853 research outputs found

    Reconstructing cosmic acceleration from modified and non-minimal gravity: The Yang-Mills case

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    A variant of the accelerating cosmology reconstruction program is developed for f(R)f(R) gravity and for a modified Yang-Mills/Maxwell theory. Reconstruction schemes in terms of e-foldings and by using an auxiliary scalar field are developed and carefully compared, for the case of f(R)f(R) gravity. An example of a model with a transient phantom behavior without real matter is explicitly discussed in both schemes. Further, the two reconstruction schemes are applied to the more physically interesting case of a Yang-Mills/Maxwell theory, again with explicit examples. Detailed comparison of the two schemes of reconstruction is presented also for this theory. It seems to support, as well, physical non-equivalence of the two frames.Comment: 16 pages, no figures, version to appear in Phys Rev

    Imaging Technology and Systems

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    Presents a review of various imaging techniques used in the ground-based airborne and spaceborne systems. It mainly covers the subject on electromagnetic spectrum extending from ultraviolet to microwave region. Discusses various imaging techniques, including their advantages/limitations and available systems and highlights visible, near infrared, thermal infrared and millimeter wave band imaging system developed by the Defence Electronics Applications Laboratory, Dehradun

    Duality and cosmological compactification of superstrings with unbroken supersymmetry

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    The cosmological compactification of D=10, N=1 supergravity-super-Yang-Mills theory obtained from superstring theory is studied. The constraint of unbroken N=1 supersymmetry is imposed. A duality transformation is performed on the resulting consistency conditions. The original equations as well as the transformed equations are solved numerically to obtain new configurations with a nontrivial scale factor and a dynamical dilaton. It is shown that various classes of solutions are possible, which include cosmological solutions with no initial singularity.Comment: Latex2e file, 24 pages including 10 figures as tex file

    Scalar Field Dark Energy Perturbations and their Scale Dependence

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    We estimate the amplitude of perturbation in dark energy at different length scales for a quintessence model with an exponential potential. It is shown that on length scales much smaller than hubble radius, perturbation in dark energy is negligible in comparison to that in in dark matter. However, on scales comparable to the hubble radius (λp>1000Mpc\lambda_{p}>1000\mathrm{Mpc}) the perturbation in dark energy in general cannot be neglected. As compared to the Λ\LambdaCDM model, large scale matter power spectrum is suppressed in a generic quintessence dark energy model. We show that on scales λp<1000Mpc\lambda_{p} < 1000\mathrm{Mpc}, this suppression is primarily due to different background evolution compared to Λ\LambdaCDM model. However, on much larger scales perturbation in dark energy can effect matter power spectrum significantly. Hence this analysis can act as a discriminator between Λ\LambdaCDM model and other generic dark energy models with wde≠−1w_{de} \neq -1.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures, added new section, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    Complementary Constraints on Brane Cosmology

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    The acceleration of the expansion of the universe represents one of the major challenges to our current understanding of fundamental physics. In principle, to explain this phenomenon, at least two different routes may be followed: either adjusting the energy content of the Universe -- by introducing a negative-pressure dark energy -- or modifying gravity at very large scales -- by introducing new spatial dimensions, an idea also required by unification theories. In the cosmological context, the role of such extra dimensions as the source of the dark pressure responsable for the acceleration of our Universe is translated into the so-called brane world (BW) cosmologies. Here we study complementary constraints on a particular class of BW scenarios in which the modification of gravity arises due to a gravitational \emph{leakage} into extra dimensions. To this end, we use the most recent Chandra measurements of the X-ray gas mass fraction in galaxy clusters, the WMAP determinations of the baryon density parameter, measurements of the Hubble parameter from the \emph{HST}, and the current supernova data. In agreement with other recent results, it is shown that these models provide a good description for these complementary data, although a closed scenario is always favored in the joint analysis. We emphasize that observational tests of BW scenarios constitute a natural verification of the role of possible extra dimensions in both fundamental physics and cosmology.Comment: 6 Pages, 4 Figures, LaTe

    Observational constraints on low redshift evolution of dark energy: How consistent are different observations?

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    The dark energy component of the universe is often interpreted either in terms of a cosmological constant or as a scalar field. A generic feature of the scalar field models is that the equation of state parameter w= P/rho for the dark energy need not satisfy w=-1 and, in general, it can be a function of time. Using the Markov chain Monte Carlo method we perform a critical analysis of the cosmological parameter space, allowing for a varying w. We use constraints on w(z) from the observations of high redshift supernovae (SN), the WMAP observations of CMB anisotropies and abundance of rich clusters of galaxies. For models with a constant w, the LCDM model is allowed with a probability of about 6% by the SN observations while it is allowed with a probability of 98.9% by WMAP observations. The LCDM model is allowed even within the context of models with variable w: WMAP observations allow it with a probability of 99.1% whereas SN data allows it with 23% probability. The SN data, on its own, favors phantom like equation of state (w<-1) and high values for Omega_NR. It does not distinguish between constant w (with w<-1) models and those with varying w(z) in a statistically significant manner. The SN data allows a very wide range for variation of dark energy density, e.g., a variation by factor ten in the dark energy density between z=0 and z=1 is allowed at 95% confidence level. WMAP observations provide a better constraint and the corresponding allowed variation is less than a factor of three. Allowing for variation in w has an impact on the values for other cosmological parameters in that the allowed range often becomes larger. (Abridged)Comment: 21 pages, PRD format (Revtex 4), postscript figures. minor corrections to improve clarity; references, acknowledgement adde

    Late acceleration and w=−1w=-1 crossing in induced gravity

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    We study the cosmological evolution on a brane with induced gravity within a bulk with arbitrary matter content. We consider a Friedmann-Robertson-Walker brane, invariantly characterized by a six-dimensional group of isometries. We derive the effective Friedmann and Raychaudhuri equations. We show that the Hubble expansion rate on the brane depends on the covariantly defined integrated mass in the bulk, which determines the energy density of the generalized dark radiation. The Friedmann equation has two branches, distinguished by the two possible values of the parameter \ex=\pm 1. The branch with \ex=1 is characterized by an effective cosmological constant and accelerated expansion for low energy densities. Another remarkable feature is that the contribution from the generalized dark radiation appears with a negative sign. As a result, the presence of the bulk corresponds to an effective negative energy density on the brane, without violation of the weak energy condition. The transition from a period of domination of the matter energy density by non-relativistic brane matter to domination by the generalized dark radiation corresponds to a crossing of the phantom divide w=−1w=-1.Comment: 7 pages, no figures, RevTex 4.0; (v2) new references are added, minor corrections and expanded discussion; (v3) additional comments at the end of section III, minor corrections and several new references are added, to match published version in Phys. Rev.

    Evolution of perturbations in distinct classes of canonical scalar field models of dark energy

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    Dark energy must cluster in order to be consistent with the equivalence principle. The background evolution can be effectively modelled by either a scalar field or by a barotropic fluid.The fluid model can be used to emulate perturbations in a scalar field model of dark energy, though this model breaks down at large scales. In this paper we study evolution of dark energy perturbations in canonical scalar field models: the classes of thawing and freezing models.The dark energy equation of state evolves differently in these classes.In freezing models, the equation of state deviates from that of a cosmological constant at early times.For thawing models, the dark energy equation of state remains near that of the cosmological constant at early times and begins to deviate from it only at late times.Since the dark energy equation of state evolves differently in these classes,the dark energy perturbations too evolve differently. In freezing models, since the equation of state deviates from that of a cosmological constant at early times, there is a significant difference in evolution of matter perturbations from those in the cosmological constant model.In comparison, matter perturbations in thawing models differ from the cosmological constant only at late times. This difference provides an additional handle to distinguish between these classes of models and this difference should manifest itself in the ISW effect.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    An unusual case of left ventricular aneurysm in duchenne muscular dystrophy

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    Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) leads to structural heart disease, including dilated cardiomyopathy, in 90% of patients >18 years of age. Despite the ubiquity of cardiomyopathy associated with DMD, ventricular aneurysms in these patients have rarely been reported. We present a case of a basal inferoposterior aneurysm of the left ventricle in a 23-year-old male patient with DMD
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