3,512 research outputs found
Footprints of Statistical Anisotropies
We propose and develop a formalism to describe and constrain statistically
anisotropic primordial perturbations. Starting from a decomposition of the
primordial power spectrum in spherical harmonics, we find how the temperature
fluctuations observed in the CMB sky are directly related to the coefficients
in this harmonic expansion. Although the angular power spectrum does not
discriminate between statistically isotropic and anisotropic perturbations, it
is possible to define analogous quadratic estimators that are direct measures
of statistical anisotropy. As a simple illustration of our formalism we test
for the existence of a preferred direction in the primordial perturbations
using full-sky CMB maps. We do not find significant evidence supporting the
existence of a dipole component in the primordial spectrum.Comment: 26 pages, 5 double figures. Uses RevTeX
Cosmic Microwave Background, Accelerating Universe and Inhomogeneous Cosmology
We consider a cosmology in which a spherically symmetric large scale
inhomogeneous enhancement or a void are described by an inhomogeneous metric
and Einstein's gravitational equations. For a flat matter dominated universe
the inhomogeneous equations lead to luminosity distance and Hubble constant
formulas that depend on the location of the observer. For a general
inhomogeneous solution, it is possible for the deceleration parameter to differ
significantly from the FLRW result. The deceleration parameter can be
interpreted as ( for a flat matter dominated universe) in a
FLRW universe and be as inferred from the inhomogeneous enhancement
that is embedded in a FLRW universe. A spatial volume averaging of local
regions in the backward light cone has to be performed for the inhomogeneous
solution at late times to decide whether the decelerating parameter can be
negative for a positive energy condition. The CMB temperature fluctuations
across the sky can be unevenly distributed in the northern and southern
hemispheres in the inhomogeneous matter dominated solution, in agreement with
the analysis of the WMAP power spectrum data by several authors. The model can
possibly explain the anomalous alignment of the quadrupole and octopole moments
observed in the WMAP data.Comment: 20 pages, no figures, LaTex file. Equations and typos corrected and
references added. Additional material and some conclusions changed. Final
published versio
Lamb Wave Modes in Coal-Tar-Coated Steel Plates
In order to study the feasibility of using ultrasonic Lamb wave modes for detection and sizing of corrosion-related flaws in buried steel pipelines, we have calculated Lamb wave modes and performed numerous experiments on steel plates coated on one side with coal-tar enamel. The purpose of this paper is to discuss these theoretical and experimental results
Zero Energy of Plane-Waves for ELKOs
We consider the ELKO field in interaction through contorsion with its own
spin density, and we investigate the form of the consequent autointeractions;
to do so we take into account the high-density limit and find plane wave
solutions: such plane waves give rise to contorsional autointeractions for
which the Ricci metric curvature vanishes and therefore the energy density is
equal to zero identically. Consequences are discussed.Comment: 7 page
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Can management ever be responsible? Alternative organizing and the three irresponsibilities of management
This chapter argues that management should be understood as a concrete set of institutionally embedded practices, rather than an abstract verb for âgetting things doneâ. Management, as a discourse, a social group, and a practice cannot become responsible because it is constitutively irresponsible and actively de-responsibilises others. It is irresponsible because management is an agent of external interests and limited to the effective realisation of those interests without regard to substantive values. In practice this means externalising costs where possible. We further argue that management actively de-responsibilises employees by determining the purpose of their activities for them. This renders management inherently anti-democratic, as it removes the possibility of autonomous action that would enable effective responsibility for all. We argued that real responsibility is only possible if we abandon management to focus on organization instead. Because it is not institutionalised in the same way as management, organization is more open to developing democratic and collective, rather than individualised and limited, forms of shared responsibility. We outline this approach by considering workersâ cooperatives as spaces of democratic selfdetermination and common ownership, fostering an expansive conception of responsibility. Without such changes, we suggest, promises of a more responsible management will be mere window-dressing
Assessing the Significance of Cohort and Period Effects in Hierarchical Age-Period-Cohort Models: Applications to Verbal Test Scores and Voter Turnout in U.S. Presidential Elections
In recently developed hierarchical age-period-cohort (HAPC) models, inferential questions arise: How can one assess or judge the significance of estimates of individual cohort and period effects in such models? And how does one assess the overall statistical significance of the cohort and/or the period effects? Beyond statistical significance is the question of substantive significance. This paper addresses these questions. In the context of empirical applications of linear and generalized linear mixed-model specifications of HAPC models using data on verbal test scores and voter turnout in U.S. presidential elections, respectively, we describe a two-step approach and a set of guidelines for assessing statistical significance. The guidelines include assessments of patterns of effects and statistical tests both for the effects of individual cohorts and time periods as well as for entire sets of cohorts and periods. The empirical applications show strong evidence that trends in verbal test scores are primarily cohort driven, while voter turnout is primarily a period phenomenon
From Feynman Proof of Maxwell Equations to Noncommutative Quantum Mechanics
In 1990, Dyson published a proof due to Feynman of the Maxwell equations
assuming only the commutation relations between position and velocity. With
this minimal assumption, Feynman never supposed the existence of Hamiltonian or
Lagrangian formalism. In the present communication, we review the study of a
relativistic particle using ``Feynman brackets.'' We show that Poincar\'e's
magnetic angular momentum and Dirac magnetic monopole are the consequences of
the structure of the Lorentz Lie algebra defined by the Feynman's brackets.
Then, we extend these ideas to the dual momentum space by considering
noncommutative quantum mechanics. In this context, we show that the
noncommutativity of the coordinates is responsible for a new effect called the
spin Hall effect. We also show its relation with the Berry phase notion. As a
practical application, we found an unusual spin-orbit contribution of a
nonrelativistic particle that could be experimentally tested. Another practical
application is the Berry phase effect on the propagation of light in
inhomogeneous media.Comment: Presented at the 3rd Feynman Festival (Collage Park, Maryland,
U.S.A., August 2006
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