9,938 research outputs found
Noncommutative Spacetime, Stringy Spacetime Uncertainty Principle, and Density Fluctuations
We propose a variation of spacetime noncommutative field theory to realize
the stringy spacetime uncertainty relation without breaking any of the global
symmetries of the homogeneous isotropic universe. We study the spectrum of
metric perturbations in this model for a wide class of accelerating background
cosmologies. Spacetime noncommutativity leads to a coupling between the
fluctuation modes and the background cosmology which is nonlocal in time. For
each mode, there is a critical time at which the spacetime uncertainty relation
is saturated. This is the time when the mode is generated. These effects lead
to a spectrum of fluctuations whose spectral index is different from what is
obtained for commutative spacetime in the infrared region, but is unchanged in
the ultraviolet region. In the special case of an exponentially expanding
background, we find a scale-invariant spectrum. but with a different magnitude
than in the context of commutative spacetime if the Hubble constant is above
the string scale.Comment: 10 page
Anapole Dark Matter
We consider dark matter (DM) that interacts with ordinary matter exclusively
through an electromagnetic anapole, which is the only allowed electromagnetic
form factor for Majorana fermions. We show that unlike DM particles with an
electric or magnetic dipole moment, anapole dark matter particles annihilate
exclusively into fermions via purely p-wave interactions, while tree-level
annihilations into photons are forbidden. We calculate the anapole moment
needed to produce a thermal relic abundance in agreement with cosmological
observations, and show that it is consistent with current XENON100 detection
limits on the DM-nucleus cross-section for all masses, while lying just below
the detection threshold for a mass ~ 30-40 GeV.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, v3: version to appear in PL
Fault-tolerant meshes and hypercubes with minimal numbers of spares
Many parallel computers consist of processors connected in the form of a d-dimensional mesh or hypercube. Two- and three-dimensional meshes have been shown to be efficient in manipulating images and dense matrices, whereas hypercubes have been shown to be well suited to divide-and-conquer algorithms requiring global communication. However, even a single faulty processor or communication link can seriously affect the performance of these machines.
This paper presents several techniques for tolerating faults in d-dimensional mesh and hypercube architectures. Our approach consists of adding spare processors and communication links so that the resulting architecture will contain a fault-free mesh or hypercube in the presence of faults. We optimize the cost of the fault-tolerant architecture by adding exactly k spare processors (while tolerating up to k processor and/or link faults) and minimizing the maximum number of links per processor. For example, when the desired architecture is a d-dimensional mesh and k = 1, we present a fault-tolerant architecture that has the same maximum degree as the desired architecture (namely, 2d) and has only one spare processor. We also present efficient layouts for fault-tolerant two- and three-dimensional meshes, and show how multiplexers and buses can be used to reduce the degree of fault-tolerant architectures. Finally, we give constructions for fault-tolerant tori, eight-connected meshes, and hexagonal meshes
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