801 research outputs found
Fourth derivative gravity in the auxiliary fields representation and application to the black hole stability
We consider an auxiliary fields formulation for the general fourth-order
gravity on an arbitrary curved background. The case of a Ricci-flat background
is elaborated in full details and it is shown that there is an equivalence with
the standard metric formulation. At the same time, using auxiliary fields helps
to make perturbations to look simpler and the results more clear. As an
application we reconsider the linear perturbations for the classical
Schwarzschild solution. We also briefly discuss the relation to the effect of
massive unphysical ghosts in the theory.Comment: 11 pages, no figure
Quantum Effects in Black Hole Interiors
The Weyl curvature inside a black hole formed in a generic collapse grows,
classically without bound, near to the inner horizon, due to partial absorption
and blueshifting of the radiative tail of the collapse. Using a spherical
model, we examine how this growth is modified by quantum effects of conformally
coupled massless fields.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure (not included), RevTe
Anomaly-Induced Effective Action and Inflation
In the early Universe matter can be described as a conformal invariant
ultra-relativistic perfect fluid, which does not contribute, on classical
level, to the evolution of the isotropic and homogeneous metric. If we suppose
that there is some desert in the particle spectrum just below the Planck mass,
then the effect of conformal trace anomaly is dominating at the corresponding
energies. With some additional constraints on the particle content of the
underlying gauge model (which favor extended or supersymmetric versions of the
Standard Model rather than the minimal one), one arrives at the stable
inflation. We review the model and report about the calculation of the
gravitational waves on the background of the anomaly-induced inflation. The
result for the perturbation spectrum is close to the one for the conventional
inflaton model, and is in agreement with the existing Cobe data (see also
[hep-th/0009197]).Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX. Contribution to the Proceedings of the EuroConference
on Frontiers in Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology, 30 September - 5 October
2000. San Feliu, Spai
Non-local density correlations as signal of Hawking radiation in BEC acoustic black holes
We have used the analogy between gravitational systems and non-homogeneous
fluid flows to calculate the density-density correlation function of an atomic
Bose-Einstein condensate in the presence of an acoustic black hole. The
emission of correlated pairs of phonons by Hawking-like process results into a
peculiar long-range density correlation. Quantitative estimations of the effect
are provided for realistic experimental configurations.Comment: Strongly revised version. 5 pages, 3 eps figure
Development of DTT single null divertor scenario
Abstract This paper focuses on scrape-off layer and divertor modelling of the medium-density single-null scenario of the Divertor Test Tokamak facility (DTT), under construction in Italy. The modelling was performed using the 2D coupled fluid-Monte Carlo code SOLEDGE2D-EIRENE. For DTT pump designing, neutral pressure at the pump aperture below the dome is calculated in deuterium-only cases as well as with impurity seeding with various puffing levels. This scenario analysis also allowed the characterization of detachment in DTT and the influence of pumping on detachment itself. Two different radiating impurities, neon and nitrogen, were tested in the high power scenario to evaluate the minimum impurity concentration required to achieve sustainable conditions at DTT divertor. The sensitivity of the model was studied by varying the impurity concentration; the model shows a hysteresis-like behaviour between the impurity influx and the total impurity content by which detachment is strongly influenced
Biases in the determination of dynamical parameters of star clusters: today and in the Gaia era
The structural and dynamical properties of star clusters are generally
derived by means of the comparison between steady-state analytic models and the
available observables. With the aim of studying the biases of this approach, we
fitted different analytic models to simulated observations obtained from a
suite of direct N-body simulations of star clusters in different stages of
their evolution and under different levels of tidal stress to derive mass, mass
function and degree of anisotropy. We find that masses can be
under/over-estimated up to 50% depending on the degree of relaxation reached by
the cluster, the available range of observed masses and distances of radial
velocity measures from the cluster center and the strength of the tidal field.
The mass function slope appears to be better constrainable and less sensitive
to model inadequacies unless strongly dynamically evolved clusters and a
non-optimal location of the measured luminosity function are considered. The
degree and the characteristics of the anisotropy developed in the N-body
simulations are not adequately reproduced by popular analytic models and can be
detected only if accurate proper motions are available. We show how to reduce
the uncertainties in the mass, mass-function and anisotropy estimation and
provide predictions for the improvements expected when Gaia proper motions will
be available in the near future.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication by MNRA
Testing Hawking particle creation by black holes through correlation measurements
Hawking's prediction of thermal radiation by black holes has been shown by
Unruh to be expected also in condensed matter systems. We show here that in a
black hole-like configuration realised in a BEC this particle creation does
indeed take place and can be unambiguously identified via a characteristic
pattern in the density-density correlations. This opens the concrete
possibility of the experimental verification of this effect.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures. Honorable mention in the 2010 GRF Essay
Competitio
Bridge over troubled gas: clusters and associations under the SMC and LMC tidal stresses
We obtained SOAR telescope B and V photometry of 14 star clusters and 2
associations in the Bridge tidal structure connecting the LMC and SMC. These
objects are used to study the formation and evolution of star clusters and
associations under tidal stresses from the Clouds. Typical star clusters in the
Bridge are not richly populated and have in general relatively large diameters
(~30-35 pc), being larger than Galactic counterparts of similar age. Ages and
other fundamental parameters are determined with field-star decontaminated
photometry. A self-consistent approach is used to derive parameters for the
most-populated sample cluster NGC 796 and two young CMD templates built with
the remaining Bridge clusters. We find that the clusters are not coeval in the
Bridge. They range from approximately a few Myr (still related to optical HII
regions and WISE and Spitzer dust emission measurements) to about 100-200 Myr.
The derived distance moduli for the Bridge objects suggests that the Bridge is
a structure connecting the LMC far-side in the East to the foreground of the
SMC to the West. Most of the present clusters are part of the tidal dwarf
candidate D 1, which is associated with an H I overdensity. We find further
evidence that the studied part of the Bridge is evolving into a tidal dwarf
galaxy, decoupling from the Bridge.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures, MNRAS, Accepted 2015 July 2
Bianchi Type I Cosmology in N=2, D=5 Supergravity
The dynamics and evolution of Bianchi type I space-times is considered in the
framework of the four-dimensional truncation of a reduced theory obtained from
the N=2,D=5 supergravity. The general solution of the gravitational field
equations can be represented in an exact parametric form. All solutions have a
singular behavior at the initial/final moment, except when the space-time
geometry reduces to the isotropic flat case. Generically the obtained
cosmological models describe an anisotropic, expanding or collapsing, singular
Universe with a non-inflationary evolution for all times.Comment: revised version to appear in PR
Desempenho agronômico de genótipos de feijão em dois níveis de investimento.
O objetivo deste trabalho foi avaliar a produtividade de grãos de cultivares de feijão em dois níveis de investimento. O maior nível de investimento, caracterizado pelo uso de maior dose de fertilizante e maior número de aplicações de fungicidas, não influenciou na produtividade de cultivares de feijão, em relação ao manejo usual
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