1,007 research outputs found
Generic description of CMB power spectra
Taking advantage of the smoothness of CMB Cl power spectra, we derive a
simple and model-independent parameterization of their measurement. It allows
to describe completely the spectrum, ie. provide an estimate of the value and
the error for any real l point at the percent level, down to low l multipole.
We provide this parameterization for WMAP first year data and show that the
spectrum is consistent with the smoothness hypothesis. We also show how such a
parameterization allows to retrieve the Cl spectra from the measurement of
Fourier rings on the sky (Gamma(m)) or from the angular correlation function
(c(theta)
Does the speed of light depend upon the vacuum ?
We propose a quantum model for the vacuum filled of virtual particle pairs.
The main originality of this model is to define a density and a life-time of
the virtual particles. Compared to the usual QED framework, we add here
the space time parameters. We show how and
originate from the polarization and the magnetization of these virtual pairs
when the vacuum is stressed by an electrostatic or magnetostatic field
respectively. We obtain numerical values very close to the measured values. The
exact equalities constraint the free parameters of our vacuum model. Then we
show that if we simply model the propagation of a photon in vacuum as a
succession of transient captures with virtual pairs, we can derive a finite
velocity of the photon with a magnitude close to the measured speed of light
. Again this is the occasion to adjust better our vacuum model. Since the
transit time of a photon is a statistical process we expect it to be
fluctuating and this translates into a fluctuation of which, if measured,
would bring another piece of information on the vacuum.
When submitted to a stress the vacuum may change and this will induce a
variation in the electromagnetic constants. We show this to be the case around
a gravitational mass. It gives a physical interpretation of a varying vacuum
refractive index equivalent to the curved space-time in General Relativity. The
known measurements of the deflection of light by a mass, the Shapiro delay and
the gravitational redshift do bring constraints on the way inertial masses
should depend upon the vacuum.
At last some experimental predictions are proposed.Comment: 25 page
Almost clean rings and arithmetical rings
It is shown that a commutative B\'ezout ring with compact minimal prime
spectrum is an elementary divisor ring if and only if so is for each
minimal prime ideal . This result is obtained by using the quotient space
of the prime spectrum of the ring modulo the equivalence
generated by the inclusion. When every prime ideal contains only one minimal
prime, for instance if is arithmetical, is Hausdorff and
there is a bijection between this quotient space and the minimal prime spectrum
, which is a homeomorphism if and only if is
compact. If is a closed point of , there is a pure ideal
such that . If is almost clean, i.e. each element is the
sum of a regular element with an idempotent, it is shown that is totally disconnected and, , is
almost clean; the converse holds if every principal ideal is finitely
presented. Some questions posed by Facchini and Faith at the second
International Fez Conference on Commutative Ring Theory in 1995, are also
investigated. If is a commutative ring for which the ring of
quotients of is an IF-ring for each proper ideal , it is proved that
is a strongly discrete valuation ring for each maximal ideal and
is semicoherent for each proper ideal
A mechanism giving a finite value to the speed of light, and some experimental consequences
We admit that the vacuum is not empty but is filled with continuously
appearing and disappearing virtual fermion pairs. We show that if we simply
model the propagation of the photon in vacuum as a series of transient captures
within the virtual pairs, we can derive the finite light velocity as the
average delay on the photon propagation. We then show that the vacuum
permittivity and permeability originate from the
polarization and the magnetization of the virtual fermions pairs. Since the
transit time of a photon is a statistical process within this model, we expect
it to be fluctuating. We discuss experimental tests of this prediction. We also
study vacuum saturation effects under high photon density conditions.Comment: Submitted to International Journal of Modern Physics A. arXiv admin
note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1106.399
Relieving tensions related to the lensing of CMB temperature power spectra
The angular power spectra of the cosmic microwave background (CMB)
temperature anisotropies reconstructed from Planck data seem to present too
much gravitational lensing distortion. This is quantified by the control
parameter that should be compatible with unity for a standard cosmology.
With the Class Boltzmann solver and the profile-likelihood method, for this
parameter we measure a 2.6 shift from 1 using the Planck public
likelihoods. We show that, owing to strong correlations with the reionization
optical depth and the primordial perturbation amplitude , a
tension on also appears between the results obtained with
the low () and high () multipoles
likelihoods. With Hillipop, another high- likelihood built from Planck
data, this difference is lowered to . In this case, the value
is still in disagreement with unity by , suggesting a non-trivial
effect of the correlations between cosmological and nuisance parameters. To
better constrain the nuisance foregrounds parameters, we include the very high
measurements of the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) and South Pole
Telescope (SPT) experiments and obtain . The
Hillipop+ACT+SPT likelihood estimate of the optical depth is
which is now fully compatible with the low
likelihood determination. After showing the robustness of our results with
various combinations, we investigate the reasons for this improvement that
results from a better determination of the whole set of foregrounds parameters.
We finally provide estimates of the CDM parameters with our combined
CMB data likelihood.Comment: accepted by A&
About the connection between the power spectrum of the Cosmic Microwave Background and the Fourier spectrum of rings on the sky
In this article we present and study a scaling law of the CMB
Fourier spectrum on rings which allows us (i) to combine spectra corresponding
to different colatitude angles (e.g. several detectors at the focal plane of a
telescope), and (ii) to recover the power spectrum once the
coefficients have been measured. This recovery is performed numerically below
the 1% level for colatitudes degrees. In addition, taking
advantage of the smoothness of the and of the , we provide
analytical expressions which allow to recover one of the spectrum at the 1%
level, the other one being known.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
On the Link Between Strongly Connected Iteration Graphs and Chaotic Boolean Discrete-Time Dynamical Systems
Chaotic functions are characterized by sensitivity to initial conditions,
transitivity, and regularity. Providing new functions with such properties is a
real challenge. This work shows that one can associate with any Boolean network
a continuous function, whose discrete-time iterations are chaotic if and only
if the iteration graph of the Boolean network is strongly connected. Then,
sufficient conditions for this strong connectivity are expressed on the
interaction graph of this network, leading to a constructive method of chaotic
function computation. The whole approach is evaluated in the chaos-based
pseudo-random number generation context
HFI L2 DPC destripping and mapmaking modules
PoS(CMB2006)049International audienceThe data processing of the data from the High Frequency Instrument (HFI) of the Planck mission will use several modules. Destriping is expected to play a central role in the mapmaking stage. This paper outlines two existing HFI l2 DPC destriping modules together with estimations of their performances. MOKAPIX is a temperature data destriping tool based on scanning redundancies on the sky. We have developped another modules, BOGOPIX , based on the same philosophy, to perform simultaneously destriping and relative intercalibration
Destriping of Polarized Data in a CMB Mission with a Circular Scanning Strategy
A major problem in Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) anisotropy mapping, especially in a total-power mode, is the presence of low-frequency noise in the data streams. If unproperly processed, such low-frequency noise leads to striping in the maps. To deal with this problem, solutions have already been found for mapping the CMB temperature fluctuations but no solution has yet been proposed for the measurement of CMB polarization. Complications arise due to the scan-dependent orientation of the measured polarization. In this paper, we investigate a method for building temperature and polarization maps free of striping effects in the case of a circular scanning strategy mission such as that of the Planck satellite
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