40,197 research outputs found

    Probing the structure of the outflow in the tidal disruption flare Sw J1644+57 with long-term radio emission

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    The recently discovered high-energy transient Sw J1644+57 is thought to arise from the tidal disruption of a passing star by a dormant massive black hole. The long-term, bright radio emission of Sw J1644+57 is believed to result from the synchrotron emission of the blast wave produced by an outflow expanding into the surrounding medium. Using the detailed multi-epoch radio spectral data, we are able to determine the total number of radiating electrons in the outflow at different times, and further the evolution of the cross section of the outflow with time. We find that the outflow gradually transits from a conical jet to a cylindrical one at later times. The transition may be due to collimation of the outflow by the pressure of the shocked jet cocoon that forms while the outflow is propagating in the ambient medium. Since cylindrical jets usually exist in AGNs and extragalactic jets, this may provide independent evidence that Sw J1644+57 signals the onset of an AGN.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, accepted by Ap

    Strain-Fluctuation-Induced Near-Quantization of Valley Hall Conductivity in Graphene Systems

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    We develop a theory of the valley Hall effect in high-quality graphene samples, in which strain fluctuation-induced random gauge potentials have been suggested as the dominant source of disorder. We find a near-quantized value of valley Hall conductivity in the band transport regime, which originates from an enhanced side jump of a Dirac electron when it scatters off the gauge potential. By assuming a small residue charge density our theory reproduces qualitatively the temperature- and gap-dependence of the observed valley Hall effect at the charge neutral point. Our study suggests that the valley Hall effect in graphene systems represents a new paradigm for the anomalous Hall physics where gauge disorder plays an important role

    New Realization of the Conversion Calculation for Reactor Antineutrino Fluxes

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    Validation of the effective conversion method in the reactor antineutrino flux calculation is examined using the \textit{ab initio} calculation of the electron and antineutrino spectra from the state-of-the-art nuclear database. It turns out that neglecting the shape variation of beta decay branches between the allowed and forbidden transitions would induce significant bias in the total inverse-beta-decay yields and energy spectral distributions. We propose a new realization of the conversion method with both the allowed and forbidden virtual branches, and apply it to both the \textit{simulated} data from the nuclear database and \textit{real} data from the fission measurements at ILL by virtue of statistical properties of the allowed and forbidden decays in the database. Two kinds of dominant uncertainty sources are identified and it turns out that the new realization of the conversion calculation can largely reduce the rate and spectral bias and thus present a reliable prediction of the antineutrino fluxes if accurate beta decay information is available in the high endpoint energy range.Comment: 23 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables, with new results on uncertainty study, and ILL beta spectrum conversion, to appear in PR

    Predictions for the Abundance of High-redshift Galaxies in a Fuzzy Dark Matter Universe

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    During the last decades, rapid progress has been made in measurements of the rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) luminosity function (LF) for high-redshift galaxies (zβ‰₯6z \geq 6). The faint-end of the galaxy LF at these redshifts provides powerful constraints on different dark matter models that suppress small-scale structure formation. In this work we perform full hydrodynamical cosmological simulations of galaxy formation using an alternative DM model composed of extremely light bosonic particles (m∼10βˆ’22m \sim 10^{-22} eV), also known as fuzzy dark matter (FDM), and examine the predictions for the galaxy stellar mass function and luminosity function at zβ‰₯6z \geq 6 for a range of FDM masses. We find that for FDM models with bosonic mass m=5Γ—10βˆ’22m = 5\times10^{-22} eV, the number density of galaxies with stellar mass Mβˆ—βˆΌ107MβŠ™\rm M_* \sim 10^7 M_{\odot} is suppressed by ∼40%\sim 40\% at z = 9, ∼20%\sim 20\% at z = 5, and the UV LFs within magnitude range of -16 < MUVM_{\rm UV} < -14 is suppressed by ∼60%\sim 60\% at z=9z = 9, ∼20%\sim 20\% at z=5z = 5 comparing to the CDM counterpart simulation. Comparing our predictions with current measurements of the faint-end LFs (βˆ’18β©½MUVβ©½βˆ’14-18 \leqslant M_{\rm UV} \leqslant -14), we find that FDM models with m22<5Γ—10βˆ’22m_{22} < 5\times10^{-22} are ruled out at 3Οƒ3\sigma confidence level. We expect that future LF measurements by James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), which will extend down to MUVβˆΌβˆ’13M_{\rm UV} \sim -13 for z≲10z \lesssim 10, with a survey volume that is comparable to the Hubble Ultra Deep Field (HUDF) would have the capability to constrain FDM models to mβ€…β€Šβ‰³10βˆ’21m\; \gtrsim 10^{-21} eV

    Holographic Photon Production with Magnetic Field in Anisotropic Plasmas

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    We investigate the thermal photon production from constant magnetic field in a strongly coupled and anisotropic plasma via the gauge/gravity duality. The dual geometry with pressure anisotropy is generated from the axion-dilaton gravity action introduced by Mateos and Trancancelli and the magnetic field is coupled to fundamental matters(quarks) through the D3/D7 embeddings. We find that the photon spectra with different quark mass are enhanced at large frequency when the photons are emitted parallel to the anisotropic direction with larger pressure or perpendicular to the magnetic field. However, in the opposite conditions for the emitted directions, the spectra approximately saturate isotropic results in the absence of magnetic field. On the other hand, a resonance emerges at moderate frequency for the photon spectrum with heavy quarks when the photons move perpendicular to the magnetic field. The resonance is more robust when the photons are polarized along the magnetic field. On the contrary, in the presence of pressure anisotropy, the resonance will be suppressed. There exist competing effects of magnetic field and pressure anisotropy on meson melting in the strongly coupled super Yang-Mills plasma, while we argue that the suppression led by anisotropy may not be applied to the quark gluon plasma.Comment: 22 pages, 16 figures, references added, journal versio

    Towards Adversarial Training with Moderate Performance Improvement for Neural Network Classification

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    It has been demonstrated that deep neural networks are prone to noisy examples particular adversarial samples during inference process. The gap between robust deep learning systems in real world applications and vulnerable neural networks is still large. Current adversarial training strategies improve the robustness against adversarial samples. However, these methods lead to accuracy reduction when the input examples are clean thus hinders the practicability. In this paper, we investigate an approach that protects the neural network classification from the adversarial samples and improves its accuracy when the input examples are clean. We demonstrate the versatility and effectiveness of our proposed approach on a variety of different networks and datasets.Comment: Accepted for publication in Uncertainty in Deep Learning Workshop at Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence (UAI) 201

    Sharp-interface limits of a phase-field model with a generalized Navier slip boundary condition for moving contact lines

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    The sharp-interface limits of a phase-field model with a generalized Navier slip boundary condition for moving contact line problem are studied by asymptotic analysis and numerical simulations. The effects of the {mobility} number as well as a phenomenological relaxation parameter in the boundary condition are considered. In asymptotic analysis, we focus on the case that the {mobility} number is the same order of the Cahn number and derive the sharp-interface limits for several setups of the boundary relaxation parameter. It is shown that the sharp interface limit of the phase field model is the standard two-phase incompressible Navier-Stokes equations coupled with several different slip boundary conditions. Numerical results are consistent with the analysis results and also illustrate the different convergence rates of the sharp-interface limits for different scalings of the two parameters

    Cosmic Microwave Background Dipole Asymmetry could be explained by Axion Monodromy Cosmic Strings

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    Observations by the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe and the Planck mission suggest a hemispherical power amplitude asymmetry in the cosmic microwave background, with a correlation length on the order of the size of the observable Universe. We find that this anomaly can be naturally explained by an axion-like particle (ALP) cosmic string formed near our visible Universe. The field variation associated to this cosmic string creates particle density fluctuations after inflation, which consequently decay into radiation before the Big Bang Nucleosynthesis (BBN) era and resulted in the observed power asymmetry. We find in this scenario that the hemispherical power amplitude asymmetry is strongly scale dependent: A(k)∝exp(βˆ’kl)/kA(k)\propto {\rm exp}(-kl)/k. Admittedly, typical inflation models predict a relic number density of topological defects of order one per observable Universe and so in our model the cosmic string must be tuned to have an impact factor of order 1/H01/H_0. Interestingly, the constraints based on purely cosmological considerations also give rise to a Peccei-Quinn scale FaF_a of order 10310^3 larger then the Hubble scale of inflation HIH_I. Assuming HI∼1013H_I\sim 10^{13}GeV, we then have an ALP with Fa∼1016F_a\sim 10^{16}GeV, which coincides with the presumed scale of grand unification. As we require ALP decays occur before the BBN era, which implies a relatively heavy mass or strong self-coupling, and considering that the associated potential should break the shift symmetry softly in order to protect the system from radiative corrections, we also conclude that the required ALP potential should be monodromic in nature.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures, references and comments added, published versio

    Bayesian Estimation Based Load Modeling Report

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    This report presents the detailed steps of establishing the composite load model in the power system. The derivations of estimation the ZIP model and IM model parameters are proposed in this report. This is a supplementary material for the paper submitted to PES GM 2019

    Spin responses and effective Hamiltonian for the two dimensional electron gas at oxide interface {LaAlO}3_3/{SrTiO}3_3

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    Strong Rashba spin-orbit coupling (SOC) of the two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG) at the oxide interface LaAlO3/SrTiO3\mathrm{LaAlO_{3}/SrTiO_{3}} underlies a variety of exotic physics, but its nature is still under debate. We derive an effective Hamiltonian for the 2DEG at the oxide interface LaAlO3/SrTiO3\mathrm{LaAlO_{3}/SrTiO_{3}} and find a different anisotropic Rashba SOC for the dxzd_{xz} and dyzd_{yz} orbitals. This anisotropic Rashba SOC leads to anisotropic static spin susceptibilities and also distinctive behavior of the spin Hall conductivity. These unique spin responses may be used to determine the nature of the Rashba SOC experimentally and shed light on the orbital origin of the 2DEG.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, final published versio
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