1,363 research outputs found
Metric gravity theories and cosmology:II. Stability of a ground state in f(R) theories
A fundamental criterion of viability of any gravity theory is existence of a
stable ground-state solution being either Minkowski, dS or AdS space. Stability
of the ground state is independent of which frame is physical. In general, a
given theory has multiple ground states and splits into independent physical
sectors. All metric gravity theories with the Lagrangian being a function of
Ricci tensor are dynamically equivalent to Einstein gravity with a source and
this allows us to study the stability problem using methods developed in GR. We
apply these methods to f(R) theories. As is shown in 13 cases of Lagrangians
the stability criterion works simply and effectively whenever the curvature of
the ground state is determined. An infinite number of gravity theories have a
stable ground state and further viability criteria are necessary.Comment: A modified and expanded version of a second part of the paper which
previously appeared as gr-qc/0702097v1. The first, modified part is now
published as gr-qc/0702097v2 and as a separate paper in Class. Qu. Grav. The
present paper matches the published versio
Kinetics of isothermal and non-isothermal precipitation in an Al-6at%Si alloy
A novel theory which describes the progress of a thermally activated reaction under isothermal and linear heating conditions is presented. It incorporates nucleation, growth and impingement and takes account of temperaturedependent solubility. The model generally fits very well to isothermal calorimetry and differential scanning calorimetry data on precipitation in an Al-6 at.% Si alloy. Analysis of the data shows that two processes occur in this precipitation reaction: growth of large Si particles and growth of pre-existing small nuclei. Determination of the sizes of Si precipitates by transmission electron microscopy indicates that interfacial energy contributions are small and have a negligible influence on solubilit
Experimental Study of the Radiative Decays K+ -> mu+ nu e+e- and K+ -> e+ nu e+e-
Experiment 865 at the Brookhaven AGS obtained 410 K+ -> e+ nu e+e- and 2679
K+ -> mu+ nu e+e- events including 10% and 19% background. The branching ratios
were measured to be (2.48+-0.14(stat.)+-0.14(syst.))x10^-8 (m_ee>150 MeV) and
(7.06+-0.16+-0.26)x10^-8 (m_ee>145 MeV), respectively. Results for the decay
form factors are presented.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, RevTeX
Peroxy radical partitioning during the AMMA radical intercomparison exercise
Peroxy radicals were measured onboard two scientific aircrafts during the AMMA (African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analysis) campaign in summer 2006. This paper reports results from the flight on 16 August 2006 during which measurements of HO2 by laser induced fluorescence spectroscopy at low pressure (LIF-FAGE) and total peroxy radicals (RO2* = HO2+ÎŁRO2, R = organic chain) by two similar instruments based on the peroxy radical chemical amplification (PeRCA) technique were subject of a blind intercomparison. The German DLR-Falcon and the British FAAM-BAe-146 flew wing tip to wing tip for about 30 min making concurrent measurements on 2 horizontal level runs at 697 and 485 hPa over the same geographical area in Burkina Faso. A full set of supporting measurements comprising photolysis frequencies, and relevant trace gases like CO, NO, NO2, NOy, O3 and a wider range of VOCs were collected simultaneously.
Results are discussed on the basis of the characteristics and limitations of the different instruments used. Generally, no data bias are identified and the RO2* data available agree quite reasonably within the instrumental errors. The [RO2*]/[HO2] ratios, which vary between 1:1 and 3:1, as well as the peroxy radical variability, concur with variations in photolysis rates and in other potential radical precursors. Model results provide additional information about dominant radical formation and loss processes
Spinning particles in the vacuum C metric
The motion of a spinning test particle given by the Mathisson-Papapetrou
equations is studied on an exterior vacuum C metric background spacetime
describing the accelerated motion of a spherically symmetric gravitational
source. We consider circular orbits of the particle around the direction of
acceleration of the source. The symmetries of this configuration lead to the
reduction of the differential equations of motion to algebraic relations. The
spin supplementary conditions as well as the coupling between the spin of the
particle and the acceleration of the source are discussed.Comment: IOP macros used, eps figures n.
Chaotic inflation on the brane
We consider slow-roll inflation in the context of recently proposed
four-dimensional effective gravity induced on the world-volume of a three-brane
in five-dimensional Einstein gravity. We find significant modifications of the
simplest chaotic inflationary scenario when the five-dimensional Planck scale
is below about 10^{17} GeV. We use the comoving curvature perturbation, which
remains constant on super-Hubble scales, in order to calculate the spectrum of
adiabatic density perturbations generated. Modifications to the Friedmann
constraint equation lead to a faster Hubble expansion at high energies and a
more strongly damped evolution of the scalar field. This assists slow-roll,
enhances the amount of inflation obtained in any given model, and drives the
perturbations towards an exactly scale-invariant Harrison-Zel'dovich spectrum.
In chaotic inflation driven by a massive scalar field we show that inflation
can occur at field values far below the four-dimensional Planck scale, though
above the five-dimensional fundamental scale.Comment: New figure to show accuracy of high-energy approximation. Version
accepted by Phys. Rev. D (RC
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