882 research outputs found
Newtonian View of General Relativistic Stars
Although general relativistic cosmological solutions, even in the presence of
pressure, can be mimicked by using neo-Newtonian hydrodynamics, it is not clear
whether there exists the same Newtonian correspondence for spherical static
configurations. General relativity solutions for stars are known as the
Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff (TOV) equations. On the other hand, the Newtonian
description does not take into account the total pressure effects and therefore
can not be used in strong field regimes. We discuss how to incorporate pressure
in the stellar equilibrium equations within the neo-Newtonian framework. We
compare the Newtonian, neo-Newtonian and the full relativistic theory by
solving the equilibrium equations for both three approaches and calculating the
mass-radius diagrams for some simple neutron stars equation of state.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. v2 matches accepted version (EPJC
Viscous Cosmology
We discuss the possibility to implement a viscous cosmological model,
attributing to the dark matter component a behaviour described by bulk
viscosity. Since bulk viscosity implies negative pressure, this rises the
possibility to unify the dark sector. At the same time, the presence of
dissipative effects may alleviate the so called small scale problems in the
CDM model. While the unified viscous description for the dark sector
does not lead to consistent results, the non-linear behaviour indeed improves
the situation with respect to the standard cosmological model.Comment: Latex file, 7 pages, 6 figures. To appear in the proceedings of the
XIIth International Conference on Gravitation, Astrophysics and Cosmology,
June 28-July 5, 2015, PFUR, Moscow, Russi
Optimization of neutrino fluxes for future long baseline neutrino oscillation experiments
AbstractOne of the main goals of the Long Baseline Neutrino Oscillation experiment (LBNO) experiment is to study the L/E behaviour of the electron neutrino appearance probability in order to determine the unknown phase δCP. In the standard neutrino 3-flavour mixing paradigm, this parameter encapsulates a possibility of a CP violation in the lepton sector that in turn could help explain the matter-antimatter asymmetry in the universe. In LBNO, the measurement of δCP would rely on the observation of the electron appearance probability in a broad energy range covering the 1st and 2nd maxima of the oscillation probability. An optimization of the energy spectrum of the neutrino beam is necessary to find the best coverage of the neutrino energies of interest. This in general is a complex task that requires exploring a large parameter space describing hadron target and beamline focusing elements. In this paper we will present a numerical approach of finding a solution to this difficult optimization problem often encountered in design of modern neutrino beamlines and we will show the improved LBNO sensitivity to the presence of the leptonic CP violation attained after the neutrino beam optimization
Optimization of neutrino fluxes for future long baseline neutrino oscillation experiments
One of the main goals of the Long Baseline Neutrino Oscillation experiment
(LBNO) experiment is to study the L/E behaviour of the electron neutrino
appearance probability in order to determine the unknown phase .
In the standard neutrino 3-flavour mixing paradigm, this parameter encapsulates
a possibility of a CP violation in the lepton sector that in turn could help
explain the matter-antimatter asymmetry in the universe. In LBNO, the
measurement of would rely on the observation of the electron
appearance probability in a broad energy range covering the 1 and
2 maxima of the oscillation probability. An optimization of the energy
spectrum of the neutrino beam is necessary to find the best coverage of the
neutrino energies of interest. This in general is a complex task that requires
exploring a large parameter space describing hadron target and beamline
focusing elements. In this paper we will present a numerical approach of
finding a solution to this difficult optimization problem often encountered in
design of modern neutrino beamlines and we will show the improved LBNO
sensitivity to the presence of the leptonic CP violation attained after the
neutrino beam optimization
A new beamline for laser spin-polarization at ISOLDE
A beamline dedicated to the production of laser-polarized radioactive beams
has been constructed at ISOLDE, CERN. We present here different simulations
leading to the design and construction of the setup, as well as technical
details of the full setup and examples of the achieved polarizations for
several radioisotopes. Beamline simulations show a good transmission through
the entire line, in agreement with observations. Simulations of the induced
nuclear spin-polarization as a function of atom-laser interaction length are
presented for Na, [1] and for Ar, which is studied in this
work. Adiabatic spin rotation of the spin-polarized ensemble of atoms, and how
this influences the observed nuclear ensemble polarization, are also performed
for the same nuclei. For Ar, we show that multiple-frequency pumping
enhances the ensemble polarization by a factor 1.85, in agreement with
predictions from a rate equations model.
[1] J. Phys. G: Nucl. Part. Phys./174408400
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