28,023 research outputs found
Quantum fluctuations of Cosmological Perturbations in Generalized Gravity
Recently, we presented a unified way of analysing classical cosmological
perturbation in generalized gravity theories. In this paper, we derive the
perturbation spectrums generated from quantum fluctuations again in unified
forms. We consider a situation where an accelerated expansion phase of the
early universe is realized in a particular generic phase of the generalized
gravity. We take the perturbative semiclassical approximation which treats the
perturbed parts of the metric and matter fields as quantum mechanical
operators. Our generic results include the conventional power-law and
exponential inflations in Einstein's gravity as special cases.Comment: 5 pages, revtex, no figure
Shrinkage Confidence Procedures
The possibility of improving on the usual multivariate normal confidence was
first discussed in Stein (1962). Using the ideas of shrinkage, through Bayesian
and empirical Bayesian arguments, domination results, both analytic and
numerical, have been obtained. Here we trace some of the developments in
confidence set estimation.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/10-STS319 the Statistical
Science (http://www.imstat.org/sts/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Doping and temperature-dependent optical properties of oxygen-reduced BaTiO3-d
We report on optical properties of reduced BaTiO3-d at different doping
levels including insulating and metallic samples. In all the samples, including
metallic one, we observe structural phase transitions from the changes in the
infrared-active phonon modes. Metallic ground state is confirmed by the
Drude-type lowfrequency optical reflectance. Similar to SrTiO3-d we find that
the midinfrared-absorption band in BaTiO3-d appears and grows with an increase
in the oxygen-vacancy concentration. Upon decrease in temperature from 300 K,
the midinfrared band shifts slightly to higher frequency and evolves into two
bands: the existing band and a new and smaller band at lower frequency. The
appearance of the new and smaller band seems to be correlated with the
structural phase transitionsComment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Minimax estimation with thresholding and its application to wavelet analysis
Many statistical practices involve choosing between a full model and reduced
models where some coefficients are reduced to zero. Data were used to select a
model with estimated coefficients. Is it possible to do so and still come up
with an estimator always better than the traditional estimator based on the
full model? The James-Stein estimator is such an estimator, having a property
called minimaxity. However, the estimator considers only one reduced model,
namely the origin. Hence it reduces no coefficient estimator to zero or every
coefficient estimator to zero. In many applications including wavelet analysis,
what should be more desirable is to reduce to zero only the estimators smaller
than a threshold, called thresholding in this paper. Is it possible to
construct this kind of estimators which are minimax? In this paper, we
construct such minimax estimators which perform thresholding. We apply our
recommended estimator to the wavelet analysis and show that it performs the
best among the well-known estimators aiming simultaneously at estimation and
model selection. Some of our estimators are also shown to be asymptotically
optimal.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/009053604000000977 in the
Annals of Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Spacetime Slices and Surfaces of Revolution
Under certain conditions, a -dimensional slice of a
spherically symmetric black hole spacetime can be equivariantly embedded in
-dimensional Minkowski space. The embedding depends on a real parameter
that corresponds physically to the surface gravity of the black hole
horizon.
Under conditions that turn out to be closely related, a real surface that
possesses rotational symmetry can be equivariantly embedded in 3-dimensional
Euclidean space. The embedding does not obviously depend on a parameter.
However, the Gaussian curvature is given by a simple formula: If the metric is
written , then
\K_g=-{1/2}\phi''(r).
This note shows that metrics and occur in dual pairs, and that
the embeddings described above are orthogonal facets of a single phenomenon. In
particular, the metrics and their respective embeddings differ by a Wick
rotation that preserves the ambient symmetry.
Consequently, the embedding of depends on a real parameter. The ambient
space is not smooth, and is inversely proportional to the cone angle
at the axis of rotation. Further, the Gaussian curvature of is given
by a simple formula that seems not to be widely known.Comment: 15 pages, added reference
Unified Analysis of Cosmological Perturbations in Generalized Gravity
In a class of generalized Einstein's gravity theories we derive the equations
and general asymptotic solutions describing the evolution of the perturbed
universe in unified forms. Our gravity theory considers general couplings
between the scalar field and the scalar curvature in the Lagrangian, thus
includes broad classes of generalized gravity theories resulting from recent
attempts for the unification. We analyze both the scalar-type mode and the
gravitational wave in analogous ways. For both modes the large scale evolutions
are characterized by the same conserved quantities which are valid in the
Einstein's gravity. This unified and simple treatment is possible due to our
proper choice of the gauges, or equivalently gauge invariant combinations.Comment: 4 pages, revtex, no figure
Relativistic Hydrodynamic Cosmological Perturbations
Relativistic cosmological perturbation analyses can be made based on several
different fundamental gauge conditions. In the pressureless limit the variables
in certain gauge conditions show the correct Newtonian behaviors. Considering
the general curvature () and the cosmological constant () in the
background medium, the perturbed density in the comoving gauge, and the
perturbed velocity and the perturbed potential in the zero-shear gauge show the
same behavior as the Newtonian ones in general scales. In the first part, we
elaborate these Newtonian correspondences. In the second part, using the
identified gauge-invariant variables with correct Newtonian correspondences, we
present the relativistic results with general pressures in the background and
perturbation. We present the general super-sound-horizon scale solutions of the
above mentioned variables valid for general , , and generally
evolving equation of state. We show that, for vanishing , the
super-sound-horizon scale evolution is characterised by a conserved variable
which is the perturbed three-space curvature in the comoving gauge. We also
present equations for the multi-component hydrodynamic situation and for the
rotation and gravitational wave.Comment: 16 pages, no figure, To appear in Gen. Rel. Gra
Cosmological perturbations in a gravity with quadratic order curvature couplings
We present a set of equations describing the evolution of the scalar-type
cosmological perturbation in a gravity with general quadratic order curvature
coupling terms. Equations are presented in a gauge ready form, thus are ready
to implement various temporal gauge conditions depending on the problems. The
Ricci-curvature square term leads to a fourth-order differential equation for
describing the spacetime fluctuations in a spatially homogeneous and isotropic
cosmological background.Comment: 5 pages, no figure, To appear in Phys. Rev.
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