5,082 research outputs found
Limit to General Relativity in f(R) theories of gravity
We discuss two aspects of f(R) theories of gravity in metric formalism. We
first study the reasons to introduce a scalar-tensor representation for these
theories and the behavior of this representation in the limit to General
Relativity, f(R)--> R. We find that the scalar-tensor representation is well
behaved even in this limit. Then we work out the exact equations for
spherically symmetric sources using the original f(R) representation, solve the
linearized equations, and compare our results with recent calculations of the
literature. We observe that the linearized solutions are strongly affected by
the cosmic evolution, which makes very unlikely that the cosmic speedup be due
to f(R) models with correcting terms relevant at low curvatures.Comment: 8 pages; small changes to match published version (some comments,
references added, title corrected); to appear in Phys.Rev.
The Spread of Opinions and Proportional Voting
Election results are determined by numerous social factors that affect the
formation of opinion of the voters, including the network of interactions
between them and the dynamics of opinion influence. In this work we study the
result of proportional elections using an opinion dynamics model similar to
simple opinion spreading over a complex network. Erdos-Renyi, Barabasi-Albert,
regular lattices and randomly augmented lattices are considered as models of
the underlying social networks. The model reproduces the power law behavior of
number of candidates with a given number of votes found in real elections with
the correct slope, a cutoff for larger number of votes and a plateau for small
number of votes. It is found that the small world property of the underlying
network is fundamental for the emergence of the power law regime.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Complex collective states in a one-dimensional two-atom system
We consider a pair of identical two-level atoms interacting with a scalar
field in one dimension, separated by a distance . We restrict our
attention to states where one atom is excited and the other is in the ground
state, in symmetric or anti-symmetric combinations. We obtain exact collective
decaying states, belonging to a complex spectral representation of the
Hamiltonian. The imaginary parts of the eigenvalues give the decay rates, and
the real parts give the average energy of the collective states. In one
dimension there is strong interference between the fields emitted by the atoms,
leading to long-range cooperative effects. The decay rates and the energy
oscillate with the distance . Depending on , the decay rates
will either decrease, vanish or increase as compared with the one-atom decay
rate. We have sub- and super-radiance at periodic intervals. Our model may be
used to study two-cavity electron wave-guides. The vanishing of the collective
decay rates then suggests the possibility of obtaining stable configurations,
where an electron is trapped inside the two cavities.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Breaking a chaos-noise-based secure communication scheme
This paper studies the security of a secure communication scheme based on two
discrete-time intermittently-chaotic systems synchronized via a common random
driving signal. Some security defects of the scheme are revealed: 1) the key
space can be remarkably reduced; 2) the decryption is insensitive to the
mismatch of the secret key; 3) the key-generation process is insecure against
known/chosen-plaintext attacks. The first two defects mean that the scheme is
not secure enough against brute-force attacks, and the third one means that an
attacker can easily break the cryptosystem by approximately estimating the
secret key once he has a chance to access a fragment of the generated
keystream. Yet it remains to be clarified if intermittent chaos could be used
for designing secure chaotic cryptosystems.Comment: RevTeX4, 11 pages, 15 figure
Return-Map Cryptanalysis Revisited
As a powerful cryptanalysis tool, the method of return-map attacks can be
used to extract secret messages masked by chaos in secure communication
schemes. Recently, a simple defensive mechanism was presented to enhance the
security of chaotic parameter modulation schemes against return-map attacks.
Two techniques are combined in the proposed defensive mechanism: multistep
parameter modulation and alternative driving of two different transmitter
variables. This paper re-studies the security of this proposed defensive
mechanism against return-map attacks, and points out that the security was much
over-estimated in the original publication for both ciphertext-only attack and
known/chosen-plaintext attacks. It is found that a deterministic relationship
exists between the shape of the return map and the modulated parameter, and
that such a relationship can be used to dramatically enhance return-map attacks
thereby making them quite easy to break the defensive mechanism.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
Costruire in pietra, pratica e storia. Laboratorio di stereotomia - Palermo 2016
Il volume raccoglie i contributi presentati in occasione del seminario introduttivo al Laboratorio di stereotomia, tenutosi presso il Dipartimento di Architettura dell'Università degli studi di Palermo nel mese di aprile del 2016, e un contributo che illustra quest'ultima esperienza. Nel complesso, i diversi saggi ruotano intorno al tema della costruzione in pietra nell'ambito dell'architettura tardogotica, con particolare attenzione alle volte, osservata da diversi punti di vista e ambiti disciplinari che spaziano dalla storia, al disegno, alla storia della costruzione. Ricerca e didattica si intrecciano e concorrono a fare nuova luce su esperienze costruttive di primo piano nella storia dell'architettura europea, secondo una modalità già sperimentata da José Carlos Palacios Gonzalo nel Laboratorio di costruzione gotica dell'Universidad Politecnica di Madrid e replicata a Palermo nel Laboratorio di stereotomiaThis volume collects the contributions presented at the introductory seminar at Laboratory of stereotomy, held at the Department of Architecture of the University of Palermo in April of 2016, and a contribution that illustrates this last experience. All the essays deal with the theme of the stone building in late Gothic architecture, with particular attention to the vaults, observed from different points of view and disciplines ranging from history, to drawing, to construction history . Research and teaching are intertwined and help to shed new light on experiences prominent in the history of European architecture, according to a methodology already tested by José Carlos Gonzalo Palacios in the Gothic building Laboratory of the Universidad Politecnica de Madrid and replicated in Palermo in the Laboratory of stereotomy
Bouncing Cosmologies in Palatini Gravity
We consider the early time cosmology of f(R) theories in Palatini formalism
and study the conditions that guarantee the existence of homogeneous and
isotropic models that avoid the Big Bang singularity. We show that for such
models the Big Bang singularity can be replaced by a cosmic bounce without
violating any energy condition. In fact, the bounce is possible even for
pressureless dust. We give a characterization of such models and discuss their
dynamics in the region near the bounce. We also find that power-law lagrangians
with a finite number of terms may lead to non-singular universes, which
contrasts with the infinite-series Palatini f(R) lagrangian that one needs to
fully capture the effective dynamics of Loop Quantum Cosmology. We argue that
these models could also avoid the formation of singularities during stellar
gravitational collapse.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures; added references and a short comment in sec.I
Universal scaling in quantum impurity models: the appearance of additional low energy scales
We present results of the impurity local density of states of the interacting
resonant level model at zero temperature. We concentrate on low-energy
properties and predominantly use the numerical renormalisation group technique.
As interaction is increased, we find that the resonance peak at zero energy
disappears, while two new peaks at finite energy emerge. This is in the absence
of any field breaking the resonance. We further show that the height of the
spectral function does not scale in the same way as the width, and in fact
defines a second distinct exponent. We back up our results with analytic
strong-coupling calculations as well as an analytic diagrammatic
renormalisation group calculation that rather surprisingly gets the second
exponent exactly, even for strong interactions
Quantifying non-star formation associated 8um dust emission in NGC 628
Combining Ha and IRAC images of the nearby spiral galaxy NGC 628, we find
that between 30-43% of its 8um dust emission is not related to recent star
formation. Contributions from dust heated by young stars are separated by
identifying HII regions in the Ha map and using these areas as a mask to
determine the 8um dust emission that must be due to heating by older stars.
Corrections are made for sub-detection-threshold HII regions, photons escaping
from HII regions and for young stars not directly associated to HII regions
(i.e. 10-100 Myr old stars). A simple model confirms this amount of 8um
emission can be expected given dust and PAH absorption cross-sections, a
realistic star-formation history, and the observed optical extinction values. A
Fourier power spectrum analysis indicates that the 8um dust emission is more
diffuse than the Ha emission (and similar to observed HI), supporting our
analysis that much of the 8um-emitting dust is heated by older stars. The 8um
dust-to-Ha emission ratio declines with galactocentric radius both within and
outside of HII regions, probably due to a radial increase in disk transparency.
In the course of this work, we have also found that intrinsic diffuse Ha
fractions may be lower than previously thought in galaxies, if the differential
extinction between HII regions and diffuse regions is taken into account.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, accepted in Ap
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