869 research outputs found
Cosmic strings and Natural Inflation
In the present work we discuss cosmic strings in natural inflation. Our
analysis is based entirely on the CMB quadrupole temperature anisotropy and on
the existing upper bound on the cosmic string tension. Our results show that
the allowed range for both parameters of the inflationary model is very
different from the range obtained recently if cosmic strings are formed at the
same time with inflation, while if strings are formed after inflation we find
that the parameters of the inflationary model are similar to the ones obtained
recently.Comment: 12 pages, 0 tables, 4 figures, accepted for publication in JHE
CMBPol Mission Concept Study: Foreground Science Knowledge and Prospects
We report on our knowledge of Galactic foregrounds, as well as on how a CMB
satellite mission aiming at detecting a primordial B-mode signal (CMBPol) will
contribute to improving it. We review the observational and analysis techniques
used to constrain the structure of the Galactic magnetic field, whose presence
is responsible for the polarization of Galactic emissions. Although our current
understanding of the magnetized interstellar medium is somewhat limited,
dramatic improvements in our knowledge of its properties are expected by the
time CMBPol flies. Thanks to high resolution and high sensitivity instruments
observing the whole sky at frequencies between 30 GHz and 850 GHz, CMBPol will
not only improve this picture by observing the synchrotron emission from our
galaxy, but also help constrain dust models. Polarized emission from
interstellar dust indeed dominates over any other signal in CMBPol's highest
frequency channels. Observations at these wavelengths, combined with
ground-based studies of starlight polarization, will therefore enable us to
improve our understanding of dust properties and of the mechanism(s)
responsible for the alignment of dust grains with the Galactic magnetic field.
CMBPol will also shed new light on observations that are presently not well
understood. Morphological studies of anomalous dust and synchrotron emissions
will indeed constrain their natures and properties, while searching for
fluctuations in the emission from heliospheric dust will test our understanding
of the circumheliospheric interstellar medium. Finally, acquiring more
information on the properties of extra-Galactic sources will be necessary in
order to maximize the cosmological constraints extracted from CMBPol's
observations of CMB lensing. (abridged)Comment: 43 pages, 7 figures, 2 table
Small-Angle CMB Temperature Anisotropies Induced by Cosmic Strings
We use Nambu-Goto numerical simulations to compute the cosmic microwave
background (CMB) temperature anisotropies induced at arcminute angular scales
by a network of cosmic strings in a Friedmann-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker (FLRW)
expanding universe. We generate 84 statistically independent maps on a 7.2
degree field of view, which we use to derive basic statistical estimators such
as the one-point distribution and two-point correlation functions. At high
multipoles, the mean angular power spectrum of string-induced CMB temperature
anisotropies can be described by a power law slowly decaying as \ell^{-p}, with
p=0.889 (+0.001,-0.090) (including only systematic errors). Such a behavior
suggests that a nonvanishing string contribution to the overall CMB
anisotropies may become the dominant source of fluctuations at small angular
scales. We therefore discuss how well the temperature gradient magnitude
operator can trace strings in the context of a typical arcminute
diffraction-limited experiment. Including both the thermal and nonlinear
kinetic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effects, the Ostriker-Vishniac effect, and the
currently favored adiabatic primary anisotropies, we find that, on such a map,
strings should be ``eye visible,'' with at least of order ten distinctive
string features observable on a 7.2 degree gradient map, for tensions U down to
GU \simeq 2 x 10^{-7} (in Planck units). This suggests that, with upcoming
experiments such as the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT), optimal
non-Gaussian, string-devoted statistical estimators applied to small-angle CMB
temperature or gradient maps may put stringent constraints on a possible cosmic
string contribution to the CMB anisotropies.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures. v2: matches published version, minor
clarifications added, typo in Eq. (8) fixed, results unchange
Role of a Pediatric Cardiologist in the COVID-19 Pandemic
© 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature. Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has affected patients across all age groups, with a wide range of illness severity from asymptomatic carriers to severe multi-organ dysfunction and death. Although early reports have shown that younger age groups experience less severe disease than older adults, our understanding of this phenomenon is in continuous evolution. Recently, a severe multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C), with active or recent COVID-19 infection, has been increasingly reported. Children with MIS-C may demonstrate signs and symptoms of Kawasaki disease, but also have some distinct differences. These children have more frequent and severe gastrointestinal symptoms and are more likely to present with a shock-like presentation. Moreover, they often present with cardiovascular involvement including myocardial dysfunction, valvulitis, and coronary artery dilation or aneurysms. Here, we present a review of the literature and summary of our current understanding of cardiovascular involvement in children with COVID-19 or MIS-C and identifying the role of a pediatric cardiologist in caring for these patients
Collective magnetism at multiferroic vortex domain walls
Topological defects have been playgrounds for many emergent phenomena in
complex matter such as superfluids, liquid crystals, and early universe.
Recently, vortex-like topological defects with six interlocked structural
antiphase and ferroelectric domains merging into a vortex core were revealed in
multiferroic hexagonal manganites. Numerous vortices are found to form an
intriguing self-organized network. Thus, it is imperative to find out the
magnetic nature of these vortices. Using cryogenic magnetic force microscopy,
we discovered unprecedented alternating net moments at domain walls around
vortices that can correlate over the entire vortex network in hexagonal ErMnO3
The collective nature of domain wall magnetism originates from the
uncompensated Er3+ moments and the correlated organization of the vortex
network. Furthermore, our proposed model indicates a fascinating phenomenon of
field-controllable spin chirality. Our results demonstrate a new route to
achieving magnetoelectric coupling at domain walls in single-phase
multiferroics, which may be harnessed for nanoscale multifunctional devices.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figure
Cosmic Strings and Superstrings
Cosmic strings are predicted by many field-theory models, and may have been
formed at a symmetry-breaking transition early in the history of the universe,
such as that associated with grand unification. They could have important
cosmological effects. Scenarios suggested by fundamental string theory or
M-theory, in particular the popular idea of brane inflation, also strongly
suggest the appearance of similar structures. Here we review the reasons for
postulating the existence of cosmic strings or superstrings, the various
possible ways in which they might be detected observationally, and the special
features that might discriminate between ordinary cosmic strings and
superstrings.Comment: Minor errors corrected and some references added, 34 pages, 6 figure
The Impact of the Spectral Response of an Achromatic Half-Wave Plate on the Measurement of the Cosmic Microwave Background Polarization
We study the impact of the spectral dependence of the linear polarization
rotation induced by an achromatic half-wave plate on measurements of cosmic
microwave background polarization in the presence of astrophysical foregrounds.
We focus on the systematic effects induced on the measurement of inflationary
gravitational waves by uncertainties in the polarization and spectral index of
Galactic dust. We find that for the experimental configuration and noise levels
of the balloon-borne EBEX experiment, which has three frequency bands centered
at 150, 250, and 410 GHz, a crude dust subtraction process mitigates systematic
effects to below detectable levels for 10% polarized dust and tensor to scalar
ratio of as low as r = 0.01. We also study the impact of uncertainties in the
spectral response of the instrument. With a top-hat model of the spectral
response for each band, characterized by band-center and band-width, and with
the same crude dust subtraction process, we find that these parameters need to
be determined to within 1 and 0.8 GHz at 150 GHz; 9 and 2.0 GHz at 250 GHz; and
20 and 14 GHz at 410 GHz, respectively. The approach presented in this paper is
applicable to other optical elements that exhibit polarization rotation as a
function of frequency.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication by Astrophysical Journa
A Note on Noncommutative Brane Inflation
In this paper, we investigate the noncommutative KKLMMT D3/anti-D3 brane
inflation scenario in detail. Incorporation of the brane inflation scenario and
the noncommutative inflation scenario can nicely explain the large negative
running of the spectral index as indicated by WMAP three-year data and can
significantly release the fine-tuning for the parameter . Using the WMAP
three year results (blue-tilted spectral index with large negative running), we
explore the parameter space and give the constraints and predictions for the
inflationary parameters and cosmological observables in this scenario. We show
that this scenario predicts a quite large tensor/scalar ratio and what is more,
a too large cosmic string tension (assuming that the string coupling is
in its likely range from 0.1 to 1) to be compatible with the present
observational bound. A more detailed analysis reveals that this model has some
inconsistencies according to the fit to WMAP three year results.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures; accepted for publication in JCA
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