3,414 research outputs found
On the Existence of Radiation Gauges in Petrov type II spacetimes
The radiation gauges used by Chrzanowski (his IRG/ORG) for metric
reconstruction in the Kerr spacetime seem to be over-specified. Their
specification consists of five conditions: four, which we treat here as valid
gauge conditions, plus an additional condition on the trace of the metric
perturbation. In this work, we utilize a newly developed form of the perturbed
Einstein equations to establish a condition -- on a particular tetrad component
of the stress-energy tensor -- under which the full IRG/ORG can be imposed.
Using gauge freedom, we are able to impose the full IRG for Petrov type II and
type D backgrounds, using a different tetrad for each case. As a specific
example, we work through the process of imposing the IRG in a Schwarzschild
background, using a more traditional approach. Implications for metric
reconstruction using the Teukolsky curvature perturbations in type D spacetimes
are briefly discussed.Comment: 21 pages, uses iop style files. v2: proved a stronger result for type
II backgrounds, added a subsection on remaining gauge freedom in the full IRG
and improved calrity and readability throughout due to insightful referee
comments; published as Class. Quantum Grav. 24 (2007) 2367-238
The case for 100000 tonnes/year integrated iron and steel plants for emergent countries
The Development of an iron and steel industry is affected by many factors which vary considerably from country to country, and it is obvious that no overall rules can be laid down which would govern all eventualities. Nevertheless, the problem which faces many countries which are just emerging as iron and steel producers, shows certain similarities which can be summarized as follows:
(i) in most cases, steelmaking is either non-existent
or in comparison with the more developed countries,
of extremely low capacity
(ii) these countries often cover wide territories with
under-developed communications systems
(iii) these countries are usually associated with
a relatively low standard of living. The raising
of this standard for the greatest number of
people is urgent
(iv) capital for investment and foreign exchange is
scarce and the demand on both is heavy
Reconstruction of Black Hole Metric Perturbations from Weyl Curvature II: The Regge-Wheeler gauge
Perturbation theory of rotating black holes is described in terms of the Weyl
scalars and ; each satisfying the Teukolsky's complex master
wave equation with spin , and respectively representing outgoing and
ingoing radiation. We explicitly construct the metric perturbations out of
these Weyl scalars in the Regge-Wheeler gauge in the nonrotating limit. We
propose a generalization of the Regge-Wheeler gauge for Kerr background in the
Newman-Penrose language, and discuss the approach for building up the perturbed
spacetime of a rotating black hole. We also provide both-way relationships
between waveforms defined in the metric and curvature approaches in the time
domain, also known as the (inverse-) Chandrasekhar transformations, generalized
to include matter.Comment: 22 pages, no figure
Black hole puncture initial data with realistic gravitational wave content
We present improved post-Newtonian-inspired initial data for non-spinning
black-hole binaries, suitable for numerical evolution with punctures. We
revisit the work of Tichy et al. [W. Tichy, B. Bruegmann, M. Campanelli, and P.
Diener, Phys. Rev. D 67, 064008 (2003)], explicitly calculating the remaining
integral terms. These terms improve accuracy in the far zone and, for the first
time, include realistic gravitational waves in the initial data. We investigate
the behavior of these data both at the center of mass and in the far zone,
demonstrating agreement of the transverse-traceless parts of the new metric
with quadrupole-approximation waveforms. These data can be used for numerical
evolutions, enabling a direct connection between the merger waveforms and the
post-Newtonian inspiral waveforms.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures; replaced with published versio
Modelling persistence in annual Australia point rainfall
Annual rainfall time series for Sydney from 1859 to 1999 is analysed. Clear evidence of nonstationarity is presented, but substantial evidence for persistence or hidden states is more elusive. A test of the hypothesis that a hidden state Markov model reduces to a mixture distribution is presented. There is strong evidence of a correlation between the annual rainfall and climate indices. Strong evidence of persistence of one of these indices, the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), is presented together with a demonstration that this is better modelled by fractional differencing than by a hidden state Markov model. It is shown that conditioning the logarithm of rainfall on PDO, the Southern Oscillation index (SOI), and their interaction provides realistic simulation of rainfall that matches observed statistics. Similar simulation models are presented for Brisbane, Melbourne and Perth.</p> <p style='line-height: 20px;'><b>Keywords: </b>Hydrological persistence,hidden state Markov models, fractional differencing, PDO, SOI, Australian rainfall</p
Unravelling Active Galactic Nuclei
A complete flat-spectrum radio-loud sample of AGN includes a significant
fraction of Seyfert-like AGN including a NLS1. Analysis of their optical
spectra suggests that the reddest continuum colours are either associated with
AGN in nearby resolved galaxies, or distant quasars showing relatively narrow
permitted emission lines.Comment: Poster contribution presented at the Joint MPE,AIP,ESO workshop on
NLS1s, Bad Honnef, Dec. 1999, to appear in New Astronomy Reviews; also
available at http://wave.xray.mpe.mpg.de/conferences/nls1-worksho
Relationships between the El-Niño Southern Oscillation and spate flows in southern Africa and Australia
International audienceThe flow records of arid zone rivers are characterised by a high degree of seasonal variability, being dominated by long periods of very low or zero flow. Discrete flow events in these rivers are influenced by aseasonal factors such as global climate forcings. The atmospheric circulations of the El-Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) have been shown to influence climate regimes across many parts of the world. Strong teleconnections between changing ENSO regimes and discharges are likely to be observed in highly variable arid zones. In this paper, the influence of ENSO mechanisms on the flow records of two arid zone rivers in each of Australia and Southern Africa are identified. ENSO signals, together with multi-decadal variability in their impact as identified through seasonal values of the Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation (IPO) index, are shown to influence both the rate of occurrence and the size of discrete flow episodes in these rivers. Keywords: arid zones, streamflow, spates, climate variability, ENSO, Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation, IP
Reconstruction of Black Hole Metric Perturbations from Weyl Curvature
Perturbation theory of rotating black holes is usually described in terms of
Weyl scalars and , which each satisfy Teukolsky's complex
master wave equation and respectively represent outgoing and ingoing radiation.
On the other hand metric perturbations of a Kerr hole can be described in terms
of (Hertz-like) potentials in outgoing or ingoing {\it radiation
gauges}. In this paper we relate these potentials to what one actually computes
in perturbation theory, i.e and . We explicitly construct
these relations in the nonrotating limit, preparatory to devising a
corresponding approach for building up the perturbed spacetime of a rotating
black hole. We discuss the application of our procedure to second order
perturbation theory and to the study of radiation reaction effects for a
particle orbiting a massive black hole.Comment: 6 Pages, Revtex
Deflections in Magnet Fringe Fields
A transverse multipole expansion is derived, including the longitudinal
components necessarily present in regions of varying magnetic field profile. It
can be used for exact numerical orbit following through the fringe field
regions of magnets whose end designs introduce no extraneous components, {\it
i.e.} fields not required to be present by Maxwell's equations. Analytic
evaluations of the deflections are obtained in various approximations. Mainly
emphasized is a ``straight-line approximation'', in which particle orbits are
treated as straight lines through the fringe field regions. This approximation
leads to a readily-evaluated figure of merit, the ratio of r.m.s. end
deflection to nominal body deflection, that can be used to determine whether or
not a fringe field can be neglected. Deflections in ``critical'' cases (e.g.
near intersection regions) are analysed in the same approximation.Comment: To be published in Physical Review
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