4,021 research outputs found
A Classical Analogue to the Standard Model, Chapters 4-11: Particle generations and masses; curved spacetimes and gravitation; heavy weak bosons
The analogue model contains counterparts to the
particle spectrum and interactions of the Standard Model, and has only three
tunable parameters. As the structure of this model is highly constrained,
predictive relationships between constants may be obtained. In Chapters 4-6,
the masses of the tau, the and bosons, and a Higgs-like scalar boson
are calculated as functions of , , and . They are shown to
be GeV/, GeV/,
GeV/, and GeV/ respectively, with no free fitting
parameters. All are within of the observed values of
GeV/, GeV/, GeV/, and
GeV/ respectively. In Chapter 7 the final ungauged freedom of
the model is used to eliminate the right-handed weak
interaction, while simultaneously introducing space-time curvature and a
gravitational interaction emulating general relativity. The value of Newton's
constant is then calculated from , , and , yielding
,
which is in agreement with the observed value of with tension less than
. This persistent consistency with experiment
suggests the existence of a unifying relationship between lepton generations,
gravitation, and the electroweak mass scale. In the Classical Analogue to the
Standard Model this unification arises from an underlying construction from
coloured preons, with the low-energy residuals of the preon binding
interactions corresponding to the strong nuclear force.Comment: 201 pages, 46 figures. Updated calculation of Higgs boson mass (0.1%
correction; Secs. 5:3.3 & 6:4.5). Added some initial discussion of Higgs
interactions in CASMIR (Ch. 11
Granular discharge rate for submerged hoppers
The discharge of spherical grains from a hole in the bottom of a right
circular cylinder is measured with the entire system underwater. We find that
the discharge rate depends on filling height, in contrast to the well-known
case of dry non-cohesive grains. It is further surprising that the rate
increases up to about twenty five percent, as the hopper empties and the
granular pressure head decreases. For deep filling, where the discharge rate is
constant, we measure the behavior as a function of both grain and hole
diameters. The discharge rate scale is set by the product of hole area and the
terminal falling speed of isolated grains. But there is a small-hole cutoff of
about two and half grain diameters, which is larger than the analogous cutoff
in the Beverloo equation for dry grains
Two controversies in classical electromagnetism
This paper examines two controversies arising within classical electromagnetism which are relevant to the optical trapping and micromanipulation community. First is the Abraham-Minkowski controversy, a debate relating to the form of the electromagnetic energy momentum tensor in dielectric materials, with implications for the momentum of a photon in dielectric media. A wide range of alternatives exist, and experiments are frequently proposed to attempt to discriminate between them. We explain the resolution of this controversy and show that regardless of the electromagnetic energy momentum tensor chosen, when material disturbances are also taken into account the predicted behaviour will always be the same. The second controversy, known as the plane wave angular momentum paradox, relates to the distribution of angular momentum within an electromagnetic wave. The two competing formulations are reviewed, and an experiment is discussed which is capable of distinguishing between the two
Boundary quantum critical phenomena with entanglement renormalization
We extend the formalism of entanglement renormalization to the study of
boundary critical phenomena. The multi-scale entanglement renormalization
ansatz (MERA), in its scale invariant version, offers a very compact
approximation to quantum critical ground states. Here we show that, by adding a
boundary to the scale invariant MERA, an accurate approximation to the critical
ground state of an infinite chain with a boundary is obtained, from which one
can extract boundary scaling operators and their scaling dimensions. Our
construction, valid for arbitrary critical systems, produces an effective chain
with explicit separation of energy scales that relates to Wilson's RG
formulation of the Kondo problem. We test the approach by studying the quantum
critical Ising model with free and fixed boundary conditions.Comment: 8 pages, 12 figures, for a related work see arXiv:0912.289
Power-law fluctuations in phase-separated lipid membranes
URL:http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevE.60.7354
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevE.60.7354The spatial structure of three binary lipid mixtures, prepared as multilamellar vesicles, was studied by small-angle neutron scattering. In the fluid-gel coexistence region, large- scale concentration fluctuations appear which scatter like surface fractals for small acyl- chain mismatch and like mass fractals for large mismatch over about one decade of length. The transition is highly discontinuous: The fractal dimension of the boundary between the gel and fluid drops from 2.7 to 1.7, the gel fraction in the fluctuations drops from about 0.5 to 0.07, and the gel domains interlamellar correlation drops from strong to weak. We interpret the fluctuations as long-lived descendants of the incipient two-phase equilibrium state and the transition as due to changes in the gel rigidity and phase diagram.We gratefully acknowledge financial support from the Deutsch Forschungsgemeinschaft and the Petroleum Research Fund, administered by the American Chemical Society
Simulation of anyons with tensor network algorithms
Interacting systems of anyons pose a unique challenge to condensed matter
simulations due to their non-trivial exchange statistics. These systems are of
great interest as they have the potential for robust universal quantum
computation, but numerical tools for studying them are as yet limited. We show
how existing tensor network algorithms may be adapted for use with systems of
anyons, and demonstrate this process for the 1-D Multi-scale Entanglement
Renormalisation Ansatz (MERA). We apply the MERA to infinite chains of
interacting Fibonacci anyons, computing their scaling dimensions and local
scaling operators. The scaling dimensions obtained are seen to be in agreement
with conformal field theory. The techniques developed are applicable to any
tensor network algorithm, and the ability to adapt these ansaetze for use on
anyonic systems opens the door for numerical simulation of large systems of
free and interacting anyons in one and two dimensions.Comment: Fixed typos, matches published version. 16 pages, 21 figures, 4
tables, RevTeX 4-1. For a related work, see arXiv:1006.247
A Theory of Cheap Control in Embodied Systems
We present a framework for designing cheap control architectures for embodied
agents. Our derivation is guided by the classical problem of universal
approximation, whereby we explore the possibility of exploiting the agent's
embodiment for a new and more efficient universal approximation of behaviors
generated by sensorimotor control. This embodied universal approximation is
compared with the classical non-embodied universal approximation. To exemplify
our approach, we present a detailed quantitative case study for policy models
defined in terms of conditional restricted Boltzmann machines. In contrast to
non-embodied universal approximation, which requires an exponential number of
parameters, in the embodied setting we are able to generate all possible
behaviors with a drastically smaller model, thus obtaining cheap universal
approximation. We test and corroborate the theory experimentally with a
six-legged walking machine. The experiments show that the sufficient controller
complexity predicted by our theory is tight, which means that the theory has
direct practical implications. Keywords: cheap design, embodiment, sensorimotor
loop, universal approximation, conditional restricted Boltzmann machineComment: 27 pages, 10 figure
Observation of a local gravity potential isosurface by airborne lidar of Lake Balaton, Hungary
Airborne lidar is a remote sensing method commonly
used for mapping surface topography in high resolution.
A water surface in hydrostatic equilibrium theoretically
represents a gravity potential isosurface. Here we compare
lidar-based ellipsoidal water surface height measurements all
around the shore of a major lake with a local high-resolution
quasi-geoid model. The ellipsoidal heights of the 87 km2 we
sampled all around the shore of the 597 km2 lake surface vary
by 0.8m and strong spatial correlation with the quasi-geoid
undulation was calculated (R2 = 0.91). After subtraction of
the local geoid undulation from the measured ellipsoidal water
surface heights, their variation was considerably reduced.
Based on a network of water gauge measurements, dynamic
water surface heights were also successfully corrected for.
This demonstrates that the water surface heights of the lake
were truly determined by the local gravity potential.We conclude
that both the level of hydrostatic equilibrium of the lake
and the accuracy of airborne lidar were sufficient for identifying
the spatial variations of gravity potential
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