56,551 research outputs found

    The non-Gaussianity of the cosmic shear likelihood - or: How odd is the Chandra Deep Field South?

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    (abridged) We study the validity of the approximation of a Gaussian cosmic shear likelihood. We estimate the true likelihood for a fiducial cosmological model from a large set of ray-tracing simulations and investigate the impact of non-Gaussianity on cosmological parameter estimation. We investigate how odd the recently reported very low value of σ8\sigma_8 really is as derived from the \textit{Chandra} Deep Field South (CDFS) using cosmic shear by taking the non-Gaussianity of the likelihood into account as well as the possibility of biases coming from the way the CDFS was selected. We find that the cosmic shear likelihood is significantly non-Gaussian. This leads to both a shift of the maximum of the posterior distribution and a significantly smaller credible region compared to the Gaussian case. We re-analyse the CDFS cosmic shear data using the non-Gaussian likelihood. Assuming that the CDFS is a random pointing, we find σ8=0.680.16+0.09\sigma_8=0.68_{-0.16}^{+0.09} for fixed Ωm=0.25\Omega_{\rm m}=0.25. In a WMAP5-like cosmology, a value equal to or lower than this would be expected in 5\approx 5% of the times. Taking biases into account arising from the way the CDFS was selected, which we model as being dependent on the number of haloes in the CDFS, we obtain σ8=0.710.15+0.10\sigma_8 = 0.71^{+0.10}_{-0.15}. Combining the CDFS data with the parameter constraints from WMAP5 yields Ωm=0.260.02+0.03\Omega_{\rm m} = 0.26^{+0.03}_{-0.02} and σ8=0.790.03+0.04\sigma_8 = 0.79^{+0.04}_{-0.03} for a flat universe.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in A&A; New Bayesian treatment of field selection bia

    An effective Hamiltonian for phase fluctuations on a lattice: an extended XY model

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    We derive an effective Hamiltonian for phase fluctuations in an s-wave superconductor starting from the attractive Hubbard model on a square lattice. In contrast to the common assumption, we find that the effective Hamiltonian is not the usual XY model but is of an extended XY type. This extended feature is robust and leads to essential corrections in understanding phase fluctuations on a lattice. The effective coupling in the Hamiltonian varies significantly with temperature.Comment: 2 figure

    On the use of the Fourier Transform to determine the projected rotational velocity of line-profile variable B stars

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    The Fourier Transform method is a popular tool to derive the rotational velocities of stars from their spectral line profiles. However, its domain of validity does not include line-profile variables with time-dependent profiles. We investigate the performance of the method for such cases, by interpreting the line-profile variations of spotted B stars, and of pulsating B tars, as if their spectral lines were caused by uniform surface rotation along with macroturbulence. We perform time-series analysis and harmonic least-squares fitting of various line diagnostics and of the outcome of several implementations of the Fourier Transform method. We find that the projected rotational velocities derived from the Fourier Transform vary appreciably during the pulsation cycle whenever the pulsational and rotational velocity fields are of similar magnitude. The macroturbulent velocities derived while ignoring the pulsations can vary with tens of km/s during the pulsation cycle. The temporal behaviour of the deduced rotational and macroturbulent velocities are in antiphase with each other. The rotational velocity is in phase with the second moment of the line profiles. The application of the Fourier method to stars with considerable pulsational line broadening may lead to an appreciable spread in the values of the rotation velocity, and, by implication, of the deduced value of the macroturbulence. These two quantities should therefore not be derived from single snapshot spectra if the aim is to use them as a solid diagnostic for the evaluation of stellar evolution models of slow to moderate rotators.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic

    Towards a generalized theory of low-frequency sound source localization

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    Low-frequency sound source localization generates considerable amount of disagreement between audio/acoustics researchers, with some arguing that below a certain frequency humans cannot localize a source with others insisting that in certain cases localization is possible, even down to the lowest audible of frequencies. Nearly all previous work in this area depends on subjective evaluations to formulate theorems for low-frequency localization. This, of course, opens the argument of data reliability, a critical factor that may go some way to explain the reported ambiguities with regard to low-frequency localization. The resulting proposal stipulates that low-frequency source localization is highly dependent on room dimensions, source/listener location and absorptive properties. In some cases, a source can be accurately localized down to the lowest audible of frequencies, while in other situations it cannot. This is relevant as the standard procedure in live sound reinforcement, cinema sound and home-theater surround sound is to have a single mono channel for the low-frequency content, based on the assumption that human’s cannot determine direction in this band. This work takes the first steps towards showing that this may not be a universally valid simplification and that certain sound reproduction systems may actually benefit from directional low-frequency content
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