerical solutions, and then recast these into
the original mechanical variables for physical interpretation.Comment: Journal Reference added, minor updates to References and Figure
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