5,892 research outputs found

    Anti-deSitter gravitational collapse

    Get PDF
    We describe a formalism for studying spherically symmetric collapse of the massless scalar field in any spacetime dimension, and for any value of the cosmological constant Λ\Lambda. The formalism is used for numerical simulations of gravitational collapse in four spacetime dimensions with negative Λ\Lambda. We observe critical behaviour at the onset of black hole formation, and find that the critical exponent is independent of Λ\Lambda.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, revtex4, version to appear in CQ

    A Detailed Study of Giants and Horizontal Branch Stars in M68: Atmospheric Parameters and Chemical Abundances

    Full text link
    In this paper, we present a detailed high-resolution spectroscopic study of post main sequence stars in the Globular Cluster M68. Our sample, which covers a range of 4000 K in TeffT_{eff}, and 3.5 dex in log(g)log(g), is comprised of members from the red giant, red horizontal, and blue horizontal branch, making this the first high-resolution globular cluster study covering such a large evolutionary and parameter space. Initially, atmospheric parameters were determined using photometric as well as spectroscopic methods, both of which resulted in unphysical and unexpected TeffT_{eff}, log(g)log(g), ξt\xi_{t}, and [Fe/H] combinations. We therefore developed a hybrid approach that addresses most of these problems, and yields atmospheric parameters that agree well with other measurements in the literature. Furthermore, our derived stellar metallicities are consistent across all evolutionary stages, with ⟨\langle[Fe/H]⟩\rangle = −-2.42 (σ\sigma = 0.14) from 25 stars. Chemical abundances obtained using our methodology also agree with previous studies and bear all the hallmarks of globular clusters, such as a Na-O anti-correlation, constant Ca abundances, and mild rr-process enrichment.Comment: Accepted to the Astronomical Journa

    Dimension-Dependence of the Critical Exponent in Spherically Symmetric Gravitational Collapse

    Full text link
    We study the critical behaviour of spherically symmetric scalar field collapse to black holes in spacetime dimensions other than four. We obtain reliable values for the scaling exponent in the supercritical region for dimensions in the range 3.5≤D≤143.5\leq D\leq 14. The critical exponent increases monotonically to an asymptotic value at large DD of γ∼0.466\gamma\sim0.466. The data is well fit by a simple exponential of the form: γ∼0.466(1−e−0.408D)\gamma \sim 0.466(1-e^{-0.408 D}).Comment: 5 pages, including 7 figures New version contains more data points, one extra graph and more accurate error bars. No changes to result

    The general relativistic infinite plane

    Get PDF
    Uniform fields are one of the simplest and most pedagogically useful examples in introductory courses on electrostatics or Newtonian gravity. In general relativity there have been several proposals as to what constitutes a uniform field. In this article we examine two metrics that can be considered the general relativistic version of the infinite plane with finite mass per unit area. The first metric is the 4D version of the 5D "brane" world models which are the starting point for many current research papers. The second case is the cosmological domain wall metric. We examine to what extent these different metrics match or deviate from our Newtonian intuition about the gravitational field of an infinite plane. These solutions provide the beginning student in general relativity both computational practice and conceptual insight into Einstein's field equations. In addition they do this by introducing the student to material that is at the forefront of current research.Comment: Accepted for publication in the American Journal of Physic

    Probabilistic computer model of optimal runway turnoffs

    Get PDF
    Landing delays are currently a problem at major air carrier airports and many forecasters agree that airport congestion will get worse by the end of the century. It is anticipated that some types of delays can be reduced by an efficient optimal runway exist system allowing increased approach volumes necessary at congested airports. A computerized Probabilistic Runway Turnoff Model which locates exits and defines path geometry for a selected maximum occupancy time appropriate for each TERPS aircraft category is defined. The model includes an algorithm for lateral ride comfort limits

    Follow-up of a suspected excess of brain tumours among Namibian children

    Get PDF
    The original publication is available at http://www.samj.org.zaTo the Editor: The aim of this follow-up study was to further investigate a suggested excess of childhood brain tumours (CBT) among Herero children in Namibia from 1983 to 1988. Incidence rates of primary brain tumours among Herero children were found to be 4 times higher than rates among Namibian children in any of the 10 other tribal groups or among children of European origin. The causes of CBTs remain largely unknown. The only established causes are ionizing radiation and predisposing inherited syndromes. A particularly compelling hypothesis is that exposure during gestation to N-nitroso compounds (NOCs) may lead to the development of CBT. This hypothesis was suggested by experimental work in which 100% production of nervous system (NS) tumours in rat offspring resulted from transplacental exposure to the neurocarcinogen ethylnitrosourea (ENU) or to low levels of the precursor compounds sodium nitrite and ethyl urea added to the food and drinking water of pregnant rat

    Evaluation of rations used in performance testing of bulls and steers

    Get PDF
    Cover title.Includes bibliographical references

    Biological Records Centre Annual Report 2005-2006

    Get PDF
    The period covered by this report is the first year of a new six-year partnership between CEH and JNCC. For this period, there is increased emphasis on targeted survey, on analysis and interpretation and on communications and outreach. These activities were always part of BRC’s work, but they have been given greater prominence as a result of rapid developments in information technology. Data are increasingly reaching BRC in electronic form, so that the effort of data entry and collation is reduced. The data, collected by many volunteers and then collated and analysed at BRC, document the changing status and distribution of plants and animals in Britain. Distribution maps are published in atlases and are available via the internet through the NBN Gateway. The effects of change or loss of habitats, the influence of climate change and the consequences of changing water quality are all examples of the environmental factors that affect our biodiversity and which BRC aims to document and understand. The results are vital for developing environmental policies, to support conservation, and for fundamental ecological research. BRC is funded jointly by JNCC and NERC through a partnership based on a Memorandum of Agreement (MoA). The partnership started in 1973 when the Nature Conservancy was divided to form the successor bodies Nature Conservancy Council (NCC) and Institute of Terrestrial Ecology (ITE). NCC was in turn divided further to form JNCC and three Country Agencies, while ITE was merged with other NERC units to form CEH. Through all these changes, the partnership has been maintained. A six-year memorandum of agreement ended on 31 January 2005 (Hill et al. 2005). The present report covers the first full year, 2005-6, of the new agreement for 2005-2010. Rapid progress in information technology continues to be highly beneficial for BRC, whose data are increasingly used by the UK country conservation agencies, environmental consultants, NGOs, research workers, policy makers and volunteers. It is gratifying to know that, through our ability to display data on the National Biodiversity Network (NBN) Gateway, some of our data suppliers now have immediate access to their own data in a convenient form. The year 2005-6 has been one of steady progress, with new datasets added to BRC, substantial additions to existing data, and improved communication with the NBN Gateway. The most high profile activity of the year has been the Harlequin Ladybird Survey, which has enabled us to observe the early stages of colonization by a mobile insect in greater detail than has been possible in any previous case

    Local Projections of Low-Momentum Potentials

    Full text link
    Nuclear interactions evolved via renormalization group methods to lower resolution become increasingly non-local (off-diagonal in coordinate space) as they are softened. This inhibits both the development of intuition about the interactions and their use with some methods for solving the quantum many-body problem. By applying "local projections", a softened interaction can be reduced to a local effective interaction plus a non-local residual interaction. At the two-body level, a local projection after similarity renormalization group (SRG) evolution manifests the elimination of short-range repulsive cores and the flow toward universal low-momentum interactions. The SRG residual interaction is found to be relatively weak at low energy, which motivates a perturbative treatment
    • …
    corecore