773 research outputs found
On the dynamics of a quadratic scalar field potential
We review the attractor properties of the simplest chaotic model of
inflation, in which a minimally coupled scalar field is endowed with a
quadratic scalar potential. The equations of motion in a flat
Friedmann-Robertson-Walker universe are written as an autonomous system of
equations, and the solutions of physical interest appear as critical points.
This new formalism is then applied to the study of inflation dynamics, in which
we can go beyond the known slow-roll formalism of inflation.Comment: 14 pages, 6 eps figures, matches version to appear in IJMP
A Particle Image Velocimetry study of dual-rotor counter-rotating wind turbine near wake
This experimental work studied the flow characteristics in the near wake region behind dual-rotor wind turbines using two-dimensional particle image velocimetry. Two auxiliary rotors of 50% and 80% scale of the main rotor were installed upwind and operated in counter-rotating condition, which are compared to the conventional single rotor turbine. In all the three configurations, a constant Reynolds number 9.5×104 was applied and all the rotors operated at a fixed tip speed ratio of 3.46. The mean and phase averaged velocity fields were investigated together with the turbulence kinetic energy. It was found that the two auxiliary rotors do not result in a significantly different wake flow property. The configuration implementing the 50% auxiliary rotor sees a slightly better wake characteristics, in terms of weaker main rotor tip vortices and a counter-rotating swirling shear region at the mid-span behind the main rotor. The decay rates of the peak vorticity of the main rotor tip vortices and their circulation are found to follow an exponential manner
Local Thermal Equilibrium in Quantum Field Theory on Flat and Curved Spacetimes
The existence of local thermal equilibrium (LTE) states for quantum field
theory in the sense of Buchholz, Ojima and Roos is discussed in a
model-independent setting. It is shown that for spaces of finitely many
independent thermal observables there always exist states which are in LTE in
any compact region of Minkowski spacetime. Furthermore, LTE states in curved
spacetime are discussed and it is observed that the original definition of LTE
on curved backgrounds given by Buchholz and Schlemmer needs to be modified.
Under an assumption related to certain unboundedness properties of the
pointlike thermal observables, existence of states which are in LTE at a given
point in curved spacetime is established. The assumption is discussed for the
sets of thermal observables for the free scalar field considered by Schlemmer
and Verch.Comment: 16 pages, some minor changes and clarifications; section 4 has been
shortened as some unnecessary constructions have been remove
Visual cue training to improve walking and turning after stroke:a study protocol for a multi-centre, single blind randomised pilot trial
Visual information comprises one of the most salient sources of information used to control walking and the dependence on vision to maintain dynamic stability increases following a stroke. We hypothesize, therefore, that rehabilitation efforts incorporating visual cues may be effective in triggering recovery and adaptability of gait following stroke. This feasibility trial aims to estimate probable recruitment rate, effect size, treatment adherence and response to gait training with visual cues in contrast to conventional overground walking practice following stroke.Methods/design: A 3-arm, parallel group, multi-centre, single blind, randomised control feasibility trial will compare overground visual cue training (O-VCT), treadmill visual cue training (T-VCT), and usual care (UC). Participants (n = 60) will be randomly assigned to one of three treatments by a central randomisation centre using computer generated tables to allocate treatment groups. The research assessor will remain blind to allocation. Treatment, delivered by physiotherapists, will be twice weekly for 8 weeks at participating outpatient hospital sites for the O-VCT or UC and in a University setting for T-VCT participants.Individuals with gait impairment due to stroke, with restricted community ambulation (gait spee
Functional electrical stimulation versus ankle foot orthoses for foot-drop: a meta-analysis of orthotic effects
Objective: To compare the effects on walking of Functional Electrical Stimulation (FES) and Ankle Foot Orthoses (AFO) for foot-drop of central neurological origin, assessed in terms of unassisted walking behaviours compared with assisted walking following a period of use (combined-orthotic effects).
Data Sources: MEDLINE, AMED, CINAHL, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Scopus, REHABDATA, PEDro, NIHR Centre for Reviews and Dissemination and clinicaltrials.gov. plus reference list, journal, author and citation searches.
Study Selection: English language comparative Randomised Controlled Trials (RCTs).
Data Synthesis: Seven RCTs were eligible for inclusion. Two of these reported different results from the same trial and another two reported results from different follow up periods so were combined; resulting in five synthesised trials with 815 stroke participants. Meta-analyses of data from the final assessment in each study and three overlapping time-points showed comparable improvements in walking speed over ten metres (p=0.04-0.95), functional exercise capacity (p=0.10-0.31), timed up-and-go (p=0.812 and p=0.539) and perceived mobility (p=0.80) for both interventions.
Conclusion: Data suggest that, in contrast to assumptions that predict FES superiority, AFOs have equally positive combined-orthotic effects as FES on key walking measures for foot-drop caused by stroke. However, further long-term, high-quality RCTs are required. These should focus on measuring the mechanisms-of-action; whether there is translation of improvements in impairment to function, plus detailed reporting of the devices used across diagnoses. Only then can robust clinical recommendations be made
Batalin-Vilkovisky formalism in perturbative algebraic quantum field theory
On the basis of a thorough discussion of the Batalin-Vilkovisky formalism for
classical field theory presented in our previous publication, we construct in
this paper the Batalin-Vilkovisky complex in perturbatively renormalized
quantum field theory. The crucial technical ingredient is a proof that the
renormalized time-ordered product is equivalent to the pointwise product of
classical field theory. The renormalized Batalin-Vilkovisky algebra is then the
classical algebra but written in terms of the time-ordered product, together
with an operator which replaces the ill defined graded Laplacian of the
unrenormalized theory. We identify it with the anomaly term of the anomalous
Master Ward Identity of Brennecke and D\"utsch. Contrary to other approaches we
do not refer to the path integral formalism and do not need to use
regularizations in intermediate steps.Comment: 34 page
Axiomatic quantum field theory in curved spacetime
The usual formulations of quantum field theory in Minkowski spacetime make
crucial use of features--such as Poincare invariance and the existence of a
preferred vacuum state--that are very special to Minkowski spacetime. In order
to generalize the formulation of quantum field theory to arbitrary globally
hyperbolic curved spacetimes, it is essential that the theory be formulated in
an entirely local and covariant manner, without assuming the presence of a
preferred state. We propose a new framework for quantum field theory, in which
the existence of an Operator Product Expansion (OPE) is elevated to a
fundamental status, and, in essence, all of the properties of the quantum field
theory are determined by its OPE. We provide general axioms for the OPE
coefficients of a quantum field theory. These include a local and covariance
assumption (implying that the quantum field theory is locally and covariantly
constructed from the spacetime metric), a microlocal spectrum condition, an
"associativity" condition, and the requirement that the coefficient of the
identity in the OPE of the product of a field with its adjoint have positive
scaling degree. We prove curved spacetime versions of the spin-statistics
theorem and the PCT theorem. Some potentially significant further implications
of our new viewpoint on quantum field theory are discussed.Comment: Latex, 44 pages, 2 figure
Equivalence of the (generalised) Hadamard and microlocal spectrum condition for (generalised) free fields in curved spacetime
We prove that the singularity structure of all n-point distributions of a
state of a generalised real free scalar field in curved spacetime can be
estimated if the two-point distribution is of Hadamard form. In particular this
applies to the real free scalar field and the result has applications in
perturbative quantum field theory, showing that the class of all Hadamard
states is the state space of interest. In our proof we assume that the field is
a generalised free field, i.e. that it satisies scalar (c-number) commutation
relations, but it need not satisfy an equation of motion. The same argument
also works for anti-commutation relations and it can be generalised to
vector-valued fields. To indicate the strengths and limitations of our
assumption we also prove the analogues of a theorem by Borchers and Zimmermann
on the self-adjointness of field operators and of a very weak form of the
Jost-Schroer theorem. The original proofs of these results in the Wightman
framework make use of analytic continuation arguments. In our case no
analyticity is assumed, but to some extent the scalar commutation relations can
take its place.Comment: 18 page
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