3,056 research outputs found
Theory Challenges of the Accelerating Universe
The accelerating expansion of the universe presents an exciting, fundamental
challenge to the standard models of particle physics and cosmology. I highlight
some of the outstanding challenges in both developing theoretical models and
interpreting without bias the observational results from precision cosmology
experiments in the next decade that will return data to help reveal the nature
of the new physics. Examples given focus on distinguishing a new component of
energy from a new law of gravity, and the effect of early dark energy on baryon
acoustic oscillations.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures; minor changes to match J. Phys. A versio
Population Intermediate Outcomes of Diabetes Under Pay-for-Performance Incentives in England From 2004 to 2008
OBJECTIVEâTo evaluate diabetes outcomes under a national âpay-for-performanceâ program
Early Dark Energy Cosmologies
We propose a novel parameterization of the dark energy density. It is
particularly well suited to describe a non-negligible contribution of dark
energy at early times and contains only three parameters, which are all
physically meaningful: the fractional dark energy density today, the equation
of state today and the fractional dark energy density at early times. As we
parameterize Omega_d(a) directly instead of the equation of state, we can give
analytic expressions for the Hubble parameter, the conformal horizon today and
at last scattering, the sound horizon at last scattering, the acoustic scale as
well as the luminosity distance. For an equation of state today w_0 < -1, our
model crosses the cosmological constant boundary. We perform numerical studies
to constrain the parameters of our model by using Cosmic Microwave Background,
Large Scale Structure and Supernovae Ia data. At 95% confidence, we find that
the fractional dark energy density at early times Omega_early < 0.06. This
bound tightens considerably to Omega_early < 0.04 when the latest Boomerang
data is included. We find that both the gold sample of Riess et. al. and the
SNLS data by Astier et. al. when combined with CMB and LSS data mildly prefer
w_0 < -1, but are well compatible with a cosmological constant.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures; references added, matches published versio
Fermion absorption cross section of a Schwarzschild black hole
We study the absorption of massive spin-half particles by a small
Schwarzschild black hole by numerically solving the single-particle Dirac
equation in Painleve-Gullstrand coordinates. We calculate the absorption cross
section for a range of gravitational couplings Mm/m_P^2 and incident particle
energies E. At high couplings, where the Schwarzschild radius R_S is much
greater than the wavelength lambda, we find that the cross section approaches
the classical result for a point particle. At intermediate couplings we find
oscillations around the classical limit whose precise form depends on the
particle mass. These oscillations give quantum violations of the equivalence
principle. At high energies the cross section converges on the geometric-optics
value of 27 \pi R_S^2/4, and at low energies we find agreement with an
approximation derived by Unruh. When the hole is much smaller than the particle
wavelength we confirm that the minimum possible cross section approaches \pi
R_S^2/2.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figure
How to identify when a performance indicator has run its course
The official published version can be found at the link below.Increasing numbers of countries are using indicators to evaluate the quality of clinical care, with some linking payment to achievement. For performance frameworks to remain effective the indicators need to be regularly reviewed. The frameworks cannot cover all clinical areas, and achievement on chosen indicators will eventually reach a ceiling beyond which further improvement is not feasible. However, there has been little work on how to select indictors for replacement. The Department of Health decided in 2008 that it would regularly replace indicators in the national primary care pay for performance scheme, the Quality and Outcomes Framework, making a rigorous approach to removal a priority. We draw on our previous work on pay for performance and our current work advising the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) on the Quality and Outcomes Framework to suggest what should be considered when planning to remove indicators from a clinical performance framework
Varying Alpha Monopoles
We study static magnetic monopoles in the context of varying alpha theories
and show that there is a group of models for which the t'Hooft-Polyakov
solution is still valid. Nevertheless, in general static magnetic monopole
solutions in varying alpha theories depart from the classical t'Hooft-Polyakov
solution with the electromagnetic energy concentrated inside the core seeding
spatial variations of the fine structure constant. We show that Equivalence
Principle constraints impose tight limits on the allowed variations of alpha
induced by magnetic monopoles which confirms the difficulty to generate
significant large-scale spatial variation of the fine structure constant found
in previous works. This is true even in the most favorable case where magnetic
monopoles are the source for these variations.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures; Version to be published in Phys. Rev.
Effective Symmetries of the Minimal Supermultiplet of N = 8 Extended Worldline Supersymmetry
A minimal representation of the N = 8 extended worldline supersymmetry, known
as the `ultra-multiplet', is closely related to a family of supermultiplets
with the same, E(8) chromotopology. We catalogue their effective symmetries and
find a Spin(4) x Z(2) subgroup common to them all, which explains the
particular basis used in the original construction. We specify a constrained
superfield representation of the supermultiplets in the ultra-multiplet family,
and show that such a superfield representation in fact exists for all adinkraic
supermultiplets. We also exhibit the correspondences between these
supermultiplets, their Adinkras and the E(8) root lattice bases. Finally, we
construct quadratic Lagrangians that provide the standard kinetic terms and
afford a mixing of an even number of such supermultiplets controlled by a
coupling to an external 2-form of fluxes.Comment: 13 Figure
Observational constraints on the dark energy density evolution
We constrain the evolution of the dark energy density from Cosmic Microwave
Background, Large Scale Structure and Supernovae Ia measurements. While
Supernovae Ia are most sensitive to the equation of state of dark energy
today, the Cosmic Microwave Background and Large Scale Structure data best
constrains the dark energy evolution at earlier times. For the parametrization
used in our models, we find and the dark energy fraction at very
high redshift at 95 per cent confidence level.Comment: 5 pages, 10 figure
New Techniques for Analysing Axisymmetric Gravitational Systems. 1. Vacuum Fields
A new framework for analysing the gravitational fields in a stationary,
axisymmetric configuration is introduced. The method is used to construct a
complete set of field equations for the vacuum region outside a rotating
source. These equations are under-determined. Restricting the Weyl tensor to
type D produces a set of equations which can be solved, and a range of new
techniques are introduced to simplify the problem. Imposing the further
condition that the solution is asymptotically flat yields the Kerr solution
uniquely. The implications of this result for the no-hair theorem are
discussed. The techniques developed here have many other applications, which
are described in the conclusions.Comment: 30 pages, no figure
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