31,869 research outputs found
Testing a Simplified Version of Einstein's Equations for Numerical Relativity
Solving dynamical problems in general relativity requires the full machinery
of numerical relativity. Wilson has proposed a simpler but approximate scheme
for systems near equilibrium, like binary neutron stars. We test the scheme on
isolated, rapidly rotating, relativistic stars. Since these objects are in
equilibrium, it is crucial that the approximation work well if we are to
believe its predictions for more complicated systems like binaries. Our results
are very encouraging.Comment: 9 pages (RevTeX 3.0 with 6 uuencoded figures), CRSR-107
Exotic Meson Decay Widths using Lattice QCD
A decay width calculation for a hybrid exotic meson h, with JPC=1-+, is
presented for the channel h->pi+a1. This quenched lattice QCD simulation
employs Luescher's finite box method. Operators coupling to the h and pi+a1
states are used at various levels of smearing and fuzzing, and at four quark
masses. Eigenvalues of the corresponding correlation matrices yield energy
spectra that determine scattering phase shifts for a discrete set of relative
pi+a1 momenta. Although the phase shift data is sparse, fits to a Breit-Wigner
model are attempted, resulting in a decay width of about 60 MeV when averaged
over two lattice sizes.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, RevTex4, minor change to Fig.
Seeing Double at Neptune's South Pole
Keck near-infrared images of Neptune from UT 26 July 2007 show that the cloud
feature typically observed within a few degrees of Neptune's south pole had
split into a pair of bright spots. A careful determination of disk center
places the cloud centers at -89.07 +/- 0 .06 and -87.84 +/- 0.06 degrees
planetocentric latitude. If modeled as optically thick, perfectly reflecting
layers, we find the pair of features to be constrained to the troposphere, at
pressures greater than 0.4 bar. By UT 28 July 2007, images with comparable
resolution reveal only a single feature near the south pole. The changing
morphology of these circumpolar clouds suggests they may form in a region of
strong convection surrounding a Neptunian south polar vortex.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures; accepted to Icaru
High-precision radiocarbon dating of the construction phase of Oakbank Crannog, Loch Tay, Perthshire
Many of the Loch Tay crannogs were built in the Early Iron Age and so calibration of the radiocarbon ages produces
very broad calendar age ranges due to the well-documented Hallstatt plateau in the calibration curve. However, the
large oak timbers that were used in the construction of some of the crannogs potentially provide a means of improving the precision of the dating through subdividing them into decadal or subdecadal increments, dating them to high precision and wiggle-matching the resulting data to the master <sup>14</sup>C calibration curve. We obtained a sample from 1 oak timber from Oakbank Crannog comprising 70 rings (Sample OB06 WMS 1, T103) including sapwood that was complete to the bark edge. The timber is situated on the northeast edge of the main living area of the crannog and as a large and strong oak pile would have been a useful support in more than 1 phase of occupation and may be related to the earliest construction phase of the site. This was sectioned into 5-yr increments and dated to a precision of approximately ±8–16 <sup>14</sup>C yr (1 σ). The wiggle-match predicts that the last ring dated was formed around 500 BC (maximum range of 520–465 BC) and should be taken as indicative of the likely time of construction of Oakbank Crannog. This is a considerable improvement on the estimates based on single <sup>14</sup>C ages made on oak samples, which typically encompassed the period from around 800–400 BC
Relativistic stars in differential rotation: bounds on the dragging rate and on the rotational energy
For general relativistic equilibrium stellar models (stationary axisymmetric
asymptotically flat and convection-free) with differential rotation, it is
shown that for a wide class of rotation laws the distribution of angular
velocity of the fluid has a sign, say "positive", and then both the dragging
rate and the angular momentum density are positive. In addition, the "mean
value" (with respect to an intrinsic density) of the dragging rate is shown to
be less than the mean value of the fluid angular velocity (in full general,
without having to restrict the rotation law, nor the uniformity in sign of the
fluid angular velocity); this inequality yields the positivity and an upper
bound of the total rotational energy.Comment: 23 pages, no figures, LaTeX. Submitted to J. Math. Phy
Fragmentation of Nuclei at Intermediate and High Energies in Modified Cascade Model
The process of nuclear multifragmentation has been implemented, together with
evaporation and fission channels of the disintegration of excited remnants in
nucleus-nucleus collisions using percolation theory and the intranuclear
cascade model. Colliding nuclei are treated as face--centered--cubic lattices
with nucleons occupying the nodes of the lattice. The site--bond percolation
model is used. The code can be applied for calculation of the fragmentation of
nuclei in spallation and multifragmentation reactions.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figure
New CP-violation and preferred-frame tests with polarized electrons
We used a torsion pendulum containing polarized
electrons to search for CP-violating interactions between the pendulum's
electrons and unpolarized matter in the laboratory's surroundings or the sun,
and to test for preferred-frame effects that would precess the electrons about
a direction fixed in inertial space. We find and for AU. Our preferred-frame constraints, interpreted in
the Kosteleck\'y framework, set an upper limit on the parameter eV that should be compared to the benchmark
value eV.Comment: 4 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter
Implementing an apparent-horizon finder in three dimensions
Locating apparent horizons is not only important for a complete understanding
of numerically generated spacetimes, but it may also be a crucial component of
the technique for evolving black-hole spacetimes accurately. A scheme proposed
by Libson et al., based on expanding the location of the apparent horizon in
terms of symmetric trace-free tensors, seems very promising for use with
three-dimensional numerical data sets. In this paper, we generalize this scheme
and perform a number of code tests to fully calibrate its behavior in
black-hole spacetimes similar to those we expect to encounter in solving the
binary black-hole coalescence problem. An important aspect of the
generalization is that we can compute the symmetric trace-free tensor expansion
to any order. This enables us to determine how far we must carry the expansion
to achieve results of a desired accuracy. To accomplish this generalization, we
describe a new and very convenient set of recurrence relations which apply to
symmetric trace-free tensors.Comment: 14 pages (RevTeX 3.0 with 3 figures
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