5,743 research outputs found
How BAO measurements can fail to detect quintessence
We model the nonlinear growth of cosmic structure in different dark energy
models, using large volume N-body simulations. We consider a range of
quintessence models which feature both rapidly and slowly varying dark energy
equations of state, and compare the growth of structure to that in a universe
with a cosmological constant. The adoption of a quintessence model changes the
expansion history of the universe, the form of the linear theory power spectrum
and can alter key observables, such as the horizon scale and the distance to
last scattering. The difference in structure formation can be explained to
first order by the difference in growth factor at a given epoch; this scaling
also accounts for the nonlinear growth at the 15% level. We find that
quintessence models which feature late , rapid transitions towards
in the equation of state, can have identical baryonic acoustic
oscillation (BAO) peak positions to those in CDM, despite being very
different from CDM both today and at high redshifts .
We find that a second class of models which feature non-negligible amounts of
dark energy at early times cannot be distinguished from CDM using
measurements of the mass function or the BAO. These results highlight the need
to accurately model quintessence dark energy in N-body simulations when testing
cosmological probes of dynamical dark energy.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, to appear in the Invisible Univers International
Conference AIP proceedings serie
Single plane minimal tomography of double slit qubits
The determination of the density matrix of an ensemble of identically
prepared quantum systems by performing a series of measurements, known as
quantum tomography, is minimal when the number of outcomes is minimal. The most
accurate minimal quantum tomography of qubits, sometimes called a tetrahedron
measurement, corresponds to projections over four states which can be
represented on the Bloch sphere as the vertices of a regular tetrahedron. We
investigate whether it is possible to implement the tetrahedron measurement of
double slit qubits of light, using measurements performed on a single plane.
Assuming Gaussian slits and free propagation, we demonstrate that a judicious
choice of the detection plane and the double slit geometry allows the
implementation of a tetrahedron measurement. Finally, we consider possible sets
of values which could be used in actual experiments.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figure
Status of superpressure balloon technology in the United States
Superpressure mylar balloon technology in United States - applications, balloon size criteria, and possible improvement
On the existence of certain axisymmetric interior metrics
One of the effects of noncommutative coordinate operators is that the
delta-function connected to the quantum mechanical amplitude between states
sharp to the position operator gets smeared by a Gaussian distribution.
Although this is not the full account of effects of noncommutativity, this
effect is in particular important, as it removes the point singularities of
Schwarzschild and Reissner-Nordstr\"{o}m solutions. In this context, it seems
to be of some importance to probe also into ring-like singularities which
appear in the Kerr case. In particular, starting with an anisotropic
energy-momentum tensor and a general axisymmetric ansatz of the metric together
with an arbitrary mass distribution (e.g. Gaussian) we derive the full set of
Einstein equations that the Noncommutative Geometry inspired Kerr solution
should satisfy. Using these equations we prove two theorems regarding the
existence of certain Kerr metrics inspired by Noncommutative Geometry.Comment: 27 pages, accepted for publication in Journal of Mathematical Physic
Well-posedness and stability results for the Gardner equation
In this article we present local well-posedness results in the classical
Sobolev space H^s(R) with s > 1/4 for the Cauchy problem of the Gardner
equation, overcoming the problem of the loss of the scaling property of this
equation. We also cover the energy space H^1(R) where global well-posedness
follows from the conservation laws of the system. Moreover, we construct
solitons of the Gardner equation explicitly and prove that, under certain
conditions, this family is orbitally stable in the energy space.Comment: 1 figure. Accepted for publication in Nonlin.Diff Eq.and App
Direct measurement of the 14N(p,g)15O S-factor
We have measured the 14N(p,g)15O excitation function for energies in the
range E_p = 155--524 keV. Fits of these data using R-matrix theory yield a
value for the S-factor at zero energy of 1.64(17) keV b, which is significantly
smaller than the result of a previous direct measurement. The corresponding
reduction in the stellar reaction rate for 14N(p,g)15O has a number of
interesting consequences, including an impact on estimates for the age of the
Galaxy derived from globular clusters.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
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