201 research outputs found
Navigation of Spacetime Ships in Unified Gravitational and Electromagnetic Waves
On the basis of a "local" principle of equivalence of general relativity, we
consider a navigation in a kind of "4D-ocean" involving measurements of
conformally invariant physical properties only. Then, applying the Pfaff theory
for PDE to a particular conformally equivariant system of differential
equations, we show the dependency of any kind of function describing "spacetime
waves", with respect to 20 parametrizing functions. These latter, appearing in
a linear differential Spencer sequence and determining gauge fields of
deformations relatively to "ship-metrics" or to "flat spacetime ocean metrics",
may be ascribed to unified electromagnetic and gravitational waves. The present
model is based neither on a classical gauge theory of gravitation or a
gravitation theory with torsion, nor on any Kaluza-Klein or Weyl type
unifications, but rather on a post-Newtonian approach of gravitation in a four
dimensional conformal Cosserat spacetime.Comment: 28 pages. Relative to the second version some changes in the
mathematical results have been corrected without consequences in the physical
model. The conformally flatness of the substratum spacetime which is an
assumption used throughout in the mathematical developements from chapter 2,
has been well precised in the first chapter. Clearer explanations at the very
end of chapter 3 about accelerating frames are given. New references are
indicated and some of them correcte
Relativistic Stereometric Coordinates from Relativistic Localizing Systems and the Projective Geometry of the Spacetime Manifold
Relativistic stereometric coordinates supplied by relativistic auto-locating
positioning systems made up of four satellites supplemented by a fifth one are
defined in addition to the well-known emission and reception coordinates. Such
a constellation of five satellites defines a so-called relativistic localizing
system. The determination of such systems is motivated by the need to not only
locate (within a grid) users utilizing receivers but, more generally, to
localize any spacetime event. The angles measured on the celestial spheres of
the five satellites enter into the definition. Therefore, there are, up to
scalings, intrinsic physical coordinates related to the underlying conformal
structure of spacetime. Moreover, they indicate that spacetime must be endowed
everywhere with a local projective geometry characteristic of a so-called
generalized Cartan space locally modeled on four-dimensional, real projective
space. The particular process of localization providing the relativistic
stereometric coordinates is based, in a way, on an enhanced notion of parallax
in space and time generalizing the usual parallax restricted to space only.Comment: Preprint version of Sec. VIII in the HAL-INRIA document with
reference: hal-00945515, v1. One bibliographic reference (Blagojevic et al.)
more with respect to version
Spacetime deployments parametrized by gravitational and electromagnetic fields
On the basis of a "Punctual" Equivalence Principle of the general relativity
context, we consider spacetimes with measurements of conformally invariant
physical properties. Then, applying the Pfaff theory for PDE to a particular
conformally equivariant system of differential equations, we make explicit the
dependence of any kind of function describing a "spacetime deployment", on
n(n+1) parametrizing functions, denoting by n the spacetime dimension. These
functions, appearing in a linear differential Spencer sequence and determining
gauge fields of spacetime deformations relatively to a "substrat spacetime",
can be consistently ascribed to unified electromagnetic and gravitational
fields, at any spacetime dimensions n greater or equal to 4.Comment: 26 pages, LaTeX2e, file macro "suppl.sty", correction in the
definition of germs and local ring
The short and long of it: neural correlates of temporal-order memory for autobiographical events
Previous functional neuroimaging studies of temporal-order memory have investigated memory for laboratory stimuli that are causally unrelated and poor in sensory detail. In contrast, the present functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study investigated temporal-order memory for autobiographical events that were causally interconnected and rich in sensory detail. Participants took photographs at many campus locations over a period of several hours, and the following day they were scanned while making temporal-order judgments to pairs of photographs from different locations. By manipulating the temporal lag between the two locations in each trial, we compared the neural correlates associated with reconstruction processes, which we hypothesized depended on recollection and contribute mainly to short lags, and distance processes, which we hypothesized to depend on familiarity and contribute mainly to longer lags. Consistent with our hypotheses, parametric fMRI analyses linked shorter lags to activations in regions previously associated with recollection (left prefrontal, parahippocampal, precuneus, and visual cortices), and longer lags with regions previously associated with familiarity (right prefrontal cortex). The hemispheric asymmetry in prefrontal cortex activity fits very well with evidence and theories regarding the contributions of the left versus right prefrontal cortex to memory (recollection vs. familiarity processes) and cognition (systematic vs. heuristic processes). In sum, using a novel photo-paradigm, this study provided the first evidence regarding the neural correlates of temporal-order for autobiographical events
Conformal proper times according to the Woodhouse causal axiomatics of relativistic spacetimes
On the basis of the Woodhouse causal axiomatics, we show that conformal
proper times and an extra variable in addition to those of space and time,
precisely and physically identified from experimental examples, together give a
physical justification for the `chronometric hypothesis' of general relativity.
Indeed, we show that, with a lack of these latter two ingredients, no clock
paradox solution exists in which the clock and message functions are solely at
the origin of the asymmetry. These proper times originate from a given
conformal structure of the spacetime when ascribing different compatible
projective structures to each Woodhouse particle, and then, each defines a
specific Weylian sheaf structure. In addition, the proper time
parameterizations, as two point functions, cannot be defined irrespective of
the processes in the relative changes of physical characteristics. These
processes are included via path-dependent conformal scale factors, which act
like sockets for any kind of physical interaction and also represent the values
of the variable associated with the extra dimension. As such, the differential
aging differs far beyond the first and second clock effects in Weyl geometries,
with the latter finally appearing to not be suitable.Comment: 25 pages, 2 figure
Shifting visual perspective during retrieval shapes autobiographical memories
The dynamic and flexible nature of memories is evident in our ability to adopt multiple visual perspectives. Although autobiographical memories are typically encoded from the visual perspective of our own eyes they can be retrieved from the perspective of an observer looking at our self. Here, we examined the neural mechanisms of shifting visual perspective during long-term memory retrieval and its influence on online and subsequent memories using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Participants generated specific autobiographical memories from the last five years and rated their visual perspective. In a separate fMRI session, they were asked to retrieve the memories across three repetitions while maintaining the same visual perspective as their initial rating or by shifting to an alternative perspective. Visual perspective shifting during autobiographical memory retrieval was supported by a linear decrease in neural recruitment across repetitions in the posterior parietal cortices. Additional analyses revealed that the precuneus, in particular, contributed to both online and subsequent changes in the phenomenology of memories. Our findings show that flexibly shifting egocentric perspective during autobiographical memory retrieval is supported by the precuneus, and suggest that this manipulation of mental imagery during retrieval has consequences for how memories are retrieved and later remembered
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