5,746 research outputs found
Consequences of Fine-Tuning for Fifth Force Searches
Light bosonic fields mediate long range forces between objects. If these
fields have self-interactions, i.e., non-quadratic terms in the potential, the
experimental constraints on such forces can be drastically altered due to a
screening (chameleon) or enhancement effect. We explore how technically natural
values for such self-interaction coupling constants modify the existing
constraints. We point out that assuming the existence of these natural
interactions leads to new constraints, contrary to the usual expectation that
screening leads to gaps in coverage. We discuss how screening can turn
fundamentally equivalence principle (EP)-preserving forces into EP-violating
ones. This means that when natural screening is present, searches for EP
violation can be used to constrain EP-preserving forces. We show how this
effect enables the recently discovered stellar triple system \textit{PSR
J03371715} to place a powerful constraint on EP-preserving fifth forces.
Finally, we demonstrate that technically natural cubic self-interactions modify
the vacuum structure of the scalar potential, leading to new constraints from
spontaneous and induced vacuum decay.Comment: 36 pages, 9 figures -- v3 reflects version published in JHE
Leveraging ASTM Industry Standard F3269-17 for Providing Safe Operations of a Highly Autonomous Aircraft
This paper expands upon the ASTM industry standard F3269-17 to outline a run-time assurance (RTA) network architecture for use in ensuring safe flight operations of a highly autonomous aircraft. An RTA network architecture is proposed and critical features discussed to implement functions where automation is primarily responsible for the safety of the aircraft instead of a pilot. This shift in responsibility, made possible by the proposed architecture, is key to highly resilient automation and is a core enabler for future pilotless transportation concepts. The findings in this paper stem from the researchers experiences with ASTM in the generation of the standard and some seven years of RTA system development on various flight programs leveraging the RTA concepts outlined in the ASTM standard
Multiphotons and Photon-Jets
We discuss an extension of the Standard Model with a new vector-boson
decaying predominantly into a multi-photon final state through intermediate
light degrees of freedom. The model has a distinctive phase in which the
photons are collimated. As such, they would fail the isolation requirements of
standard multi-photon searches, but group naturally into a novel object, the
photon-jet. Once defined, the photon-jet object facilitates more inclusive
searches for similar phenomena. We present a concrete model, discuss
photon-jets more generally, and outline some strategies that may prove useful
when searching for such objects.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Automated optical identification of a large complete northern hemisphere sample of flat spectrum radio sources with S_6cm > 200 mJy
This paper describes the automated optical APM identification of radio
sources from the Jodrell Bank - VLA Astrometric Survey (JVAS), as used for the
search for distant radio-loud quasars. The sample has been used to investigate
possible relations between optical and radio properties of flat spectrum radio
sources. From the 915 sources in the sample, 756 have an optical APM
identification at a red (e) and/or blue (o) plate,resulting in an
identification fraction of 83% with a completeness and reliability of 98% and
99% respectively. About 20% are optically identified with extended APM objects
on the red plates, e.g. galaxies. However the distinction between galaxies and
quasars can not be done properly near the magnitude limit of the POSS-I plates.
The identification fraction appears to decrease from >90% for sources with a 5
GHz flux density of >1 Jy, to <80% for sources at 0.2 Jy. The identification
fraction, in particular that for unresolved quasars, is found to be lower for
sources with steeper radio spectra. In agreement with previous studies, we find
that the quasars at low radio flux density levels also tend to have fainter
optical magnitudes, although there is a large spread. In addition, objects with
a steep radio-to-optical spectral index are found to be mainly highly polarised
quasars, supporting the idea that in these objects the polarised synchrotron
component is more prominent. It is shown that the large spread in
radio-to-optical spectral index is possibly caused by source to source
variations in the Doppler boosting of the synchrotron component [Abridged].Comment: LaTex, 17 pages, 5 gif figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in
MNRAS. High resolution figures can be found at http://www.roe.ac.uk/~ignas
Litigation Analytics: A Framework For Understanding, Using & Teaching
This article, appearing in the American Association of Law Libraries bimonthly member magazine, provides a brief introduction (under 2000 words) to litigation analytics. It contains a definition, common uses of litigation analytics, a brief history, as well as why litigation analytics should be taught in law school. The author provides his framework for teaching and understanding litigation analytics which includes types of analytics, pivot points (perspectives from which the analytics may be understood), and contextualizes the various analytics offerings by insight-needs categories: (1) categorizing and clustering; (2) ordering, ranking, and sorting; (3) distribution; (4) comparison; (5) trends; (6) geospatial location; (7) composition; and (8) relationships. Additionally, the article contains a cautionary hypothetical as to how the predictive nature of analytics might stifle the development of the law in a particular area
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