6,837 research outputs found
Storage Ring Probes of Dark Matter and Dark Energy
We show that proton storage ring experiments designed to search for proton
electric dipole moments can also be used to look for the nearly dc spin
precession induced by dark energy and ultra-light dark matter. These
experiments are sensitive to both axion-like and vector fields. Current
technology permits probes of these phenomena up to three orders of magnitude
beyond astrophysical limits. The relativistic boost of the protons in these
rings allows this scheme to have sensitivities comparable to atomic
co-magnetometer experiments that can also probe similar phenomena. These
complementary approaches can be used to extract the micro-physics of a signal,
allowing us to distinguish between pseudo-scalar, magnetic and electric dipole
moment interactions.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figure
Sign problems, noise, and chiral symmetry breaking in a QCD-like theory
The Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model reduced to 2+1 dimensions has two different path
integral formulations: at finite chemical potential one formulation has a
severe sign problem similar to that found in QCD, while the other does not. At
large N, where N is the number of flavors, one can compute the probability
distributions of fermion correlators analytically in both formulations. In the
former case one finds a broad distribution with small mean; in the latter one
finds a heavy tailed positive distribution amenable to the cumulant expansion
techniques developed in earlier work. We speculate on the implications of this
model for QCD.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures; Published version with minor changes from the
origina
AKT-1 Regulates DNA-Damage-Induced Germline Apoptosis in C. elegans
SummaryThe cellular response to genotoxic stress involves the integration of multiple prosurvival and proapoptotic signals that dictate whether a cell lives or dies. In mammals, AKT/PKB regulates cell survival by modulating the activity of several apoptotic proteins, including p53 [1]. In Caenorhabditis elegans, akt-1 and akt-2 regulate development in response to environmental cues by controlling the FOXO transcription factor daf-16[2], but the role of these genes in regulating p53-dependent apoptosis is not known. In this study, we show that akt-1 and akt-2 negatively regulate DNA-damage-induced apoptosis in the C. elegans germline. The antiapoptotic activity of akt-1 is independent of its target gene daf-16 but dependent on cep-1/p53. Although only akt-1 regulates the apoptotic activity of cep-1, both akt-1 and akt-2 modulate the intensity of the apoptotic response independently of the transcriptional activity of CEP-1. Finally, we show that AKT-1 regulates apoptosis but not cell-cycle progression downstream of the HUS-1/MRT-2 branch of the DNA damage checkpoint
Reconciling optical and radio observations of the binary millisecond pulsar PSR J1640+2224
Previous optical and radio observations of the binary millisecond pulsar PSR
J1640+2224 have come to inconsistent conclusions about the identity of its
companion, with some observations suggesting the companion is a low-mass
helium-core (He-core) white dwarf (WD), while others indicate it is most likely
a high-mass carbon-oxygen (CO) WD. Binary evolution models predict PSR
J1640+2224 most likely formed in a low-mass X-ray binary (LMXB) based on the
pulsar's short spin period and long-period, low-eccentricity orbit, in which
case its companion should be a He-core WD with mass about , depending on metallicity. If it is instead a CO WD, that would
suggest the system has an unusual formation history. In this paper we present
the first astrometric parallax measurement for this system from observations
made with the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA), from which we determine the
distance to be . We use this distance and a
reanalysis of archival optical observations originally taken in 1995 with the
Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) in
order to measure the WD's mass. We also incorporate improvements in
calibration, extinction model, and WD cooling models. We find that the existing
observations are not sufficient to tightly constrain the companion mass, but we
conclude the WD mass is with confidence. The limiting
factor in our analysis is the low signal-to-noise ratio of the original HST
observations.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Very long baseline astrometry of PSR J1012+5307 and its implications on alternative theories of gravity
PSR J1012+5307, a millisecond pulsar in orbit with a helium white dwarf (WD),
has been timed with high precision for about 25 years. One of the main
objectives of this long-term timing is to use the large asymmetry in
gravitational binding energy between the neutron star and the WD to test
gravitational theories. Such tests, however, will be eventually limited by the
accuracy of the distance to the pulsar. Here, we present VLBI (very long
baseline interferometry) astrometry results spanning approximately 2.5 years
for PSR J1012+5307, obtained with the Very Long Baseline Array as part of the
MSPSRPI project. These provide the first proper motion and absolute position
for PSR J1012+5307 measured in a quasi-inertial reference frame. From the VLBI
results, we measure a distance of kpc (all the estimates
presented in the abstract are at 68% confidence) for PSR J1012+5307, which is
the most precise obtained to date. Using the new distance, we improve the
uncertainty of measurements of the unmodeled contributions to orbital period
decay, which, combined with three other pulsars, places new constraints on the
coupling constant for dipole gravitational radiation
and the fractional time derivative of
Newton's gravitational constant in the local universe. As the uncertainties of the
observed decays of orbital period for the four leading pulsar-WD systems become
negligible in years, the uncertainties for and
will be improved to and
, respectively, predominantly limited by the distance
uncertainties.Comment: published in ApJ (2020ApJ...896...85D
Minimal Warm Inflation
Slow-roll inflation is a successful paradigm. However we find that even a
small coupling of the inflaton to other light fields can dramatically alter the
dynamics and predictions of inflation. As an example, the inflaton can
generically have an axion-like coupling to gauge bosons. Even relatively small
couplings will automatically induce a thermal bath during inflation. The
thermal friction from this bath can easily be stronger than Hubble friction,
significantly altering the usual predictions of any particular inflaton
potential. Thermal effects suppress the tensor-to-scalar ratio
significantly, and predict unique non-gaussianities. This axion-like coupling
provides a minimal model of warm inflation which avoids the usual problem of
thermal backreaction on the inflaton potential. As a specific example, we find
that hybrid inflation with this axion-like coupling can easily fit the current
cosmological data.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figure, v2: We added additional references and clarifying
comments in the introduction. We added an estimate on thermalization in
section III, and an additional comment on cosine-like potentials in section
IV, and a footnote commenting on equation 12. v2 matches published versio
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