7,151 research outputs found
Trans-Planckian Dark Energy?
It has recently been proposed by Mersini et al. 01, Bastero-Gil and Mersini
02 that the dark energy could be attributed to the cosmological properties of a
scalar field with a non-standard dispersion relation that decreases
exponentially at wave-numbers larger than Planck scale (k_phys > M_Planck). In
this scenario, the energy density stored in the modes of trans-Planckian
wave-numbers but sub-Hubble frequencies produced by amplification of the vacuum
quantum fluctuations would account naturally for the dark energy. The present
article examines this model in detail and shows step by step that it does not
work. In particular, we show that this model cannot make definite predictions
since there is no well-defined vacuum state in the region of wave-numbers
considered, hence the initial data cannot be specified unambiguously. We also
show that for most choices of initial data this scenario implies the production
of a large amount of energy density (of order M_Planck^4) for modes with
momenta of order M_Planck, far in excess of the background energy density. We
evaluate the amount of fine-tuning in the initial data necessary to avoid this
back-reaction problem and find it is of order H/M_Planck. We also argue that
the equation of state of the trans-Planckian modes is not vacuum-like.
Therefore this model does not provide a suitable explanation for the dark
energy.Comment: RevTeX - 15 pages, 7 figures: final version to appear in PRD, minor
changes, 1 figure adde
Fine-Tuning Constraints on Supergravity Models
We discuss fine-tuning constraints on supergravity models. The tightest
constraints come from the experimental mass limits on two key particles: the
lightest CP even Higgs boson and the gluino. We also include the lightest
chargino which is relevant when universal gaugino masses are assumed. For each
of these particles we show how fine-tuning increases with the experimental mass
limit, for four types of supergravity model: minimal supergravity, no-scale
supergravity (relaxing the universal gaugino mass assumption), D-brane models
and anomaly mediated supersymmetry breaking models. Among these models, the
D-brane model is less fine tuned.The experimental propects for an early
discovery of Higgs and supersymmetry at LEP and the Tevatron are discussed in
this framework.Comment: 17 pages, Latex, including 5 eps figure
A note on inflation and transplanckian physics
In this paper we consider the influence of transplanckian physics on the CMBR
anisotropies produced by inflation. We consider a simple toy model that allows
for analytic calculations and argue on general grounds, based on ambiguities in
the choice of vacuum, that effects are expected with a magnitude of the order
of , where is the Hubble constant during inflation and
the scale for new physics, e.g. the Planck scale.Comment: 12 pages. v2: typos corrected and references added. v3: final version
accepted for publication by PRD. Improved discussion of adiabatic vacuu
Miniaturization of Planar Microwave Devices by Means of Complementary Spiral Resonators (CSRs): Design of Quadrature Phase Shifters
In this work, two compact quadrature phase shifters based on metamaterial transmission lines implemented by means of complementary spiral resonators (CSRs) have been designed, fabricated and measured. The structures consist on Y-junctions with output lines exhibiting 90Âş phase balance. The reported metamaterial-based devices present a size reduction of 64% and 77% as compared to the conventional one
Bounds on Generic High-Energy Physics Modifications to the Primordial Power Spectrum from Back-Reaction on the Metric
Modifications to the primordial power spectrum of inflationary density
perturbations have been studied recently using a boundary effective field
theory approach. In the approximation of a fluctuating quantum field on a fixed
background, the generic effect of new physics is encoded in parameters of order
H/M. Here, we point out that the back-reaction on the metric can be neglected
only when these parameters obey certain bounds that may put them beyond the
reach of observation.Comment: 6 pages, Latex. References added, misprints corrected. To appear in
Phys. Lett.
Appropriateness of oral anticoagulants for long-term treatment of atrial fibrillation in older people: results of an evidence-based review and international consensus validation process (OAC-FORTA 2016)
Background:
Age appropriateness of anticoagulants for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation is uncertain.
Objective:
To review oral anticoagulants for the treatment of atrial fibrillation in older (age >65Â years) people and to classify appropriate and inappropriate drugs based on efficacy, safety and tolerability using the Fit-fOR-The-Aged (FORTA) classification.
Methods:
We performed a structured comprehensive review of controlled clinical trials and summaries of individual product characteristics to assess study and total patient numbers, quality of major outcome data and data of geriatric relevance. The resulting evidence was discussed in a round table with an interdisciplinary panel of ten European experts. Decisions on age appropriateness were made using a Delphi process.
Results:
For the eight drugs included, 380 citations were identified. The primary outcome results were reported in 32 clinical trials with explicit and relevant data on older people. Though over 24,000 patients aged >75/80Â years were studied for warfarin, data on geriatric syndromes were rare (two studies reporting on frailty/falls/mental status) and missing for all other compounds. Apixaban was rated FORTA-A (highly beneficial). Other non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants (including low/high-intensity dabigatran and high-intensity edoxaban) and warfarin were assigned to FORTA-B (beneficial). Phenprocoumon, acenocoumarol and fluindione were rated FORTA-C (questionable), mainly reflecting the absence of data.
Conclusions:
All non-vitamin K antagonist oral anticoagulants and warfarin were classified as beneficial or very beneficial in older persons (FORTA-A or -B), underlining the overall positive assessment of the risk/benefit ratio for these drugs. For other vitamin-K antagonists regionally used in Europe, the lack of evidence should challenge current practice
The fate of spiral galaxies in clusters: The star formation history of the anemic Virgo cluster galaxy NGC 4569
We present a new method for studying the star formation history of late-type cluster galaxies undergoing gas starvation or a ram pressure stripping event by combining bidimensional multifrequency observations with multizone models of galactic chemical and spectrophotometric evolution. This method is applied to the Virgo Cluster anemic galaxy NGC 4569. We extract radial profiles from recently obtained UV GALEX images at 1530 and 2310 Å, from visible and near-IR narrow (Hα) and broadband images at different wavelengths (u, B, g, V, r, i, z, J, H, and K), from Spitzer IRAC and MIPS images, and from atomic and molecular gas maps. The model in the absence of interaction (characterized by its rotation velocity and spin parameter) is constrained by the unperturbed H-band light profile and by the Hα rotation curve. We can reconstruct the observed total gas radial density profile and the light surface brightness profiles at all wavelengths in a ram pressure stripping scenario by making simple assumptions about the gas removal process and the orbit of NGC 4569 inside the cluster. The observed profiles cannot be reproduced by simply stopping gas infall, thus mimicking starvation. Gas removal is required, which is more efficient in the outer disk, inducing radial quenching in the star formation activity, as observed and reproduced by the model. This observational result, consistent with theoretical predictions that a galaxy cluster-IGM interaction is able to modify structural disk parameters without gravitational perturbations, is discussed in the framework of the origin of lenticular galaxies in cluster
New Light in Star-Forming Dwarf Galaxies: The PMAS Integral Field View of the Blue Compact Dwarf Galaxy Mrk 409
We present an integral field spectroscopic study of the central 2x2 kpc^2 of
the blue compact dwarf galaxy Mrk 409, observed with the Potsdam MultiAperture
Spectrophotometer. This study focuses on the morphology, two-dimensional
chemical abundance pattern, excitation properties and kinematics of the ionized
interstellar medium in the starburst component. We also investigate the nature
of the extended ring of ionized gas emission surrounding the bright nuclear
starburst region of Mrk 409. PMAS spectra of selected regions along the ring,
interpreted with evolutionary and population synthesis models, indicate that
their ionized emission is mainly due to a young stellar population with a total
mass of ~1.5x10^6 M_sun, which started forming almost coevally ~10 Myr ago.
This stellar component is likely confined to the collisional interface of a
spherically expanding, starburst-driven super-bubble with denser, swept-up
ambient gas, ~600 pc away from the central starburst nucleus. The spectroscopic
properties of the latter imply a large extinction (C_H-beta>0.9), and the
presence of an additional non-thermal ionization source, most likely a
low-luminosity Active Galactic Nucleus. Mrk 409 shows a relatively large oxygen
abundance (12+log(O/H)~8.4) and no chemical abundance gradients out to R~600
pc. The ionized gas kinematics displays an overall regular rotation on a
northwest-southwest axis, with a maximum velocity of 60 km/s; the total mass
inside the star-forming ring is about 1.4x10^9 M_sun.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Anderson localization in a periodic photonic lattice with a disordered boundary
We investigate experimentally the light evolution inside a two-dimensional
finite periodic array of weakly- coupled optical waveguides with a disordered
boundary. For a completely localized initial condition away from the surface,
we find that the disordered boundary induces an asymptotic localization in the
bulk, centered around the initial position of the input beam.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figure
Influence of Light and Heavy Thresholds on SUSY Unification
In this paper we study and compare susy unification using two different
approaches in order to take into account the effect of light particle
thresholds on the evolution of gauge couplings: the step--function
approximation, on the one hand, and a mass dependent procedure, which gives a
more accurate description of the dependence of the results on the masses, on
the other. We also include the effect of heavy thresholds, when is
chosen as the unifying group. We find that the mass--dependent procedure
excludes scenarios where all susy masses are below , and favors a value
of near its upper experimental bound, contrary to the results
obtained with the step--function approximation. We underline the dependence of
the results on the procedure chosen to deal with light thresholds.Comment: 18 pages,LAEFF-93/014,REVTEX-2.1, 5 figures not included, available
upon request (include FAX number)
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