30,381 research outputs found
Accuracy of vertical deflection determination by present-day inertial instrumentation
An analysis of results obtained in the Canadian Rock Mountains indicates that the observation of deflection differences along the same line can be repeated with a precision of about 0.5 sec but that there are systematic discrepancies between the forward and the backward running of the same line. A comparison with the available astronomically determined deflections also shows systematic differences of 2 sec and 3 sec. These errors are most likely due to the overshooting of the Kalman procedure at gradient changes. It appears that the software can be altered in such a way that deflection differences between stations, not more than half an hour of travel time apart, can be determined by the inertial system with an accuracy of better than + or - 1 sec
Multipole invariants and non-Gaussianity
We propose a framework for separating the information contained in the CMB
multipoles, , into its algebraically independent components. Thus
we cleanly separate information pertaining to the power spectrum,
non-Gaussianity and preferred axis effects. The formalism builds upon the
recently proposed multipole vectors (Copi, Huterer & Starkman 2003; Schwarz &
al 2004; Katz & Weeks 2004), and we elucidate a few features regarding these
vectors, namely their lack of statistical independence for a Gaussian random
process. In a few cases we explicitly relate our proposed invariants to
components of the -point correlation function (power spectrum, bispectrum).
We find the invariants' distributions using a mixture of analytical and
numerical methods. We also evaluate them for the co-added WMAP first year map
The Multipole Vectors of WMAP, and their frames and invariants
We investigate the Statistical Isotropy and Gaussianity of the CMB
fluctuations, using a set of multipole vector functions capable of separating
these two issues. In general a multipole is broken into a frame and
ordered invariants. The multipole frame is found to be suitably sensitive to
galactic cuts. We then apply our method to real WMAP datasets; a coadded masked
map, the Internal Linear Combinations map, and Wiener filtered and cleaned
maps. Taken as a whole, multipoles in the range or show
consistency with statistical isotropy, as proved by the Kolmogorov test applied
to the frame's Euler angles. This result in {\it not} inconsistent with
previous claims for a preferred direction in the sky for . The
multipole invariants also show overall consistency with Gaussianity apart from
a few anomalies of limited significance (98%), listed at the end of this paper.Comment: 9 pages. Submitted to MNRA
On the Nature of the Binary Components of RX J0806.3+1527
We present imaging circular polarimetry and near-infrared photometry of the
suspected ultra-short period white-dwarf binary RX J0806.3+1527 obtained with
the ESO VLT and discuss the implications for a possible magnetic nature of the
white dwarf accretor and the constraints derived for the nature of the donor
star. Our V-filter data show marginally significant circular polarization with
a modulation amplitude of ~0.5% typical for cyclotron emission from an
accretion column in a magnetic field of order 10 MG and not compatible with a
direct-impact accretor model. The optical to near-infrared flux distribution is
well described by a single blackbody with temperature kT_bb = 35000 K and
excludes a main-sequence stellar donor unless the binary is located several
scale heights above the galactic disk population.Comment: 2 pages including 2 figures. To appear in RevMexAA(SC) Conference
Series, Proc. of IAU Colloquium 194 `Compact Binaries in the Galaxy and
Beyond', La Paz (Mexico), eds. G. Tovmassian & E. Sio
A framework for modelling kinematic measurements in gravity field applications
To assess the resolution of the local gravity field from kinematic measurements, a state model for motion in the gravity field of the earth is formulated. The resulting set of equations can accommodate gravity gradients, specific force, acceleration, velocity and position as input data and can take into account approximation errors as well as sensor errors
Template fitting and the large-angle CMB anomalies
We investigate two possible explanations for the large-angle anomalies in the
Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB): an intrinsically anisotropic model and an
inhomogeneous model. We take as an example of the former a Bianchi model (which
leaves a spiral pattern in the sky) and of the latter a background model that
already contains a non-linear long-wavelength plane wave (leaving a stripy
pattern in the sky). We make use of an adaptation of the ``template''
formalism, previously designed to detect galactic foregrounds, to recognize
these patterns and produce confidence levels for their detection. The
``corrected'' maps, from which these patterns have been removed, are free of
anomalies, in particular their quadrupole and octupole are not planar and their
intensities not low. We stress that although the ``template'' detections are
not found to be statistically significant they do correct statistically
significant anomalies.Comment: 8 pages. MNRAS submitte
Effects of weak self-interactions in a relativistic plasma on cosmological perturbations
The exact solutions for linear cosmological perturbations which have been
obtained for collisionless relativistic matter within thermal field theory are
extended to a self-interacting case. The two-loop contributions of scalar
theory to the thermal graviton self-energy are evaluated, which
give the corrections in the perturbation equations. The changes
are found to be perturbative on scales comparable to or larger than the Hubble
horizon, but the determination of the large-time damping behavior of subhorizon
perturbations requires a resummation of thermally induced masses.Comment: 11 pages, REVTEX, 4 postscript figures included by epsf.sty -
expanded version (more details on the resummation of thermal masses which is
required for the late-time damping behaviour
Neuropilin-mediated neural crest cell guidance is essential to organise sensory neurons into segmented dorsal root ganglia
The peripheral nervous system (PNS) of higher vertebrates is segmented to align the spinal nerve roots with the vertebrae. This co-patterning is set up during embryogenesis, when vertebrae develop from the sclerotome layer of the metameric somites, and PNS neurons and glia differentiate from neural crest cells (NCCs) that preferentially migrate into the anterior sclerotome halves. Previous analyses of mice deficient in the class 3 semaphorin (SEMA3) receptors neuropilin (NRP) 1 or 2 raised the possibility that each controlled a distinct aspect of trunk NCC migration. We now demonstrate that both pathways act sequentially in distinct NCC subpopulations and thereby cooperate to enforce segmental NCC migration. Specifically, SEMA3A/NRP1 signalling first directs one population of NCCs from the intersomitic path into the sclerotome, and SEMA3F/NRP2 signalling acts subsequently to restrict a second population to the anterior half of the sclerotome. NCC exclusion from either the posterior sclerotome or the intersomitic boundary is sufficient to enforce the separation of neighbouring NCC streams and the segregation of sensory NCC progeny into metameric dorsal root ganglia (DRG). By contrast, the combined loss of both guidance pathways leads to ectopic invasion of the intersomitic furrows and posterior sclerotome halves, disrupting metameric NCC streaming and DRG segmentation
Domain walls and chaos in the disordered SOS model
Domain walls, optimal droplets and disorder chaos at zero temperature are
studied numerically for the solid-on-solid model on a random substrate. It is
shown that the ensemble of random curves represented by the domain walls obeys
Schramm's left passage formula with kappa=4 whereas their fractal dimension is
d_s=1.25, and therefore is NOT described by "Stochastic-Loewner-Evolution"
(SLE). Optimal droplets with a lateral size between L and 2L have the same
fractal dimension as domain walls but an energy that saturates at a value of
order O(1) for L->infinity such that arbitrarily large excitations exist which
cost only a small amount of energy. Finally it is demonstrated that the
sensitivity of the ground state to small changes of order delta in the disorder
is subtle: beyond a cross-over length scale L_delta ~ 1/delta the correlations
of the perturbed ground state with the unperturbed ground state, rescaled by
the roughness, are suppressed and approach zero logarithmically.Comment: 23 pages, 11 figure
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