24,754 research outputs found
Non-Supersymmetric Attractors in BI black holes
We study attractor mechanism in extremal black holes of Einstein-Born-Infeld
theories in four dimensions. We look for solutions which are regular near the
horizon and show that they exist and enjoy the attractor behavior. The
attractor point is determined by extremization of the effective potential at
the horizon. This analysis includes the backreaction and supports the validity
of non-supersymmetric attractors in the presence of higher derivative
interactions in the gauge field part.Comment: 15 pages, minor corrections, references adde
Tensile Behavior of Tungsten/Niobium Composites at 1300 to 1600 K
The tensile behavior of continuous tungsten fiber reinforced niobium composites (W/Nb), fabricated by an arc-spray process, was studied in the 1300 to 1600 K temperature range. The tensile properties of the fiber and matrix components as well as of the composites were measured and were compared to rule of mixtures (ROM) predictions. The deviation from the ROM was found to depend upon the chemistry of the tungsten alloy fibers, with positive deviations for ST300/Nb (i.e., stronger composite strength than the ROM) and negative or zero deviations for 218/Nb
Minimum fuel coplanar aeroassisted orbital transfer using collocation and nonlinear programming
The fuel optimal control problem arising in coplanar orbital transfer employing aeroassisted technology is addressed. The mission involves the transfer from high energy orbit (HEO) to low energy orbit (LEO) without plane change. The basic approach here is to employ a combination of propulsive maneuvers in space and aerodynamic maneuvers in the atmosphere. The basic sequence of events for the coplanar aeroassisted HEO to LEO orbit transfer consists of three phases. In the first phase, the transfer begins with a deorbit impulse at HEO which injects the vehicle into a elliptic transfer orbit with perigee inside the atmosphere. In the second phase, the vehicle is optimally controlled by lift and drag modulation to satisfy heating constraints and to exit the atmosphere with the desired flight path angle and velocity so that the apogee of the exit orbit is the altitude of the desired LEO. Finally, the second impulse is required to circularize the orbit at LEO. The performance index is maximum final mass. Simulation results show that the coplanar aerocapture is quite different from the case where orbital plane changes are made inside the atmosphere. In the latter case, the vehicle has to penetrate deeper into the atmosphere to perform the desired orbital plane change. For the coplanar case, the vehicle needs only to penetrate the atmosphere deep enough to reduce the exit velocity so the vehicle can be captured at the desired LEO. The peak heating rates are lower and the entry corridor is wider. From the thermal protection point of view, the coplanar transfer may be desirable. Parametric studies also show the maximum peak heating rates and the entry corridor width are functions of maximum lift coefficient. The problem is solved using a direct optimization technique which uses piecewise polynomial representation for the states and controls and collocation to represent the differential equations. This converts the optimal control problem into a nonlinear programming problem which is solved numerically by using a modified version of NPSOL. Solutions were obtained for the described problem for cases with and without heating constraints. The method appears to be more robust than other optimization methods. In addition, the method can handle complex dynamical constraints
Analyses of pion-nucleon elastic scattering amplitudes up to in extended-on-mass-shell subtraction scheme
We extend the analysis of elastic pion-nucleon scattering up to
level using extended-on-mass-shell subtraction scheme within the framework of
covariant baryon chiral perturbation theory. Numerical fits to partial wave
phase shift data up to GeV are performed to pin down the free
low energy constants. A good description to the existing phase shift data is
achieved. We find a good convergence for the chiral series at ,
considerably improved with respect to the -level analyses found in
previous literature. Also, the leading order contribution from explicit
resonance and partially-included loop
contribution are included to describe phase shift data up to
GeV. As phenomenological applications, we investigate chiral correction to the
Goldberger-Treiman relation % and find that it converges rapidly,
and the correction is found to be very small: . We also
get a reasonable prediction of pion-nucleon sigma term up to
by performing fits including both the pion-nucleon partial wave phase
shift data and the lattice QCD data. We report that MeV
from the fit without , and MeV from the
fit with explicit .Comment: The final version published in Phys.Rev. D 87, 054019 (2013
Figure of Merit for Dark Energy Constraints from Current Observational Data
Choosing the appropriate figure of merit (FoM) for dark energy (DE)
constraints is key in comparing different DE experiments. Here we show that for
a set of DE parameters {f_i}, it is most intuitive to define FoM =
1/\sqrt{Cov(f1,f2,f3,...)}, where Cov(f1,f2,f3,...) is the covariance matrix of
{f_i}. The {f_i} should be minimally correlated. We demonstrate two useful
choices of {f_i} using 182 SNe Ia (compiled by Riess et al. 2007), [R(z_*),
l_a(z_*), \Omega_b h^2] from the five year Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe
(WMAP) observations, and SDSS measurement of the baryon acoustic oscillation
(BAO) scale, assuming the HST prior of H_0=72+/-8 km/s Mpc^{-1} and without
assuming spatial flatness. We find that the correlation of (w_0,w_{0.5})
[w_0=w_X(z=0), w_{0.5}=w_X(z=0.5), w_X(a) = 3w_{0.5}-2w_0+3(w_0-w_{0.5})a] is
significantly smaller than that of (w_0,w_a) [w_X(a)=w_0+(1-a)w_a]. In order to
obtain model-independent constraints on DE, we parametrize the DE density
function X(z)=\rho_X(z)/\rho_X(0) as a free function with X_{0.5}, X_{1.0}, and
X_{1.5} [values of X(z) at z=0.5, 1.0, and 1.5] as free parameters estimated
from data. If one assumes a linear DE equation of state, current data are
consistent with a cosmological constant at 68% C.L. If one assumes X(z) to be a
free function parametrized by (X_{0.5}, X_{1.0}, X_{1.5}), current data deviate
from a cosmological constant at z=1 at 68% C.L., but are consistent with a
cosmological constant at 95% C.L.. Future DE experiments will allow us to
dramatically increase the FoM of constraints on (w_0,w_{0.5}) and of (X_{0.5},
X_{1.0}, X_{1.5}). This will significantly shrink the DE parameter space to
enable the discovery of DE evolution, or the conclusive evidence for a
cosmological constant.Comment: 7 pages, 3 color figures. Submitte
Telescoper: de novo assembly of highly repetitive regions.
MotivationWith advances in sequencing technology, it has become faster and cheaper to obtain short-read data from which to assemble genomes. Although there has been considerable progress in the field of genome assembly, producing high-quality de novo assemblies from short-reads remains challenging, primarily because of the complex repeat structures found in the genomes of most higher organisms. The telomeric regions of many genomes are particularly difficult to assemble, though much could be gained from the study of these regions, as their evolution has not been fully characterized and they have been linked to aging.ResultsIn this article, we tackle the problem of assembling highly repetitive regions by developing a novel algorithm that iteratively extends long paths through a series of read-overlap graphs and evaluates them based on a statistical framework. Our algorithm, Telescoper, uses short- and long-insert libraries in an integrated way throughout the assembly process. Results on real and simulated data demonstrate that our approach can effectively resolve much of the complex repeat structures found in the telomeres of yeast genomes, especially when longer long-insert libraries are used.AvailabilityTelescoper is publicly available for download at sourceforge.net/p/[email protected] informationSupplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online
Model-Independent Distance Measurements from Gamma-Ray Bursts and Constraints on Dark Energy
Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRB) are the most energetic events in the Universe, and
provide a complementary probe of dark energy by allowing the measurement of
cosmic expansion history that extends to redshifts greater than 6. Unlike Type
Ia supernovae (SNe Ia), GRBs must be calibrated for each cosmological model
considered, because of the lack of a nearby sample of GRBs for
model-independent calibration. For a flat Universe with a cosmological
constant, we find Omega_m=0.25^{+0.12}_{-0.11} from 69 GRBs alone. We show that
the current GRB data can be summarized by a set of model-independent distance
measurements, with negligible loss of information. We constrain a dark energy
equation of state linear in the cosmic scale factor using these distance
measurements from GRBs, together with the "Union" compilation of SNe Ia, WMAP
five year observations, and the SDSS baryon acoustic oscillation scale
measurement. We find that a cosmological constant is consistent with current
data at 68% confidence level for a flat Universe. Our results provide a simple
and robust method to incorporate GRB data in a joint analysis of cosmological
data to constrain dark energy.Comment: 8 pages, 5 color figures. Version expanded and revised for
clarification, and typo in Eqs.(3)(4)(12) corrected. PRD, in pres
Charged coherent states related to su_{q}(2) covariance
A new kind of q-deformed charged coherent states is constructed in Fock space
of two-mode q-boson system with su_{q}(2) covariance and a resolution of unity
for these states is derived. We also present a simple way to obtain these
coherent states using state projection method.Comment: 7 pages. To appear in Modern Phyics Letter:
Possible Explanation to Low CMB Quadrupole
The universe might experience many cycles with different vacua. The slow-roll
inflation may be preceded by kinetic-dominated contraction occurring in
"adjacent" vacua during some cycles. In this report we briefly show this
phenomenon may lead to a cutoff of primordial power spectrum. Thus in some
sense the CMB at large angular scale might encode the information of other
vacua.Comment: 10 pages, 3 eps figures, accepted for publication in PRD, v2 revised
with published versio
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