762 research outputs found
Quantum-Mechanical Dualities from Classical Phase Space
The geometry of the classical phase space C of a finite number of degrees of
freedom determines the possible duality symmetries of the corresponding quantum
mechanics. Under duality we understand the relativity of the notion of a
quantum with respect to an observer on C. We illustrate this property
explicitly in the case when classical phase space is complex n-dimensional
projective space. We also provide some examples of classical dynamics that
exhibit these properties at the quantum level.Comment: 8 pages, Late
Atom interferometry gravity-gradiometer for the determination of the Newtonian gravitational constant G
We developed a gravity-gradiometer based on atom interferometry for the
determination of the Newtonian gravitational constant \textit{G}. The
apparatus, combining a Rb fountain, Raman interferometry and a juggling scheme
for fast launch of two atomic clouds, was specifically designed to reduce
possible systematic effects. We present instrument performances and show that
the sensor is able to detect the gravitational field induced by source masses.
A discussion of projected accuracy for \textit{G} measurement using this new
scheme shows that the results of the experiment will be significant to
discriminate between previous inconsistent values.Comment: 9 pages,9 figures, Submitte
The faint counterparts of MAMBO mm sources near the NTT Deep Field
We discuss identifications for 18 sources from our MAMBO 1.2mm survey of the
region surrounding the NTT Deep Field. We have obtained accurate positions from
Very Large Array 1.4GHz interferometry and in a few cases IRAM mm
interferometry, and have also made deep BVRIzJK imaging at ESO. We find
thirteen 1.2mm sources associated with optical/near-infrared objects in the
magnitude range K=19.0 to 22.5, while five are blank fields at K>22. The median
redshift of the radio-identified mm sources is ~2.6 from the radio/mm
estimator, and the median optical/near-infrared photometric redshifts for the
objects with counterparts ~2.1. This suggests that those radio-identified mm
sources without optical/near-infrared counterparts tend to lie at higher
redshifts than those with optical/near-infrared counterparts. Compared to
published identifications of objects from 850micron surveys of similar depth,
the median K and I magnitudes of our counterparts are roughly two magnitudes
fainter and the dispersion of I-K colors is less. Real differences in the
median redshifts, residual mis-identifications with bright objects, cosmic
variance, and small number statistics are likely to contribute to this
significant difference, which also affects redshift measurement strategies. We
discuss basic properties of the near-infrared/(sub)mm/radio spectral energy
distributions of our galaxies and of interferometrically identified submm
sources from the literature. From a comparison with submm objects with
CO-confirmed spectroscopic redshifts we argue that roughly two thirds of the
(sub)mm galaxies are at z>~2.5. This fraction is probably larger when including
sources without radio counterparts. (abridged)Comment: 45 pages, 9 figures. Accepted by ApJ. The resolution of figures 2 and
3 has been degraded. A higher quality pdf version of this paper is available
at http://www.mpe.mpg.de/~dannerb
Monte Carlo approach to nonperturbative strings -- demonstration in noncritical string theory
We show how Monte Carlo approach can be used to study the double scaling
limit in matrix models. As an example, we study a solvable hermitian one-matrix
model with the double-well potential, which has been identified recently as a
dual description of noncritical string theory with worldsheet supersymmetry.
This identification utilizes the nonperturbatively stable vacuum unlike its
bosonic counterparts, and therefore it provides a complete constructive
formulation of string theory. Our data with the matrix size ranging from 8 to
512 show a clear scaling behavior, which enables us to extract the double
scaling limit accurately. The ``specific heat'' obtained in this way agrees
nicely with the known result obtained by solving the Painleve-II equation with
appropriate boundary conditions.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, LaTeX, JHEP3.cls; references added, typos
correcte
Precision measurements of gravity using cold atom sensors
We present a synthetic view of experiments we are performing using atom interferometry to determine the gravitational constant G and to test the Newtonian gravitational law at micrometric distances. Accurate gravity measurements with atom interferometry also find applications in geophysical studies and in satellite missions for the geoid mapping. Experiments in progress, using ultracold atom devices, for applications in geophyiscal and space monitoring will be also described
Age estimation by tooth/pulp ratio in canines by peri-apical X-rays: reliability in age determination of Spanish and Italian medieval skeletal remains
Estimation of age at death is an unavoidable step in the process of human identification, both in forensic
practice and in the anthropological and palaeopathological study of skeletal remains. In several cases, in
which medical or demographic records are completely lacking, a reliable estimation of the age at death
becomes very important. Skeletal remains from archaeological contexts suffer from several biasing
factors such as post-mortem changes, taphonomy and various burial practices depending on age, sex and
social status of the deceased persons.
Currently, anthropological methods of age determination reveal several possibilities of inaccuracy. Of
all the body parts used in age estimation, teeth are the least affected by any taphonomic process.
Although there are many dental methods for age at death estimation, some of them are very complex
and/or destructive and they are not normally used in anthropology. However, study of the apposition of
secondary dentine by examining peri-apical X-rays of canines is beginning to supply very interesting
results.
The aim of this work was to test Cameriere\u2019s method on a large sample of historical subjects from
several cemeteries in Spain and Italy. The Spanish sample belongs to the Medieval cemetery of La Torrecilla
(Arenas del Rey, Granada) and is housed in the Laboratory of Anthropology, Faculty of Medicine,
University of Granada. The Italian samples come from the Medieval cemeteries of Comacchio (Ferrara)
and Castel S. Pietro (Bologna).
In order to test the reliability of Cameriere\u2019s method, age estimations of canines were compared with
the mean ranges of age of the most commonly applied anthropological methods such as tooth wear
changes in the pubic symphysis or the metamorphosis of the auricular surface of the ilium. Tests on these
Middle Ages cemeteries produced satisfactory results, indicating that Cameriere\u2019s method is a reliable
tool in determining age at death in skeletal remains of archaeological context
Herschel/PACS far-infrared photometry of two z>4 quasars
We present Herschel far-infrared (FIR) observations of two sub-mm bright
quasars at high redshift: SDSS J1148+5251 (z=6.42) and BR 1202-0725 (z=4.69)
obtained with the PACS instrument. Both objects are detected in the PACS
photometric bands. The Herschel measurements provide additional data points
that constrain the FIR spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of both sources,
and they emphasise a broad range of dust temperatures in these objects. For
lambda_rest ~< 20mu, the two SEDs are very similar to the average SEDs of
quasars at low redshift. In the FIR, however, both quasars show excess emission
compared to low-z QSO templates, most likely from cold dust powered by vigorous
star formation in the QSO host galaxies. For SDSS J1148+5251 we detect another
object at 160mu with a distance of ~10 arcseconds from the QSO. Although no
physical connection between the quasar and this object can be shown with the
available data, it could potentially confuse low-resolution measurements, thus
resulting in an overestimate of the FIR luminosity of the z=6.42 quasar.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in the A&A special issue
on Hersche
Generalized Holographic Quantum Criticality at Finite Density
We show that the near-extremal solutions of Einstein-Maxwell-Dilaton
theories, studied in ArXiv:1005.4690, provide IR quantum critical geometries,
by embedding classes of them in higher-dimensional AdS and Lifshitz solutions.
This explains the scaling of their thermodynamic functions and their IR
transport coefficients, the nature of their spectra, the Gubser bound, and
regulates their singularities. We propose that these are the most general
quantum critical IR asymptotics at finite density of EMD theories.Comment: v4: Corrected the scaling equation for the conductivity in section
9.
Lovelock-Lifshitz Black Holes
In this paper, we investigate the existence of Lifshitz solutions in Lovelock
gravity, both in vacuum and in the presence of a massive vector field. We show
that the Lovelock terms can support the Lifshitz solution provided the
constants of the theory are suitably chosen. We obtain an exact black hole
solution with Lifshitz asymptotics of any scaling parameter in both
Gauss-Bonnet and in pure 3rd order Lovelock gravity. If matter is added in the
form of a massive vector field, we also show that Lifshitz solutions in
Lovelock gravity exist; these can be regarded as corrections to Einstein
gravity coupled to this form of matter. For this form of matter we numerically
obtain a broad range of charged black hole solutions with Lifshitz asymptotics,
for either sign of the cosmological constant. We find that these asymptotic
Lifshitz solutions are more sensitive to corrections induced by Lovelock
gravity than are their asymptotic AdS counterparts. We also consider the
thermodynamics of the black hole solutions and show that the temperature of
large black holes with curved horizons is proportional to where is
the critical exponent; this relationship holds for black branes of any size. As
is the case for asymptotic AdS black holes, we find that an extreme black hole
exists only for the case of horizons with negative curvature. We also find that
these Lovelock-Lifshitz black holes have no unstable phase, in contrast to the
Lovelock-AdS case. We also present a class of rotating Lovelock-Lifshitz black
holes with Ricci-flat horizons.Comment: 26 pages, 10 figures, a few references added, typo fixed and some
comments have been adde
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