38,402 research outputs found
Systematic Errors in Future Weak Lensing Surveys: Requirements and Prospects for Self-Calibration
We study the impact of systematic errors on planned weak lensing surveys and
compute the requirements on their contributions so that they are not a dominant
source of the cosmological parameter error budget. The generic types of error
we consider are multiplicative and additive errors in measurements of shear, as
well as photometric redshift errors. In general, more powerful surveys have
stronger systematic requirements. For example, for a SNAP-type survey the
multiplicative error in shear needs to be smaller than 1%(fsky/0.025)^{-1/2} of
the mean shear in any given redshift bin, while the centroids of photometric
redshift bins need to be known to better than 0.003(fsky/0.025)^{-1/2}. With
about a factor of two degradation in cosmological parameter errors, future
surveys can enter a self-calibration regime, where the mean systematic biases
are self-consistently determined from the survey and only higher-order moments
of the systematics contribute. Interestingly, once the power spectrum
measurements are combined with the bispectrum, the self-calibration regime in
the variation of the equation of state of dark energy w_a is attained with only
a 20-30% error degradation.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, to be submitted to MNRAS. Comments are welcom
A Simple Method for Computing the Non-Linear Mass Correlation Function with Implications for Stable Clustering
We propose a simple and accurate method for computing analytically the mass
correlation function for cold dark matter and scale-free models that fits
N-body simulations over a range that extends from the linear to the strongly
non-linear regime. The method, based on the dynamical evolution of the pair
conservation equation, relies on a universal relation between the pair-wise
velocity and the smoothed correlation function valid for high and low density
models, as derived empirically from N-body simulations. An intriguing
alternative relation, based on the stable-clustering hypothesis, predicts a
power-law behavior of the mass correlation function that disagrees with N-body
simulations but conforms well to the observed galaxy correlation function if
negligible bias is assumed. The method is a useful tool for rapidly exploring a
wide span of models and, at the same time, raises new questions about large
scale structure formation.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
Suicide ideation among nursing home residents in the US: conceptual issues and the international context
Invited perspective for the American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatr
Logarithmic temperature dependence of conductivity at half-integer filling factors: Evidence for interaction between composite fermions
We have studied the temperature dependence of diagonal conductivity in
high-mobility two-dimensional samples at filling factors and 3/2 at
low temperatures. We observe a logarithmic dependence on temperature, from our
lowest temperature of 13 mK up to 400 mK. We attribute the logarithmic
correction to the effects of interaction between composite fermions, analogous
to the Altshuler-Aronov type correction for electrons at zero magnetic field.
The paper is accepted for publication in Physical Review B, Rapid
Communications.Comment: uses revtex macro
Band Structure of the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect
The eigenstates of interacting electrons in the fractional quantum Hall phase
typically form fairly well defined bands in the energy space. We show that the
composite fermion theory gives insight into the origin of these bands and
provides an accurate and complete microscopic description of the strongly
correlated many-body states in the low-energy bands. Thus, somewhat like in
Landau's fermi liquid theory, there is a one-to-one correspondence between the
low energy Hilbert space of strongly interacting electrons in the fractinal
quantum Hall regime and that of weakly interacting electrons in the integer
quantum Hall regime.Comment: 10 page
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