30,109 research outputs found
Bounce and cyclic cosmology in extended nonlinear massive gravity
We investigate non-singular bounce and cyclic cosmological evolutions in a
universe governed by the extended nonlinear massive gravity, in which the
graviton mass is promoted to a scalar-field potential. The extra freedom of the
theory can lead to certain energy conditions violations and drive cyclicity
with two different mechanisms: either with a suitably chosen scalar-field
potential under a given Stuckelberg-scalar function, or with a suitably chosen
Stuckelberg-scalar function under a given scalar-field potential. Our analysis
shows that extended nonlinear massive gravity can alter significantly the
evolution of the universe at both early and late times.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, version published at JCA
Testing the Lorentz and CPT Symmetry with CMB polarizations and a non-relativistic Maxwell Theory
We present a model for a system involving a photon gauge field and a scalar
field at quantum criticality in the frame of a Lifthitz-type non-relativistic
Maxwell theory. We will show this model gives rise to Lorentz and CPT violation
which leads to a frequency-dependent rotation of polarization plane of
radiations, and so leaves potential signals on the cosmic microwave background
temperature and polarization anisotropies.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, accepted on JCAP, a few references adde
Cyclic cosmology from Lagrange-multiplier modified gravity
We investigate cyclic and singularity-free evolutions in a universe governed
by Lagrange-multiplier modified gravity, either in scalar-field cosmology, as
well as in one. In the scalar case, cyclicity can be induced by a
suitably reconstructed simple potential, and the matter content of the universe
can be successfully incorporated. In the case of -gravity, cyclicity can
be induced by a suitable reconstructed second function of a very
simple form, however the matter evolution cannot be analytically handled.
Furthermore, we study the evolution of cosmological perturbations for the two
scenarios. For the scalar case the system possesses no wavelike modes due to a
dust-like sound speed, while for the case there exist an oscillation
mode of perturbations which indicates a dynamical degree of freedom. Both
scenarios allow for stable parameter spaces of cosmological perturbations
through the bouncing point.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, references added, accepted for publicatio
Exotic phases of interacting p-band bosons
We study a model of interacting bosons that occupy the first excited p-band
states of a two-dimensional optical lattice. In contrast to the much studied
single band Bose-Hubbard Hamiltonian, this more complex model allows for
non-trivial superfluid phases associated with condensation at non-zero momentum
and staggered order of the orbital angular momentum in addition to the
superfluid-Mott insulator transition. More specifically, we observe staggered
orbital angular momentum order in the Mott phase at commensurate filling and
superfluidity at all densities. We also observe a transition between the
staggered angular momentum superfluid phase and a striped superfluid, with an
alternation of the phase of the superfluid along one direction. The transition
between these two phases was observed in a recent experiment, which is then
qualitatively well described by our model.Comment: 8 pages, 12 figure
Thermodynamic of the Ghost Dark Energy Universe
Recently, the vacuum energy of the QCD ghost in a time-dependent background
is proposed as a kind of dark energy candidate to explain the acceleration of
the Universe. In this model, the energy density of the dark energy is
proportional to the Hubble parameter , which is the Hawking temperature on
the Hubble horizon of the Friedmann-Robertson-Walker (FRW) Universe. In this
paper, we generalized this model and choice the Hawking temperature on the
so-called trapping horizon, which will coincides with the Hubble temperature in
the context of flat FRW Universe dominated by the dark energy component. We
study the thermodynamics of Universe with this kind of dark energy and find
that the entropy-area relation is modified, namely, there is an another new
term besides the area term.Comment: 8 pages, no figure
Microscopic and Macroscopic Signatures of Antiferromagnetic Domain Walls
Magnetotransport measurements on small single crystals of Cr, the elemental
antiferromagnet, reveal the hysteretic thermodynamics of the domain structure.
The temperature dependence of the transport coefficients is directly correlated
with the real-space evolution of the domain configuration as recorded by x-ray
microprobe imaging, revealing the effect of antiferromagnetic domain walls on
electron transport. A single antiferromagnetic domain wall interface resistance
is deduced to be of order at a
temperature of 100 K.Comment: 3 color figure
Parton Distributions at Hadronization from Bulk Dense Matter Produced at RHIC
We present an analysis of , , and spectra from
Au+Au collisions at GeV in terms of distributions of
effective constituent quarks at hadronization. Consistency in quark ratios
derived from various hadron spectra provides clear evidence for hadron
formation dynamics as suggested by quark coalescence or recombination models.
We argue that the constituent quark distribution reflects properties of the
effective partonic degrees of freedom at hadronization. Experimental data
indicate that strange quarks have a transverse momentum distribution flatter
than that of up/down quarks consistent with hydrodynamic expansion in partonic
phase prior to hadronization. After the AMPT model is tuned to reproduce the
strange and up/down quark distributions, the model can describe the measured
spectra of hyperons and mesons very well where hadrons are formed
through dynamical coalescence.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, two more paragraph added to address the referee's
comment, figure updated to include the KET scale. Accepted version to appear
in Phys. Rev.
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Prediction of the post-fire flexural capacity of RC beam using GA-BPNN Machine Learning
To accurately predict the flexural capacity of post-fire RC beams is imperative for fire safety design. In this paper, the residual flexural capacity of post-fire RC beams is predicted based on a back-propagation (BP) neural network (NN) optimized by a genetic algorithm (GA). First, the temperature distribution of the beams was determined using the finite element analysis software ABAQUS, and the strength reduction factor of materials was determined. The flexural capacity of the RC beams after fire is calculated by the flexural strength reduction calculation model. The model is used to generate the training data for the NN. To enable machine learning, 480 datasets are produced, of which 360 datasets are used to train the network; the remaining 120 datasets are used to test the network. The predictive models are constructed using BPNN and GA-BPNN respectively. The prediction accuracy is evaluated by comparing the predicted values and the target values. The comparison shows that the GA-BPNN has a faster convergence speed, higher stability, and can reach the goal more times, reducing the possibility of BPNN falling into the local optimum and achieving the global optimum. The proposed GA-BPNN model for predicting the flexural capacity of post-fire RC beams provides a new approach for design practice
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