40,784 research outputs found
Inflation, Renormalization, and CMB Anisotropies
In single-field, slow-roll inflationary models, scalar and tensorial
(Gaussian) perturbations are both characterized by a zero mean and a non-zero
variance. In position space, the corresponding variance of those fields
diverges in the ultraviolet. The requirement of a finite variance in position
space forces its regularization via quantum field renormalization in an
expanding universe. This has an important impact on the predicted scalar and
tensorial power spectra for wavelengths that today are at observable scales. In
particular, we find a non-trivial change in the consistency condition that
relates the tensor-to-scalar ratio "r" to the spectral indices. For instance,
an exact scale-invariant tensorial power spectrum, n_t=0, is now compatible
with a non-zero ratio r= 0.12 +/- 0.06, which is forbidden by the standard
prediction (r=-8n_t). Forthcoming observations of the influence of relic
gravitational waves on the CMB will offer a non-trivial test of the new
predictions.Comment: 4 pages, jpconf.cls, to appear in the Proceedings of Spanish
Relativity Meeting 2009 (ERE 09), Bilbao (Spain
Effect of interfacial oxide layers on the current-voltage characteristics of Al-Si contacts
Aluminum-silicon contacts with very thin interfacial oxide layers and various surface impurity concentrations are studied for both n and p-type silicon. To determine the surface impurity concentrations on p(+)-p and n(+)-n structures, a modified C-V technique was utilized. Effects of interfacial oxide layers and surface impurity concentrations on current-voltage characteristics are discussed based on the energy band diagrams from the conductance-voltage plots. The interfacial oxide and aluminum layer causes image contrasts on X-ray topographs
Vacuum fluctuations in a supersymmetric model in FRW spacetime
We study a noninteracting supersymmetric model in an expanding FRW spacetime.
A soft supersymmetry breaking induces a nonzero contribution to the vacuum
energy density. A short distance cutoff of the order of Planck length provides
a scale for the vacuum energy density comparable with the observed cosmological
constant. Assuming the presence of a dark energy substance in addition to the
vacuum fluctuations of the field an effective equation of state is derived in a
selfconsistent approach. The effective equation of state is sensitive to the
choice of the cut-off but no fine tuning is needed.Comment: 19 pages, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
An investigation of the basement complex aquifer system in Lofa county, Liberia, for the purpose of siting boreholes
Liberia is recovering from a 14 year civil war and only 51% of the rural population has access to safe drinking water. Little hydrogeological knowledge survives in Liberia, increasing the difficulty in successfully siting new boreholes. An understanding of the local hydrogeological environment is therefore needed to improve borehole site selection and increase success rates. This research provides a semi-quantitative characterization of the hydrogeological environment of the basement aquifer in Lofa county, Liberia. Based on literature review and analysis of borehole logs, the study has developed a conceptual hydrogeological model for the local conditions, which is further characterized using 2D geoelectrical sections. Groundwater is predominantly obtained from the saprolite and underlying fractured bedrock, but specific capacities (median 281 l h-1 m-1; 25th and 75th percentile of 179 and 490 l h-1 m-1, respectively) are constrained by the limited thickness of the saturated saprolite. This study has shown that the groundwater resources in the crystalline basement in this part of Liberia conform to the general conceptual model, allowing standard techniques used elsewhere for siting and developing groundwater to be used
Thomas-Fermi versus one- and two-dimensional regimes of a trapped dipolar Bose-Einstein condensate
We derive the criteria for the Thomas-Fermi regime of a dipolar Bose-Einstein
condensate in cigar, pancake and spherical geometries. This also naturally
gives the criteria for the mean-field one- and two-dimensional regimes. Our
predictions, including the Thomas-Fermi density profiles, are shown to be in
excellent agreement with numerical solutions. Importantly, the anisotropy of
the interactions has a profound effect on the Thomas-Fermi/low-dimensional
criteria.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Relation Between Einstein And Quantum Field Equations
We show that there exists a choice of scalar field modes, such that the
evolution of the quantum field in the zero-mass and large-mass limits is
consistent with the Einstein equations for the background geometry. This choice
of modes is also consistent with zero production of these particles and thus
corresponds to a preferred vacuum state preserved by the evolution. In the
zero-mass limit, we find that the quantum field equation implies the Einstein
equation for the scale factor of a radiation-dominated universe; in the
large-mass case, it implies the corresponding Einstein equation for a
matter-dominated universe. Conversely, if the classical radiation-dominated or
matter-dominated Einstein equations hold, there is no production of scalar
particles in the zero and large mass limits, respectively. The suppression of
particle production in the large mass limit is over and above the expected
suppression at large mass. Our results hold for a certain class of conformally
ultrastatic background geometries and therefore generalize previous results by
one of us for spatially flat Robertson-Walker background geometries. In these
geometries, we find that the temporal part of the graviton equations reduces to
the temporal equation for a massless minimally coupled scalar field, and
therefore the results for massless particle production hold also for gravitons.
Within the class of modes we study, we also find that the requirement of zero
production of massless scalar particles is not consistent with a non-zero
cosmological constant. Possible implications are discussed.Comment: Latex, 24 pages. Minor changes in text from original versio
Study of meteoroid detection systems applicable to the outer planets missions
Modifications to the Pioneer 10/11 meteoroid detection experiment to allow it to be used for outer planet missions were investigated. Both pressurized cells and metal-oxide silicon (MOS) penetration detectors are considered. Both the sensors systems and the electronics are treated. Investigation of the calibration and characterization of the MOS penetration detector is reported
Surface acoustic wave stabilized oscillators
Four areas of surface acoustic wave (SAW) controlled oscillators were investigated and a number of 401.2 MHz oscillators were constructed that showed improved performance. Aging studies on SAW devices packaged in HC36/U cold weld enclosures produced frequency drifts as low as 0.4 ppm in 35 weeks and drift rates well under 0.5 ppm/year. Temperature compensation circuits have substantially improved oscillator temperature stability, with a deviation of + or - 4 ppm observed over the range -45 C to + 40 C. High efficiency amplifiers were constructed for SAW oscillators and a dc to RF efficiency of 44 percent was obtained for an RF output of 25 mW. Shock and vibration tests were made on four oscillators and all survived 500 G shock pulses unchanged. Only when white noise vibration (20 Hz to 2000 Hz) levels of 20 G's rms were applied did some of the devices fail
Direct versus Delayed pathways in Strong-Field Non-Sequential Double Ionization
We report full-dimensionality quantum and classical calculations for double
ionization of laser-driven helium at 390 nm. Good qualitative agreement is
observed. We show that the classical double ionization trajectories can be
divided into two distinct pathways: direct and delayed. The direct pathway,
with an almost simultaneous ejection of both electrons, emerges from small
laser intensities. With increasing intensity its relative importance, compared
to the delayed ionization pathway, increases until it becomes the predominant
pathway for total electron escape energy below around 5.25 . However the
delayed pathway is the predominant one for double ionization above a certain
cut-off energy at all laser intensities
PCA of PCA: Principal Component Analysis of Partial Covering Absorption in NGC 1365
We analyse 400 ks of XMM-Newton data on the active galactic nucleus NGC 1365
using principal component analysis (PCA) to identify model independent spectral
components. We find two significant components and demonstrate that they are
qualitatively different from those found in MCG?6-30-15 using the same method.
As the variability in NGC 1365 is known to be due to changes in the parameters
of a partial covering neutral absorber, this shows that the same mechanism
cannot be the driver of variability in MCG-6-30-15. By examining intervals
where the spectrum shows relatively low absorption we separate the effects of
intrinsic source variability, including signatures of relativistic reflection,
from variations in the intervening absorption. We simulate the principal
components produced by different physical variations, and show that PCA
provides a clear distinction between absorption and reflection as the drivers
of variability in AGN spectra. The simulations are shown to reproduce the PCA
spectra of both NGC 1365 and MCG-6-30-15, and further demonstrate that the
dominant cause of spectral variability in these two sources requires a
qualitatively different mechanism.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
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