1,786 research outputs found
A Multi Megawatt Cyclotron Complex to Search for CP Violation in the Neutrino Sector
A Multi Megawatt Cyclotron complex able to accelerate H2+ to 800 MeV/amu is
under study. It consists of an injector cyclotron able to accelerate the
injected beam up to 50 MeV/n and of a booster ring made of 8 magnetic sectors
and 8 RF cavities. The magnetic field and the forces on the superconducting
coils are evaluated using the 3-D code OPERA. The injection and extraction
trajectories are evaluated using the well tested codes developed by the MSU
group in the '80s. The advantages to accelerate H2+ are described and
preliminary evaluations on the feasibility and expected problems to build the
injector cyclotron and the ring booster are here presented.Comment: Presentation at Cyclotron'10 conference, Lanzhou, China, Sept 7, 201
Extracting the three- and four-graviton vertices from binary pulsars and coalescing binaries
Using a formulation of the post-Newtonian expansion in terms of Feynman
graphs, we discuss how various tests of General Relativity (GR) can be
translated into measurement of the three- and four-graviton vertices. In
problems involving only the conservative dynamics of a system, a deviation of
the three-graviton vertex from the GR prediction is equivalent, to lowest
order, to the introduction of the parameter beta_{PPN} in the parametrized
post-Newtonian formalism, and its strongest bound comes from lunar laser
ranging, which measures it at the 0.02% level. Deviation of the three-graviton
vertex from the GR prediction, however, also affects the radiative sector of
the theory. We show that the timing of the Hulse-Taylor binary pulsar provides
a bound on the deviation of the three-graviton vertex from the GR prediction at
the 0.1% level. For coalescing binaries at interferometers we find that,
because of degeneracies with other parameters in the template such as mass and
spin, the effects of modified three- and four-graviton vertices is just to
induce an error in the determination of these parameters and, at least in the
restricted PN approximation, it is not possible to use coalescing binaries for
constraining deviations of the vertices from the GR prediction.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures; v2: an error corrected; references adde
Pure States, Mixed States and Hawking Problem in Generalized Quantum Mechanics
This paper is the continuation of a study into the information paradox
problem started by the author in his earlier works. As previously, the key
instrument is a deformed density matrix in quantum mechanics of the early
universe. It is assumed that the latter represents quantum mechanics with
fundamental length. It is demonstrated that the obtained results agree well
with the canonical viewpoint that in the processes involving black holes pure
states go to the mixed ones in the assumption that all measurements are
performed by the observer in a well-known quantum mechanics. Also it is shown
that high entropy for Planck remnants of black holes appearing in the
assumption of the Generalized Uncertainty Relations may be explained within the
scope of the density matrix entropy introduced by the author previously. It is
noted that the suggested paradigm is consistent with the Holographic Principle.
Because of this, a conjecture is made about the possibility for obtaining the
Generalized Uncertainty Relations from the covariant entropy bound at high
energies in the same way as R. Bousso has derived Heisenberg uncertainty
principle for the flat space.Comment: 12 pages,no figures,some corrections,new reference
BRST Cohomology of N=2 Super-Yang-Mills Theory in 4D
The BRST cohomology of the N=2 supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory in four
dimensions is discussed by making use of the twisted version of the N=2
algebra. By the introduction of a set of suitable constant ghosts associated to
the generators of N=2, the quantization of the model can be done by taking into
account both gauge invariance and supersymmetry. In particular, we show how the
twisted N=2 algebra can be used to obtain in a straightforward way the relevant
cohomology classes. Moreover, we shall be able to establish a very useful
relationship between the local gauge invariant polynomial and the
complete N=2 Yang-Mills action. This important relation can be considered as
the first step towards a fully algebraic proof of the one-loop exactness of the
N=2 beta function.Comment: 22 pages, LaTeX, final version to appear in Journ. Phys.
Design of the RF system for a 250 A.MeV superconducting cyclotron
International audienceA superconducting cyclotron accelerating q/A=0.5 ions up to 250 A.MeV, for medical applications and radioisotopes production (SCENT project) is being studied at Laboratori Nazionali del Sud in Catania. The RF system, working in the fourth harmonic, is based on four cavities operating at 93 MHz, which are connected in the central region. The paper describes an unusual multistem RF design, performed with 3D electromagnetic codes. The aim is to obtain a cavity, completely housed in the valley, with a voltage distribution going from 65 kV in the injection region to a peak value of 120 kV in the extraction region, and a low power consumption
Gravitational radiative corrections from effective field theory
In this paper we construct an effective field theory (EFT) that describes
long wavelength gravitational radiation from compact systems. To leading order,
this EFT consists of the multipole expansion, which we describe in terms of a
diffeomorphism invariant point particle Lagrangian. The EFT also systematically
captures "post-Minkowskian" corrections to the multipole expansion due to
non-linear terms in general relativity. Specifically, we compute long distance
corrections from the coupling of the (mass) monopole moment to the quadrupole
moment, including up to two mass insertions. Along the way, we encounter both
logarithmic short distance (UV) and long wavelength (IR) divergences. We show
that the UV divergences can be (1) absorbed into a renormalization of the
multipole moments and (2) resummed via the renormalization group. The IR
singularities are shown to cancel from properly defined physical observables.
As a concrete example of the formalism, we use this EFT to reproduce a number
of post-Newtonian corrections to the gravitational wave energy flux from
non-relativistic binaries, including long distance effects up to 3PN ()
order. Our results verify that the factorization of scales proposed in the NRGR
framework of Goldberger and Rothstein is consistent up to order 3PN.Comment: 37 pages, LaTeX. Published versio
An efficient iterative method to reduce eccentricity in numerical-relativity simulations of compact binary inspiral
We present a new iterative method to reduce eccentricity in black-hole-binary
simulations. Given a good first estimate of low-eccentricity starting momenta,
we evolve puncture initial data for ~4 orbits and construct improved initial
parameters by comparing the inspiral with post-Newtonian calculations. Our
method is the first to be applied directly to the gravitational-wave (GW)
signal, rather than the orbital motion. The GW signal is in general less
contaminated by gauge effects, which, in moving-puncture simulations, limit
orbital-motion-based measurements of the eccentricity to an uncertainty of
, making it difficult to reduce the eccentricity below
this value. Our new method can reach eccentricities below in one or
two iteration steps; we find that this is well below the requirements for GW
astronomy in the advanced detector era. Our method can be readily adapted to
any compact-binary simulation with GW emission, including black-hole-binary
simulations that use alternative approaches, and neutron-star-binary
simulations. We also comment on the differences in eccentricity estimates based
on the strain , and the Newman-Penrose scalar .Comment: 24 pages, 25 figures, pdflatex; v2: minor change
New Results on N=4 SuperYang-Mills Theory
The N=4 SuperYang--Mills theory is covariantly determined by a U(1) \times
SU(2) \subset SL(2,R) \times SU(2) internal symmetry and two scalar and one
vector BRST topological symmetry operators. This determines an off-shell closed
sector of N=4 SuperYang-Mills, with 6 generators, which is big enough to fully
determine the theory, in a Lorentz covariant way. This reduced algebra derives
from horizontality conditions in four dimensions. The horizontality conditions
only depend on the geometry of the Yang-Mills fields. They also descend from a
genuine horizontality condition in eight dimensions. In fact, the SL(2,R)
symmetry is induced by a dimensional reduction from eight to seven dimensions,
which establishes a ghost-antighost symmetry, while the SU(2) symmetry occurs
by dimensional reduction from seven to four dimensions. When the four
dimensional manifold is hyperKahler, one can perform a twist operation that
defines the N=4 supersymmetry and its SL(2,H)\sim SU(4) R-symmetry in flat
space. (For defining a TQFT on a more general four manifold, one can use the
internal SU(2)-symmetry and redefine a Lorentz SO(4) invariance). These results
extend in a covariant way the light cone property that the N=4 SuperYang-Mills
theory is actually determined by only 8 independent generators, instead of the
16 generators that occur in the physical representation of the superPoincare
algebra. The topological construction disentangles the off-shell closed sector
of the (twisted) maximally supersymmetric theory from the (irrelevant) sector
that closes only modulo equations of motion. It allows one to escape the
question of auxiliary fields in N=4 SuperYang-Mills theory.Comment: 14 page
Super-ASTROD: Probing primordial gravitational waves and mapping the outer solar system
Super-ASTROD (Super Astrodynamical Space Test of Relativity using Optical
Devices or ASTROD III) is a mission concept with 3-5 spacecraft in 5 AU orbits
together with an Earth-Sun L1/L2 spacecraft ranging optically with one another
to probe primordial gravitational-waves with frequencies 0.1 microHz - 1 mHz,
to test fundamental laws of spacetime and to map the outer solar system. In
this paper we address to its scientific goals, orbit and payload selection, and
sensitivity to gravitational waves.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, presented to 7th International LISA Symposium,
16-20 June 2008, Barcelona; submitted to Classical and Quantum Gravity;
presentation improve
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