15,672 research outputs found
Application of XFaster power spectrum and likelihood estimator to Planck
We develop the XFaster Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) temperature and
polarization anisotropy power spectrum and likelihood technique for the Planck
CMB satellite mission. We give an overview of this estimator and its current
implementation and present the results of applying this algorithm to simulated
Planck data. We show that it can accurately extract the power spectrum of
Planck data for the high-l multipoles range. We compare the XFaster
approximation for the likelihood to other high-l likelihood approximations such
as Gaussian and Offset Lognormal and a low-l pixel-based likelihood. We show
that the XFaster likelihood is not only accurate at high-l, but also performs
well at moderately low multipoles. We also present results for cosmological
parameter Markov Chain Monte Carlo estimation with the XFaster likelihood. As
long as the low-l polarization and temperature power are properly accounted
for, e.g., by adding an adequate low-l likelihood ingredient, the input
parameters are recovered to a high level of accuracy.Comment: 25 pages, 20 figures, updated to reflect published version: slightly
extended account of XFaster technique, added improved plots and minor
corrections. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Black string corrections in variable tension braneworld scenarios
Braneworld models with variable tension are investigated, and the corrections
on the black string horizon along the extra dimension are provided. Such
corrections are encrypted in additional terms involving the covariant
derivatives of the variable tension on the brane, providing profound
consequences concerning the black string horizon variation along the extra
dimension, near the brane. The black string horizon behavior is shown to be
drastically modified by the terms corrected by the brane variable tension. In
particular, a model motivated by the phenomenological interesting case
regarding Eotvos branes is investigated. It forthwith provides further physical
features regarding variable tension braneworld scenarios, heretofore concealed
in all previous analysis in the literature. All precedent analysis considered
uniquely the expansion of the metric up to the second order along the extra
dimension, what is able to evince solely the brane variable tension absolute
value. Notwithstanding, the expansion terms aftermath, further accomplished in
this paper from the third order on, elicits the successive covariant
derivatives of the brane variable tension, and their respective coupling with
the extrinsic curvature, the Weyl tensor, and the Riemann and Ricci tensors, as
well as the scalar curvature. Such additional terms are shown to provide sudden
modifications in the black string horizon in a variable tension braneworld
scenarioComment: 12 pages, 5 figures, accepted in PR
Quantum Hall Effect in Graphene with Interface-Induced Spin-Orbit Coupling
We consider an effective model for graphene with interface-induced spin-orbit
coupling and calculate the quantum Hall effect in the low-energy limit. We
perform a systematic analysis of the contribution of the different terms of the
effective Hamiltonian to the quantum Hall effect (QHE). By analysing the
spin-splitting of the quantum Hall states as a function of magnetic field and
gate-voltage, we obtain different scaling laws that can be used to characterise
the spin-orbit coupling in experiments. Furthermore, we employ a real-space
quantum transport approach to calculate the quantum Hall conductivity and
investigate the robustness of the QHE to disorder introduced by hydrogen
impurities. For that purpose, we combine first-principles calculations and a
genetic algorithm strategy to obtain a graphene-only Hamiltonian that models
the impurity
The Nusselt numbers of horizontal convection
We consider the problem of horizontal convection in which non-uniform
buoyancy, , is imposed on the top surface of a container and
all other surfaces are insulating. Horizontal convection produces a net
horizontal flux of buoyancy, , defined by vertically and temporally
averaging the interior horizontal flux of buoyancy. We show that
; overbar denotes a
space-time average over the top surface, angle brackets denote a volume-time
average and is the molecular diffusivity of buoyancy . This
connection between and
justifies the definition of the
horizontal-convective Nusselt number, , as the ratio of to the corresponding quantity produced
by molecular diffusion alone. We discuss the advantages of this definition of
over other definitions of horizontal-convective Nusselt number currently
in use. We investigate transient effects and show that equilibrates more rapidly than other
global averages, such as the domain averaged kinetic energy and bottom
buoyancy. We show that is
essentially the volume-averaged rate of Boussinesq entropy production within
the enclosure. In statistical steady state, the interior entropy production is
balanced by a flux of entropy through the top surface. This leads to an
equivalent "surface Nusselt number", defined as the surface average of vertical
buoyancy flux through the top surface times the imposed surface buoyancy
. In experiments it is likely easier to evaluate the surface
entropy flux, rather than the volume integral of
demanded by .Comment: 16 pages, 7 figure
Studies of CMB structure at Dec=40. II: Analysis and cosmological interpretation
We present a detailed analysis of the cosmic microwave background structure
in the Tenerife Dec=+40 degrees data. The effect of local atmospheric
contributions on the derived fluctuation amplitude is considered, resulting in
an improved separation of the intrinsic CMB signal from noise. Our analysis
demonstrates the existence of common structure in independent data scans at 15
and 33 GHz. For the case of fluctuations described by a Gaussian
auto-correlation function, a likelihood analysis of our combined results at 15
and 33 GHz implies an intrinsic rms fluctuation level of 48^{+21}_{-15} uK on a
coherence scale of 4 degrees; the equivalent analysis for a
Harrison-Zel'dovitch model gives a power spectrum normalisation of Q_{rms-ps} =
22^{+10}_{-6} uK. The fluctuation amplitude is seen to be consistent at the 68%
confidence level with that reported for the COBE two-year data for primordial
fluctuations described by a power law model with a spectral index in the range
1.0 \le n \le 1.6. This limit favours the large scale CMB anisotropy being
dominated by scalar fluctuations rather than tensor modes from a gravitational
wave background. The large scale Tenerife and COBE results are considered in
conjunction with observational results from medium scale experiments in order
to place improved limits on the fluctuation spectral index; we find n=1.10 +/-
0.10 assuming standard CDM with H_{0}=50 kms^{-1}Mpc^{-1}.Comment: 10 pages LaTeX, including 8 PostScript figures. Accepted for
publication in MNRA
Markov Chain Beam Randomization: a study of the impact of PLANCK beam measurement errors on cosmological parameter estimation
We introduce a new method to propagate uncertainties in the beam shapes used
to measure the cosmic microwave background to cosmological parameters
determined from those measurements. The method, which we call Markov Chain Beam
Randomization, MCBR, randomly samples from a set of templates or functions that
describe the beam uncertainties. The method is much faster than direct
numerical integration over systematic `nuisance' parameters, and is not
restricted to simple, idealized cases as is analytic marginalization. It does
not assume the data are normally distributed, and does not require Gaussian
priors on the specific systematic uncertainties. We show that MCBR properly
accounts for and provides the marginalized errors of the parameters. The method
can be generalized and used to propagate any systematic uncertainties for which
a set of templates is available. We apply the method to the Planck satellite,
and consider future experiments. Beam measurement errors should have a small
effect on cosmological parameters as long as the beam fitting is performed
after removal of 1/f noise.Comment: 17 pages, 23 figures, revised version with improved explanation of
the MCBR and overall wording. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysics (to appear in the Planck pre-launch special issue
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