19,111 research outputs found

    A Search for New Physics with the BEACON Mission

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    The primary objective of the Beyond Einstein Advanced Coherent Optical Network (BEACON) mission is a search for new physics beyond general relativity by measuring the curvature of relativistic space-time around Earth. This curvature is characterized by the Eddington parameter \gamma -- the most fundamental relativistic gravity parameter and a direct measure for the presence of new physical interactions. BEACON will achieve an accuracy of 1 x 10^{-9} in measuring the parameter \gamma, thereby going a factor of 30,000 beyond the present best result involving the Cassini spacecraft. Secondary mission objectives include: (i) a direct measurement of the "frame-dragging" and geodetic precessions in the Earth's rotational gravitomagnetic field, to 0.05% and 0.03% accuracy correspondingly, (ii) first measurement of gravity's non-linear effects on light and corresponding 2nd order spatial metric's effects to 0.01% accuracy. BEACON will lead to robust advances in tests of fundamental physics -- this mission could discover a violation or extension of general relativity and/or reveal the presence of an additional long range interaction in physics. BEACON will provide crucial information to separate modern scalar-tensor theories of gravity from general relativity, probe possible ways for gravity quantization, and test modern theories of cosmological evolution.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, 2 table

    LATOR Covariance Analysis

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    We present results from a covariance study for the proposed Laser Astrometric Test of Relativity (LATOR) mission. This mission would send two laser-transmitter spacecraft behind the Sun and measure the relative gravitational light bending of their signals using a hundred-meter-baseline optical interferometer to be constructed on the International Space Station. We assume that each spacecraft is equipped with a <1.9×1013ms2Hz1/2 < 1.9 \times 10^{-13} \mathrm{m} \mathrm{s}^2 \mathrm{Hz}^{-1/2} drag-free system and assume approximately one year of data. We conclude that the observations allow a simultaneous determination of the orbit parameters of the spacecraft and of the Parametrized Post-Newtonian (PPN) parameter γ\gamma with an uncertainty of 2.4×1092.4 \times 10^{-9}. We also find a 6×1096 \times 10^{-9} determination of the solar quadrupole moment, J2J_2, as well as the first measurement of the second-order post-PPN parameter δ\delta to an accuracy of about 10310^{-3}.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures. first revision: minor changes to results. Second revision: additional discussion of orbit modelling and LATOR drag-free system requirement feasibility. Added references to tables I and V (which list PPN parameter uncertainties), removed word from sentence in Section III. 3rd revision: removed 2 incorrect text fragments (referring to impact parameter as distance of closest approach) and reference to upcoming publication of ref. 2, removed spurious gamma from eq. 1 - Last error is still in cqg published versio

    Flicker Noise in Bilayer Graphene Transistors

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    We present the results of the experimental investigation of the low - frequency noise in bilayer graphene transistors. The back - gated devices were fabricated using the electron beam lithography and evaporation. The charge neutrality point for the fabricated transistors was around 10 V. The noise spectra at frequencies above 10 - 100 Hz were of the 1/f - type with the spectral density on the order of 10E-23 - 10E-22 A2/Hz at the frequency of 1 kHz. The deviation from the 1/f spectrum at the frequencies below 10 -100 Hz indicates that the noise is of the carrier - number fluctuation origin due to the carrier trapping by defects. The Hooge parameter of 10E-4 was extracted for this type of devices. The gate dependence of the noise spectral density suggests that the noise is dominated by the contributions from the ungated part of the device channel and by the contacts. The obtained results are important for graphene electronic applications

    Low-noise top-gate graphene transistors

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    We report results of experimental investigation of the low-frequency noise in the top-gate graphene transistors. The back-gate graphene devices were modified via addition of the top gate separated by 20 nm of HfO2 from the single-layer graphene channels. The measurements revealed low flicker noise levels with the normalized noise spectral density close to 1/f (f is the frequency) and Hooge parameter below 2 x 10^-3. The analysis of the noise spectral density dependence on the top and bottom gate biases helped us to elucidate the noise sources in these devices and develop a strategy for the electronic noise reduction. The obtained results are important for all proposed graphene applications in electronics and sensors.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure

    Probing neutrino mass hierarchies and ϕ13\phi_{13} with supernova neutrinos

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    We investigate the feasibility of probing the neutrino mass hierarchy and the mixing angle ϕ13\phi_{13} with the neutrino burst from a future supernova. An inverse power-law density ρrn\rho \sim r^{n} with varying nn is adopted in the analysis as the density profile of a typical core-collapse supernova. The survival probabilities of νe\nu_{e} and νˉe\bar{\nu}_{e} are shown to reduce to two-dimensional functions of nn and ϕ13\phi_{13}. It is found that in the nsin2ϕ13n-\sin^{2} \phi_{13} parameter space, the 3D plots of the probability functions exhibit highly non-trivial structures that are sensitive to the mass hierarchy, the mixing angle ϕ13\phi_{13}, and the value of nn. The conditions that lead to observable differences in the 3D plots are established. With the uncertainty of nn considered, a qualitative analysis of the Earth matter effect is also included.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures. Ref [11] added, and some typos correcte

    Symplectic Geometry on Quantum Plane

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    A study of symplectic forms associated with two dimensional quantum planes and the quantum sphere in a three dimensional orthogonal quantum plane is provided. The associated Hamiltonian vector fields and Poissonian algebraic relations are made explicit.Comment: 12 pages, Late

    Hadron-quark phase transition in asymmetric matter with dynamical quark masses

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    The two-Equation of State (EoS) model is used to describe the hadron-quark phase transition in asymmetric matter formed at high density in heavy-ion collisions. For the quark phase, the three-flavor Nambu--Jona-Lasinio (NJL) effective theory is used to investigate the influence of dynamical quark mass effects on the phase transition. At variance to the MIT-Bag results, with fixed current quark masses, the main important effect of the chiral dynamics is the appearance of an End-Point for the coexistence zone. We show that a first order hadron-quark phase transition may take place in the region T=(50-80)MeV and \rho_B=(2-4)\rho_0, which is possible to be probed in the new planned facilities, such as FAIR at GSI-Darmstadt and NICA at JINR-Dubna. From isospin properties of the mixed phase somepossible signals are suggested. The importance of chiral symmetry and dynamical quark mass on the hadron-quark phase transition is stressed. The difficulty of an exact location of Critical-End-Point comes from its appearance in a region of competition between chiral symmetry breaking and confinement, where our knowledge of effective QCD theories is still rather uncertain.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figures (revtex

    Kalman-filter control schemes for fringe tracking. Development and application to VLTI/GRAVITY

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    The implementation of fringe tracking for optical interferometers is inevitable when optimal exploitation of the instrumental capacities is desired. Fringe tracking allows continuous fringe observation, considerably increasing the sensitivity of the interferometric system. In addition to the correction of atmospheric path-length differences, a decent control algorithm should correct for disturbances introduced by instrumental vibrations, and deal with other errors propagating in the optical trains. We attempt to construct control schemes based on Kalman filters. Kalman filtering is an optimal data processing algorithm for tracking and correcting a system on which observations are performed. As a direct application, control schemes are designed for GRAVITY, a future four-telescope near-infrared beam combiner for the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI). We base our study on recent work in adaptive-optics control. The technique is to describe perturbations of fringe phases in terms of an a priori model. The model allows us to optimize the tracking of fringes, in that it is adapted to the prevailing perturbations. Since the model is of a parametric nature, a parameter identification needs to be included. Different possibilities exist to generalize to the four-telescope fringe tracking that is useful for GRAVITY. On the basis of a two-telescope Kalman-filtering control algorithm, a set of two properly working control algorithms for four-telescope fringe tracking is constructed. The control schemes are designed to take into account flux problems and low-signal baselines. First simulations of the fringe-tracking process indicate that the defined schemes meet the requirements for GRAVITY and allow us to distinguish in performance. In a future paper, we will compare the performances of classical fringe tracking to our Kalman-filter control.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in A&

    The Effect of Transfer Printing on Pentacene Thin-Film Crystal Structure

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    The thermal deposition and transfer Printing method had been used to produce pentacene thin-films on SiO2/Si and plastic substrates (PMMA and PVP), respectively. X-ray diffraction patterns of pentacene thin films showed reflections associated with highly ordered polycrystalline films and a coexistence of two polymorph phases classified by their d-spacing, d(001): 14.4 and 15.4 A.The dependence of the c-axis correlation length and the phase fraction on the film thickness and printing temperature were measured. A transition from the 15.4 A phase towards 14.4 A phase was also observed with increasing film thickness. An increase in the c-axis correlation length of approximately 12% ~16% was observed for Pn films transfer printed onto a PMMA coated PET substrate at 100~120 C as compared to as-grown Pn films on SiO2/Si substrates. The transfer printing method is shown to be an attractive for the fabrication of pentacene thin-film transistors on flexible substrates partly because of the resulting improvement in the quality of the pentacene film.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure

    Investigation on dynamic behaviours of liquid and solid phases within non-homogeneous debris flows

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    The non-homogeneous debris flows, consisting of a wide range of grain size, bulk density and demonstrating non-uniform velocity distributions, are commonly modeled as the two-phase flow. In adopting such an approach, a critical grain diameter to separate the solid and liquid phase, within such debris flows, can be determined through the principles of minimum energy dissipation. In the current study, an improved analytical approach using the resistance formula of water flow and mass conservation law is presented to determine the velocity of the solid and liquid phases within a non-homogeneous debris flow, based on the derived critical grain diameter. Some of the dynamic parameters required in the analysis are validated against the experimental data of a non-homogeneous, two-phase debris flow measured from the Jiangjia gully, Yunnan Province of China. The results show that, for the majority of non-homogeneous debris flows tested, the liquid phase exhibits higher velocity than the solid phase. However, as the bulk density of the debris flow increases, the solid phase tends to have higher velocity than the liquid phase. These findings are shown to have important implications on the vertical grading patterns of the bed deposits in depositional areas. The observations from the field studies indicate that the non-homogeneous debris flows with bulk density being significantly lower, close to and significantly higher than the critical value seem to exhibit normal (i.e. bed-to-surface vertical fining), mixed, and inverse (bed-to-surface vertical coarsening) grading patterns in the alluvial fan deposits
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