60,759 research outputs found
Decoding mode-mixing in black-hole merger ringdown
Optimal extraction of information from gravitational-wave observations of
binary black-hole coalescences requires detailed knowledge of the waveforms.
Current approaches for representing waveform information are based on
spin-weighted spherical harmonic decomposition. Higher-order harmonic modes
carrying a few percent of the total power output near merger can supply
information critical to determining intrinsic and extrinsic parameters of the
binary. One obstacle to constructing a full multi-mode template of merger
waveforms is the apparently complicated behavior of some of these modes;
instead of settling down to a simple quasinormal frequency with decaying
amplitude, some modes show periodic bumps characteristic of
mode-mixing. We analyze the strongest of these modes -- the anomalous
harmonic mode -- measured in a set of binary black-hole merger waveform
simulations, and show that to leading order, they are due to a mismatch between
the spherical harmonic basis used for extraction in 3D numerical relativity
simulations, and the spheroidal harmonics adapted to the perturbation theory of
Kerr black holes. Other causes of mode-mixing arising from gauge ambiguities
and physical properties of the quasinormal ringdown modes are also considered
and found to be small for the waveforms studied here.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables; new version has improved Figs. 1-3,
consistent labelling of simulations between Tables I & II,
additional/corrected references, and extra hyphen
Air speed and attitude probe
An air speed and attitude probe characterized by a pivot shaft normally projected from a data boom and supported thereby for rotation about an axis of rotation coincident with the longitudinal axis of the shaft is described. The probe is a tubular body supported for angular displacement about the axis of rotation and has a fin mounted on the body for maintaining one end of the body in facing relation with relative wind and has a pair of transducers mounted in the body for providing intelligence indicative of total pressure and static pressure for use in determining air speed. A stack of potentiometers coupled with the shaft to provide intelligence indicative of aircraft attitude, and circuitry connecting the transducers and potentiometers to suitable telemetry circuits are described
Approximate solutions for the single soliton in a Skyrmion-type model with a dilaton scalar field
We consider the analytical properties of the single-soliton solution in a
Skyrmion-type Lagrangian that incorporates the scaling properties of quantum
chromodynamics (QCD) through the coupling of the chiral field to a scalar field
interpreted as a bound state of gluons. The model was proposed in previous
works to describe the Goldstone pions in a dense medium, being also useful for
studying the properties of nuclear matter and the in-medium properties of
mesons and nucleons. Guided by an asymptotic analysis of the Euler-Lagrange
equations, we propose approximate analytical representations for the single
soliton solution in terms of rational approximants exponentially localized.
Following the Pad\'e method, we construct a sequence of approximants from the
exact power series solutions near the origin. We find that the convergence of
the approximate representations to the numerical solutions is considerably
improved by taking the expansion coefficients as free parameters and then
minimizing the mass of the Skyrmion using our ans\"atze for the fields. We also
perform an analysis of convergence by computation of physical quantities
showing that the proposed analytical representations are very useful useful for
phenomenological calculations.Comment: 13 pages, 3 eps figures, version to be published in Phys.Rev.
Notes from the 3rd Axion Strategy Meeting
In this note we briefly summarize the main future targets and strategies for
axion and general low energy particle physics identified in the "3rd axion
strategy meeting" held during the AXIONS 2010 workshop. This summary follows a
wide discussion with contributions from many of the workshop attendees.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Structure of a linear array of hollow vortices of finite cross-section
Free-streamline theory is employed to construct an exact steady solution for a linear array of hollow, or stagnant cored, vortices in an inviscid incompressible fluid. If each vortex has area A and the separation is L, there are two possible shapes if A[1/2]/L is less than a critical value 0.38 and none if it is larger. The stability of the shapes to two-dimensional, periodic and symmetric disturbances is considered for hollow vortices. The more deformed of the two possible shapes is found to be unstable while the less deformed shape is stable
CONFINEMENT IN RELATIVISTIC POTENTIAL MODELS
In relativistic potential models of quarkonia based on a Dirac-type of
equation with a local potential there is a sharp distinction between a linear
potential V which is vector-like and one which is scalar-like: There are
normalizable solutions for a scalar-like V but not for a vector-like V. It is
pointed out that if instead one uses an equation of the no-pair type, which is
more natural from the viewpoint of field theory, this somewhat bizarre
difference disappears.Comment: LaTeX, 4 page
Ignition of binary alloys of uranium
Experiments determine the effect of alloying additives on the ignition of uranium. Data on oxidation rates, ignition temperatures, and burning curves are provided in the report
Graphics and composite material computer program enhancements for SPAR
User documentation is provided for additional computer programs developed for use in conjunction with SPAR. These programs plot digital data, simplify input for composite material section properties, and compute lamina stresses and strains. Sample problems are presented including execution procedures, program input, and graphical output
Improved Time-Domain Accuracy Standards for Model Gravitational Waveforms
Model gravitational waveforms must be accurate enough to be useful for
detection of signals and measurement of their parameters, so appropriate
accuracy standards are needed. Yet these standards should not be unnecessarily
restrictive, making them impractical for the numerical and analytical modelers
to meet. The work of Lindblom, Owen, and Brown [Phys. Rev. D 78, 124020 (2008)]
is extended by deriving new waveform accuracy standards which are significantly
less restrictive while still ensuring the quality needed for gravitational-wave
data analysis. These new standards are formulated as bounds on certain norms of
the time-domain waveform errors, which makes it possible to enforce them in
situations where frequency-domain errors may be difficult or impossible to
estimate reliably. These standards are less restrictive by about a factor of 20
than the previously published time-domain standards for detection, and up to a
factor of 60 for measurement. These new standards should therefore be much
easier to use effectively.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
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