1,334 research outputs found
Screened Perturbation Theory to Three Loops
The thermal physics of a massless scalar field with a phi^4 interaction is
studied within screened perturbation theory (SPT). In this method the
perturbative expansion is reorganized by adding and subtracting a mass term in
the lagrangian. We consider several different mass prescriptions that
generalize the one-loop gap equation to two-loop order. We calculate the
pressure and entropy to three-loop order and the screening mass to two-loop
order. In contrast to the weak-coupling expansion, the SPT-improved
approximations appear to converge even for rather large values of the coupling
constant.Comment: 30 pages, 10 figure
Leibniz, Acosmism, and Incompossibility
Leibniz claims that God acts in the best possible way, and that this includes creating exactly one world. But worlds are aggregates, and aggregates have a low degree of reality or metaphysical perfection, perhaps none at all. This is Leibniz’s tendency toward acosmism, or the view that there this no such thing as creation-as-a-whole. Many interpreters reconcile Leibniz’s acosmist tendency with the high value of worlds by proposing that God sums the value of each substance created, so that the best world is just the world with the most substances. I call this way of determining the value of a world the Additive Theory of Value (ATV), and argue that it leads to the current and insoluble form of the problem of incompossibility. To avoid the problem, I read “possible worlds” in “God chooses the best of all possible worlds” as referring to God’s ideas of worlds. These ideas, though built up from essences, are themselves unities and so well suited to be the value bearers that Leibniz’s theodicy requires. They have their own value, thanks to their unity, and that unity is not preserved when more essences are added
6DOF Testing of the SLS Inertial Navigation Unit
The Navigation System on the NASA Space Launch System (SLS) Block 1 vehicle performs initial alignment of the Inertial Navigation System (INS) navigation frame through gyrocompass alignment (GCA). In lieu of direct testing of GCA accuracy in support of requirement verification, the SLS Navigation Team proposed and conducted an engineering test to, among other things, validate the GCA performance and overall behavior of the SLS INS model through comparison with test data. This paper will detail dynamic hardware testing of the SLS INS, conducted by the SLS Navigation Team at Marshall Space Flight Center's 6DOF Table Facility, in support of GCA performance characterization and INS model validation. A 6-DOF motion platform was used to produce 6DOF pad twist and sway dynamics while a simulated SLS flight computer communicated with the INS. Tests conducted include an evaluation of GCA algorithm robustness to increasingly dynamic pad environments, an examination of GCA algorithm stability and accuracy over long durations, and a long-duration static test to gather enough data for Allan Variance analysis. Test setup, execution, and data analysis will be discussed, including analysis performed in support of SLS INS model validation
Ferromagnetic redshift of the optical gap in GdN
We report measurements of the optical gap in a GdN film at temperatures from
300 to 6K, covering both the paramagnetic and ferromagnetic phases. The gap is
1.31eV in the paramagnetic phase and red-shifts to 0.9eV in the spin-split
bands below the Curie temperature. The paramagnetic gap is larger than was
suggested by very early experiments, and has permitted us to refine a
(LSDA+U)-computed band structure. The band structure was computed in the full
translation symmetry of the ferromagnetic ground state, assigning the
paramagnetic-state gap as the average of the majority- and minority-spin gaps
in the ferromagnetic state. That procedure has been further tested by a band
structure in a 32-atom supercell with randomly-oriented spins. After fitting
only the paramagnetic gap the refined band structure then reproduces our
measured gaps in both phases by direct transitions at the X point.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Non-Abelian plasma instabilities: SU(3) vs. SU(2)
We present the first 3+1 dimensional simulations of non-Abelian plasma
instabilities in gauge-covariant Boltzmann-Vlasov equations for the QCD gauge
group SU(3) as well as for SU(4) and SU(5). The real-time evolution of
instabilities for a plasma with stationary momentum-space anisotropy is studied
using a hard-loop effective theory that is discretized in the velocities of
hard particles. We find that the numerically less expensive calculations using
the group SU(2) essentially reproduce the nonperturbative dynamics of
non-Abelian plasma instabilities with higher rank gauge groups provided the
mass parameters of the corresponding hard-loop effective theories are the same.
In particular we find very similar spectra for the turbulent cascade that forms
in the strong-field regime, which is associated with an approximately linear
growth of energy in collective fields. The magnitude of the linear growth
however turns out to increase with the number of colors.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures; v2: minor changes; accepted for publication in
Phys. Rev.
Mass Expansions of Screened Perturbation Theory
The thermodynamics of massless phi^4-theory is studied within screened
perturbation theory (SPT). In this method the perturbative expansion is
reorganized by adding and subtracting a mass term in the Lagrangian. We
analytically calculate the pressure and entropy to three-loop order and the
screening mass to two-loop order, expanding in powers of m/T. The truncated
m/T-expansion results are compared with numerical SPT results for the pressure,
entropy and screening mass which are accurate to all orders in m/T. It is shown
that the m/T-expansion converges quickly and provides an accurate description
of the thermodynamic functions for large values of the coupling constant.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figure
Association of prenatal perchlorate, thiocyanate, and nitrate exposure with neonatal size and gestational age
BACKGROUND: Perchlorate and similar anions compete with iodine for uptake into the thyroid by the sodium iodide symporter (NIS). This may restrict fetal growth via impaired thyroid hormone production. METHODS: We collected urine samples from 107 pregnant women and used linear regression to estimate differences in newborn size and gestational age associated with increases in perchlorate, thiocyanate, nitrate, and perchlorate equivalence concentrations (PEC; measure of total NIS inhibitor exposure). RESULTS: NIS inhibitor concentrations were not associated with newborn weight, length, or gestational age. Each 2.62ng/mug creatinine increase in perchlorate was associated with smaller head circumference (0.32cm; 95% CI: -0.66, 0.01), but each 3.38ng/mug increase in PEC was associated with larger head circumference (0.48cm; -0.01, 0.97). CONCLUSIONS: These anions may have effects on fetal development (e.g. neurocognitive) that are not reflected in gross measures. Future research should focus on other abnormalities in neonates exposed to NIS inhibitors
The Massive Thermal Basketball Diagram
The "basketball diagram" is a three-loop vacuum diagram for a scalar field
theory that cannot be expressed in terms of one-loop diagrams. We calculate
this diagram for a massive scalar field at nonzero temperature, reducing it to
expressions involving three-dimensional integrals that can be easily evaluated
numerically. We use this result to calculate the free energy for a massive
scalar field with a phi^4 interaction to three-loop order.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figure
The Equation of State for Dense QCD and Quark Stars
We calculate the equation of state for degenerate quark matter to leading
order in hard-dense-loop (HDL) perturbation theory. We solve the
Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkov equations to obtain the mass-radius relation for
dense quark stars. Both the perturbative QCD and the HDL equations of state
have a large variation with respect to the renormalization scale for quark
chemical potential below 1 GeV which leads to large theoretical uncertainties
in the quark star mass-radius relation.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figure
Lines on projective varieties and applications
The first part of this note contains a review of basic properties of the
variety of lines contained in an embedded projective variety and passing
through a general point. In particular we provide a detailed proof that for
varieties defined by quadratic equations the base locus of the projective
second fundamental form at a general point coincides, as a scheme, with the
variety of lines. The second part concerns the problem of extending embedded
projective manifolds, using the geometry of the variety of lines. Some
applications to the case of homogeneous manifolds are included.Comment: 15 pages. One example removed; one remark and some references added;
typos correcte
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