1,799 research outputs found
Panphasia: a user guide
We make a very large realisation of a Gaussian white noise field, called
PANPHASIA, public by releasing software that computes this field. Panphasia is
designed specifically for setting up Gaussian initial conditions for
cosmological simulations and resimulations of structure formation. We make
available both software to compute the field itself and codes to illustrate
applications including a modified version of a public serial initial conditions
generator. We document the software and present the results of a few basic
tests of the field. The properties and method of construction of Panphasia are
described in full in a companion paper Jenkins 2013.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures. Software to calculate Panphasia is available
from: http://icc.dur.ac.uk/Panphasia.ph
Canonical Phase Space Formulation of Quasilocal General Relativity
We construct a Hamiltonian formulation of quasilocal general relativity using
an extended phase space that includes boundary coordinates as configuration
variables. This allows us to use Hamiltonian methods to derive an expression
for the energy of a non-isolated region of space-time that interacts with its
neighbourhood. This expression is found to be very similar to the Brown-York
quasilocal energy that was originally derived by Hamilton-Jacobi methods. We
examine the connection between the two formalisms and find that when the
boundary conditions for the two are harmonized, the resulting quasilocal
energies are identical.Comment: 31 pages, 2 figures, references added, typos corrected, section 3
revised for clarity, to appear in Classical and Quantum Gravit
The first law for slowly evolving horizons
We study the mechanics of Hayward's trapping horizons, taking isolated
horizons as equilibrium states. Zeroth and second laws of dynamic horizon
mechanics come from the isolated and trapping horizon formalisms respectively.
We derive a dynamical first law by introducing a new perturbative formulation
for dynamic horizons in which "slowly evolving" trapping horizons may be viewed
as perturbatively non-isolated.Comment: 4 pages, typos fixed, minor changes in wording for clarity, to appear
in PR
The European Parliament is a failed experiment in pan-European democracy – national parliaments are the key to solving the democratic deficit
Strengthening the European Parliament has often been viewed as the best method of addressing the EU’s alleged ‘democratic deficit’. Stephen Booth writes that while this perspective has led to the Parliament’s powers being increased successively over recent decades, the effect of these reforms on democratic engagement among EU citizens has been limited. He argues that boosting the role of national parliaments in the EU legislative process would offer a far better route for returning democratic accountability closer to voters
Extremality conditions for isolated and dynamical horizons
A maximally rotating Kerr black hole is said to be extremal. In this paper we
introduce the corresponding restrictions for isolated and dynamical horizons.
These reduce to the standard notions for Kerr but in general do not require the
horizon to be either stationary or rotationally symmetric. We consider physical
implications and applications of these results. In particular we introduce a
parameter e which characterizes how close a horizon is to extremality and
should be calculable in numerical simulations.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, added reference; v3 appendix added with proof of
result from section IIID, some discussion and references added. Version to
appear in PR
Expert systems for fault analysis
The initial aim of this research was to investigate the application of expert Systems, or Knowledge Base Systems technology to the automated synthesis of Hazard and Operability Studies. Due to the generic nature of Fault Analysis problems and the way in which Knowledge Base Systems work, this goal has evolved into a consideration of automated support for Fault Analysis in general, covering HAZOP, Fault Tree Analysis, FMEA and Fault Diagnosis in the Process Industries. This thesis described a proposed architecture for such an Expert System. The purpose of the System is to produce a descriptive model of faults and fault propagation from a description of the physical structure of the plant. From these descriptive models, the desired Fault Analysis may be produced. The way in which this is done reflects the complexity of the problem which, in principle, encompasses the whole of the discipline of Process Engineering. An attempt is made to incorporate the perceived method that an expert uses to solve the problem; keywords, heuristics and guidelines from techniques such as HAZOP and Fault Tree Synthesis are used. In a truly Expert System, the performance of the system is strongly dependent on the high quality of the knowledge that is incorporated. This expert knowledge takes the form of heuristics or rules of thumb which are used in problem solving. This research has shown that, for the application of fault analysis heuristics, it is necessary to have a representation of the details of fault propagation within a process. This helps to ensure the robustness of the system - a gradual rather than abrupt degradation at the boundaries of the domain knowledge
Isolated, slowly evolving, and dynamical trapping horizons: geometry and mechanics from surface deformations
We study the geometry and dynamics of both isolated and dynamical trapping
horizons by considering the allowed variations of their foliating two-surfaces.
This provides a common framework that may be used to consider both their
possible evolutions and their deformations as well as derive the well-known
flux laws. Using this framework, we unify much of what is already known about
these objects as well as derive some new results. In particular we characterize
and study the "almost-isolated" trapping horizons known as slowly evolving
horizons. It is for these horizons that a dynamical first law holds and this is
analogous and closely related to the Hawking-Hartle formula for event horizons.Comment: 39 pages, 6 figures, version to appear in PRD : a few minor changes
and many typos corrected in equation
Embodied Resilience: Supervising/Mentoring during a Time of COVID-19, Black Lives Matter, and Climate Change
The authors take on the task of addressing three of the most significant issues in our society today and how one functions as a mentor and supervisor
- …