15,573 research outputs found
Spacetime algebraic skeleton
The cosmological constant Lambda, which has seemingly dominated the primaeval
Universe evolution and to which recent data attribute a significant
present-time value, is shown to have an algebraic content: it is essentially an
eigenvalue of a Casimir invariant of the Lorentz group which acts on every
tangent space. This is found in the context of de Sitter spacetimes but, as
every spacetime is a 4-manifold with Minkowski tangent spaces, the result
suggests the existence of a "skeleton" algebraic structure underlying the
geometry of general physical spacetimes. Different spacetimes come from the
"fleshening" of that structure by different tetrad fields. Tetrad fields, which
provide the interface between spacetime proper and its tangent spaces, exhibit
to the most the fundamental role of the Lorentz group in Riemannian spacetimes,
a role which is obscured in the more usual metric formalism.Comment: 13 page
Fundamental Plane of Sunyaev-Zeldovich clusters
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) cluster surveys are considered among the most
promising methods for probing dark energy up to large redshifts. However, their
premise is hinged upon an accurate mass-observable relationship, which could be
affected by the (rather poorly understood) physics of the intracluster gas. In
this letter, using a semi-analytic model of the intracluster gas that
accommodates various theoretical uncertainties, I develop a Fundamental Plane
relationship between the observed size, thermal energy, and mass of galaxy
clusters. In particular, I find that M ~ (Y_{SZ}/R_{SZ,2})^{3/4}, where M is
the mass, Y_{SZ} is the total SZ flux or thermal energy, and R_{SZ,2} is the SZ
half-light radius of the cluster. I first show that, within this model, using
the Fundamental Plane relationship reduces the (systematic+random) errors in
mass estimates to 14%, from 22% for a simple mass-flux relationship. Since
measurement of the cluster sizes is an inevitable part of observing the SZ
clusters, the Fundamental Plane relationship can be used to reduce the error of
the cluster mass estimates by ~ 34%, improving the accuracy of the resulting
cosmological constraints without any extra cost. I then argue why our
Fundamental Plane is distinctly different from the virial relationship that one
may naively expect between the cluster parameters. Finally, I argue that while
including more details of the observed SZ profile cannot significantly improve
the accuracy of mass estimates, a better understanding of the impact of
non-gravitational heating/cooling processes on the outskirts of the
intracluster medium (apart from external calibrations) might be the best way to
reduce these errors.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, added an analytic derivation of the Fundametal
Plane relation (which is distinctly different from the virial relation),
submitted to Ap
A Statistical Strategy for the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect's Cluster Data
We present a statistical strategy for the efficient determination of the
cluster luminosity function from the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) effects survey. To
determine the cluster luminosity function from the noise contaminated SZ map,
we first define the zeroth-order cluster luminosity function as a discrepancy
between the measured peak number density of the SZ map and the mean number
density of noise. Then we demonstrate that the noise contamination effects can
be removed by the stabilized deconvolution of the zeroth-order cluster
luminosity function with the one-dimensional Gaussian distribution. We test
this analysis technique against Monte-Carlo simulations, and find that it works
quite well especially in the medium amplitude range where the conventional
cluster identification method based on the threshold cut-off usually fails.Comment: final version, accepted by ApJ Letter
Topics in Born-Infeld Electrodynamics
Classical version of Born-Infeld electrodynamics is recalled and its most
important properties discussed. Then we analyze possible abelian and
non-abelian generalizations of this theory, and show how certain soliton-like
configurations can be obtained. The relationship with the Standard Model of
electroweak interactions is also mentioned.Comment: (One new reference added). 15 pages, LaTeX. To be published in the
Proceedings of XXXVII Karpacz Winter School edited in the Proceedings Series
of American Mathematical Society, editors J. Lukierski and J. Rembielinsk
Closed Expressions for Lie Algebra Invariants and Finite Transformations
A simple procedure to obtain complete, closed expressions for Lie algebra
invariants is presented. The invariants are ultimately polynomials in the group
parameters. The construction of finite group elements require the use of
projectors, whose coefficients are invariant polynomials. The detailed general
forms of these projectors are given. Closed expressions for finite Lorentz
transformations, both homogeneous and inhomogeneous, as well as for Galilei
transformations, are found as examples.Comment: 34 pages, ps file, no figure
Kinematics of a Spacetime with an Infinite Cosmological Constant
A solution of the sourceless Einstein's equation with an infinite value for
the cosmological constant \Lambda is discussed by using Inonu-Wigner
contractions of the de Sitter groups and spaces. When \Lambda --> infinity,
spacetime becomes a four-dimensional cone, dual to Minkowski space by a
spacetime inversion. This inversion relates the four-cone vertex to the
infinity of Minkowski space, and the four-cone infinity to the Minkowski
light-cone. The non-relativistic limit c --> infinity is further considered,
the kinematical group in this case being a modified Galilei group in which the
space and time translations are replaced by the non-relativistic limits of the
corresponding proper conformal transformations. This group presents the same
abstract Lie algebra as the Galilei group and can be named the conformal
Galilei group. The results may be of interest to the early Universe Cosmology.Comment: RevTex, 7 pages, no figures. Presentation changes, including a new
Title. Version to appear in Found. Phys. Let
Cosmic microwave background constraints on the epoch of reionization
We use a compilation of cosmic microwave anisotropy data to constrain the
epoch of reionization in the Universe, as a function of cosmological
parameters. We consider spatially-flat cosmologies, varying the matter density
(the flatness being restored by a cosmological constant), the Hubble
parameter and the spectral index of the primordial power spectrum. Our
results are quoted both in terms of the maximum permitted optical depth to the
last-scattering surface, and in terms of the highest allowed reionization
redshift assuming instantaneous reionization. For critical-density models,
significantly-tilted power spectra are excluded as they cannot fit the current
data for any amount of reionization, and even scale-invariant models must have
an optical depth to last scattering of below 0.3. For the currently-favoured
low-density model with and a cosmological constant, the
earliest reionization permitted to occur is at around redshift 35, which
roughly coincides with the highest estimate in the literature. We provide
general fitting functions for the maximum permitted optical depth, as a
function of cosmological parameters. We do not consider the inclusion of tensor
perturbations, but if present they would strengthen the upper limits we quote.Comment: 9 pages LaTeX file with ten figures incorporated (uses mn.sty and
epsf). Corrects some equation typos, superseding published versio
Network conduciveness with application to the graph-coloring and independent-set optimization transitions
We introduce the notion of a network's conduciveness, a probabilistically
interpretable measure of how the network's structure allows it to be conducive
to roaming agents, in certain conditions, from one portion of the network to
another. We exemplify its use through an application to the two problems in
combinatorial optimization that, given an undirected graph, ask that its
so-called chromatic and independence numbers be found. Though NP-hard, when
solved on sequences of expanding random graphs there appear marked transitions
at which optimal solutions can be obtained substantially more easily than right
before them. We demonstrate that these phenomena can be understood by resorting
to the network that represents the solution space of the problems for each
graph and examining its conduciveness between the non-optimal solutions and the
optimal ones. At the said transitions, this network becomes strikingly more
conducive in the direction of the optimal solutions than it was just before
them, while at the same time becoming less conducive in the opposite direction.
We believe that, besides becoming useful also in other areas in which network
theory has a role to play, network conduciveness may become instrumental in
helping clarify further issues related to NP-hardness that remain poorly
understood
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