3,949 research outputs found
How far are the sources of IceCube neutrinos? Constraints from the diffuse TeV gamma-ray background
The nearly isotropic distribution of the TeV-PeV neutrinos recently detected
by IceCube suggests that they come from sources at distance beyond our Galaxy,
but how far they are is largely unknown due to lack of any associations with
known sources. In this paper, we propose that the cumulative TeV gamma-ray
emission accompanying the production of neutrinos can be used to constrain the
distance of these neutrino sources, since the opacity of TeV gamma rays due to
absorption by the extragalactic background light (EBL) depends on the distance
that these TeV gamma rays have travelled. As the diffuse extragalactic TeV
background measured by \emph{Fermi} is much weaker than the expected cumulative
flux associated with IceCube neutrinos, the majority of IceCube neutrinos, if
their sources are transparent to TeV gamma rays, must come from distances
larger than the horizon of TeV gamma rays. We find that above 80\% of the
IceCube neutrinos should come from sources at redshift . Thus, the
chance for finding nearby sources correlated with IceCube neutrinos would be
small. We also find that, to explain the flux of neutrinos under the TeV
gamma-ray emission constraint, the redshift evolution of neutrino source
density must be at least as fast as the the cosmic star-formation rate.Comment: Accepted by ApJ, some minor changes made, 8 pages, 5 figure
Three-particle bound states in a finite volume: unequal masses and higher partial waves
An explicit expression for the finite-volume energy shift of shallow
three-body bound states for non-identical particles is obtained in the unitary
limit. The inclusion of the higher partial waves is considered. To this end,
the method of arXiv:1412.4969 (Mei{\ss}ner et al.) is generalized for the case
of unequal masses and arbitrary angular momenta. It is shown that in the S-wave
and in the equal mass limit, the result from arXiv:1412.4969 is reproduced.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figur
Analysis of Inertial Migration of Neutrally Buoyant Particle Suspensions in a Planar Poiseuille Flow with a Coupled Lattice Boltzmann Method-Discrete Element Method
In this study a hybrid numerical framework for modelling solid-liquid multiphase flow is established with a single-relaxation-time lattice Boltzmann method and the discrete element method implemented with the Hertz contact theory. The numerical framework is then employed to systematically explore the effect of particle concentration on the inertial migration of neutrally buoyant particle suspensions in planar Poiseuille flow. The results show that the influence of particle concentration on the migration is primarily determined by the characteristic channel Reynolds number Re0. For relatively low Re0 (Re0˂20), the migration behaviour can only be observed at a very low particle concentration (≤5%). However, when Re0˃20 the migration behaviour can be observed at a high concentration (≥20%). Furthermore, a focusing number Fc is proposed to characterise the degree of inertial migration. It was found that the inertial migration can be classified into three regimes depending on two critical values of the focusing number, Fc+ and Fc-: i) when Fc˃Fc+, a full inertial migration occurs; ii) when Fc˂Fc-, particles are laterally unfocused; iii) when Fc-˂Fc˂Fc+, a partially inertial migration takes place
Directed search for continuous gravitational waves from the possible kilonova remnant G4.8+6.2
G4.8+6.2 was proposed as a possible kilonova remnant associated with the
Korean guest star of AD 1163 in our Milky Way galaxy. Its age is about 860
years according to the historical record. If a neutron star was left in the
center of G4.8+6.2, this young neutron star may radiate strong continuous
gravitational waves, which could beat the indirect age-based upper limit with
current LIGO sensitivity. In this work, we searched such continuous
gravitational waves in the frequency band . This search
used two days of LIGO O3b data from the Hanford and Livingston detectors. While
no signal was found, we placed upper limits on the gravitational wave strain.
For comparison we also showed the latest results of all-sky searches obtained
with various search pipelines. With upgrading of the LIGO detectors, it will
provide the opportunity to see whether a black hole or a neutron star is
harbored inside G4.8+6.2.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 1 tables, Accepted for publication in Physical
Review
Distributed Indexing Schemes for k-Dominant Skyline Analytics on Uncertain Edge-IoT Data
Skyline queries typically search a Pareto-optimal set from a given data set
to solve the corresponding multiobjective optimization problem. As the number
of criteria increases, the skyline presumes excessive data items, which yield a
meaningless result. To address this curse of dimensionality, we proposed a
k-dominant skyline in which the number of skyline members was reduced by
relaxing the restriction on the number of dimensions, considering the
uncertainty of data. Specifically, each data item was associated with a
probability of appearance, which represented the probability of becoming a
member of the k-dominant skyline. As data items appear continuously in data
streams, the corresponding k-dominant skyline may vary with time. Therefore, an
effective and rapid mechanism of updating the k-dominant skyline becomes
crucial. Herein, we proposed two time-efficient schemes, Middle Indexing (MI)
and All Indexing (AI), for k-dominant skyline in distributed edge-computing
environments, where irrelevant data items can be effectively excluded from the
compute to reduce the processing duration. Furthermore, the proposed schemes
were validated with extensive experimental simulations. The experimental
results demonstrated that the proposed MI and AI schemes reduced the
computation time by approximately 13% and 56%, respectively, compared with the
existing method.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, 12 tables, to appear in IEEE Transactions on
Emerging Topics in Computin
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