2,503 research outputs found
Numerical evaluation of one-loop QCD amplitudes
We present the publicly available program NGluon allowing the numerical
evaluation of primitive amplitudes at one-loop order in massless QCD. The
program allows the computation of one-loop amplitudes for an arbitrary number
of gluons. The focus of the present article is the extension to one-loop
amplitudes including an arbitrary number of massless quark pairs. We discuss in
detail the algorithmic differences to the pure gluonic case and present cross
checks to validate our implementation. The numerical accuracy is investigated
in detail.Comment: Talk given at ACAT 2011 conference in London, 5-9 Septembe
Cosmic Electromagnetic Fields due to Perturbations in the Gravitational Field
We use non-linear gauge-invariant perturbation theory to study the
interaction of an inflation produced seed magnetic field with density and
gravitational wave perturbations in an almost
Friedmann-Lema\^itre-Robertson-Walker (FLRW) spacetime. We compare the effects
of this coupling under the assumptions of poor conductivity, infinite
conductivity and the case where the electric field is sourced via the coupling
of velocity perturbations to the seed field in the ideal magnetohydrodynamic
(MHD) regime, thus generalizing, improving on and correcting previous results.
We solve our equations for long wavelength limits and numerically integrate the
resulting equations to generate power spectra for the electromagnetic field
variables, showing where the modes cross the horizon. We find that the rotation
of the electric field dominates the power spectrum on small scales, in
agreement with previous arguments.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, published in PR
Community Perspective on Consultation on Urban Stormwater Management: Lessons from Brownhill Creek, South Australia
This article is an open access
article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution
(CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).There are salutary lessons from contrasting community consultation efforts in 2011 and
2015 to develop and gain support for an urban stormwater management plan for the Brownhill Creek
catchment in Adelaide, South Australia. The 2011 process was a failure in the human dimension,
precipitating loss of community confidence, unnecessarily entrained thousands of hours of time of
residents who initiated a community action group for environmental conservation and caused a
three-year delay to decision making. By contrast, the 2015 process was vastly improved, resulted in a
landslide level of support for an obvious option not previously offered, achieved the required level of
flood protection, saved Aus$5 million (14%) on the previously proposed option and protected a highly
valued natural environment from an unnecessary dam. This paper presents a rarely heard perspective
on these community consultation processes from a participating community environmental and
heritage conservation action group (the Brownhill Creek Association) that was deeply engaged in
reforming the Draft Brown Hill Keswick Creek Stormwater Management Plan. This reveals that the
community needs to see that all options are considered and to have access to accurate information
with which to assess them. It is also necessary that the proposed plan is consistent with existing
agreed plans and policies developed through public consultation. Community concerns need to
be heard, acknowledged and acted upon or responded to, and the consultation process needs to
be transparently fair and democratic to win community support. A major contributor to success in
the second consultation was that all community action groups were invited to meetings to discuss
the purpose of the consultation and the methods to be used. Feedback was subsequently received
before the process commenced to show what had changed and why any suggestions concerning the
consultation process were not being adopted. This openness helped to mend the distrust of the first
consultation process and is recommended as an essential early step in any public consultation process
The Impact of a Dealer's Failure on Otc Derivatives Market Liquidity During Volatile Periods
This paper develops a model in which information losses may be an important part of the cost of an OTC derivatives dealer's failure. A dealer failure forces solvent counterparties of a failed dealer to seek replacement hedges with other dealers. However, by forcing good firms into the derivatives market, the failure provides camouflage for insolvent firms seeking to speculate with a dealer that does not know their credit status. The paper models this information loss and uses the model to quantitatively evaluate a range of scenarios. The results suggest that a market breakdown is unlikely but not quite impossible
Constraints on Inflationary Solutions in the Presence of Shear and Bulk Viscosity
Inflationary models and their claim to solve many of the outstanding problems
in cosmology have been the subject of a great deal of debate over the last few
years. A major sticking point has been the lack of both good observational and
theoretical arguments to single out one particular model out of the many that
solve these problems. Here we examine the degree of restrictiveness on the
dynamical relationship between the cosmological scale factor and the inflation
driving self-interaction potential of a minimally coupled scalar field, imposed
by the condition that the scalar field is required to be real during a
classical regime (the reality condition). We systema\-tically look at the
effects of this constraint on many of the inflationary models found in the
literature within the FLRW framework, and also look at what happens when
physically motivated perturbations such as shear and bulk viscosity are
introduced. We find that in many cases, either the models are totally excluded
or the reality condition gives rise to constraints on the scale factor and on
the various parameters of the model.Comment: 21 pages, LaTe
A fully covariant description of CMB anisotropies
Starting from the exact non-linear description of matter and radiation, a
fully covariant and gauge-invariant formula for the observed temperature
anisotropy of the cosmic microwave background (CBR) radiation, expressed in
terms of the electric () and magnetic () parts of the Weyl
tensor, is obtained by integrating photon geodesics from last scattering to the
point of observation today. This improves and extends earlier work by Russ et
al where a similar formula was obtained by taking first order variations of the
redshift. In the case of scalar (density) perturbations, is related to
the harmonic components of the gravitational potential and the usual
dominant Sachs-Wolfe contribution to the
temperature anisotropy is recovered, together with contributions due to the
time variation of the potential (Rees-Sciama effect), entropy and velocity
perturbations at last scattering and a pressure suppression term important in
low density universes. We also explicitly demonstrate the validity of assuming
that the perturbations are adiabatic at decoupling and show that if the surface
of last scattering is correctly placed and the background universe model is
taken to be a flat dust dominated Friedmann-Robertson-Walker model (FRW), then
the large scale temperature anisotropy can be interpreted as being due to the
motion of the matter relative to the surface of constant temperature which
defines the surface of last scattering on those scales.Comment: 18 pages LaTeX, 1 figure. Submitted to Classical and Quantum Gravity.
Also available at http://shiva.mth.uct.ac.za/preprints/9705.htm
Hubble flow variance and the cosmic rest frame
We characterize the radial and angular variance of the Hubble flow in the
COMPOSITE sample of 4534 galaxies, on scales in which much of the flow is in
the nonlinear regime. With no cosmological assumptions other than the existence
of a suitably averaged linear Hubble law, we find with decisive Bayesian
evidence (ln B >> 5) that the Hubble constant averaged in independent spherical
radial shells is closer to its asymptotic value when referred to the rest frame
of the Local Group, rather than the standard rest frame of the Cosmic Microwave
Background. An exception occurs for radial shells in the range 40/h-60/h Mpc.
Angular averages reveal a dipole structure in the Hubble flow, whose amplitude
changes markedly over the range 32/h-62/h Mpc. Whereas the LG frame dipole is
initially constant and then decreases significantly, the CMB frame dipole
initially decreases but then increases. The map of angular Hubble flow
variation in the LG rest frame is found to coincide with that of the residual
CMB temperature dipole, with correlation coefficient -0.92. These results are
difficult to reconcile with the standard kinematic interpretation of the motion
of the Local Group in response to the clustering dipole, but are consistent
with a foreground non-kinematic anisotropy in the distance-redshift relation of
0.5% on scales up to 65/h Mpc. Effectively, the differential expansion of space
produced by nearby nonlinear structures of local voids and denser walls and
filaments cannot be reduced to a local boost. This hypothesis suggests a
reinterpretation of bulk flows, which may potentially impact on calibration of
supernovae distances, anomalies associated with large angles in the CMB
anisotropy spectrum, and the dark flow inferred from the kinematic
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect. It is consistent with recent studies that find
evidence for a non-kinematic dipole in the distribution of distant radio
sources.Comment: 37 pages, 9 tables, 13 figures; v2 adds extensive new analysis
(including additional subsections, tables, figures); v3 adds a Monte Carlo
analysis (with additional table, figure) which further tightens the
statistical robustness of the dipole results; v4 adds further clarifications,
small corrections, references and discussion of Planck satellite results; v5
typos fixed, matches published versio
Discontinuation of standard first-line antiretroviral therapy in a cohort of 1434 Malawian children
The standard first-line antiretroviral (ART) regimen in Malawi for both adults and children is a fixed-dose combination tablet containing stavudine (d4T), lamivudine (3TC) and nevirapine (NVP). This regimen has been shown to yield satisfactory virologic and immunologic outcomes in children. Published studies have described insights into discontinuation of first-line regimen and toxicities of ART in adults, but similar studies in paediatric populations are lacking
Bryophytes of Uganda : 6., new and additional records, 3.
12 hepatics and 32 mosses are reported new to Uganda, 1 moss being also new to Africa, and 1 liverwort new to mainland Africa. Ectropothecium plumigerum (Broth.) Hedenäs is a new combination (basionym: Isopterygium plumigerum Broth.) with a new synonym Taxicaulis plumirameus Müll.Hal. nom. nud., and Taxiphyllum maniae (Renauld & Paris) M. Fleisch. is a new synonym of Taxiphyllum taxirameum (Mitt.) M.Fleisch. Three mosses are removed from the Uganda list
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