6,691 research outputs found

    Cosmic axion thermalization

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    Axions differ from the other cold dark matter candidates in that they form a degenerate Bose gas. It is shown that their huge quantum degeneracy and large correlation length cause cold dark matter axions to thermalize through gravitational self-interactions when the photon temperature reaches approximately 500 eV. When they thermalize, the axions form a Bose-Einstein condensate. Their thermalization occurs in a regime, herein called the `condensed regime', where the Boltzmann equation is not valid because the energy dispersion of the particles is smaller than their interaction rate. We derive analytical expressions for the thermalization rate of particles in the condensed regime, and check the validity of these expressions by numerical simulation of a toy model. We revisit axion cosmology in light of axion Bose-Einstein condensation. It is shown that axions are indistinguishable from ordinary cold dark matter on all scales of observational interest, except when they thermalize or rethermalize. The rethermalization of axions that are about to fall in a galactic potential well causes them to acquire net overall rotation as they go to the lowest energy state consistent with the total angular momentum they acquired by tidal torquing. This phenomenon explains the occurrence of caustic rings of dark matter in galactic halos. We find that photons may reach thermal contact with axions and investigate the implications of this possibility for the measurements of cosmological parameters.Comment: 38 pages, 1 figur

    Further investigation on chaos of real digital filters

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    This Letter displays, via the numerical simulation of a real digital filter, that a finite-state machine may behave in a near-chaotic way even when its corresponding infinite-state machine does not exhibit chaotic behavior

    Observing two dark accelerators around the Galactic Centre with Fermi Large Area Telescope

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    We report the results from a detailed γ−\gamma-ray investigation in the field of two "dark accelerators", HESS J1745-303 and HESS J1741-302, with 6.96.9 years of data obtained by the Fermi Large Area Telescope. For HESS J1745-303, we found that its MeV-GeV emission is mainly originated from the "Region A" of the TeV feature. Its γ−\gamma-ray spectrum can be modeled with a single power-law with a photon index of Γ∌2.5\Gamma\sim2.5 from few hundreds MeV to TeV. Moreover, an elongated feature, which extends from "Region A" toward northwest for ∌1.3∘\sim1.3^{\circ}, is discovered for the first time. The orientation of this feature is similar to that of a large scale atomic/molecular gas distribution. For HESS J1741-302, our analysis does not yield any MeV-GeV counterpart for this unidentified TeV source. On the other hand, we have detected a new point source, Fermi J1740.1-3013, serendipitously. Its spectrum is apparently curved which resembles that of a γ−\gamma-ray pulsar. This makes it possibly associated with PSR B1737-20 or PSR J1739-3023.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Diseases of the nERVous system: retrotransposon activity in neurodegenerative disease

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    Transposable Elements (TEs) are mobile genetic elements whose sequences constitute nearly half of the human genome. Each TE copy can be present in hundreds to thousands of locations within the genome, complicating the genetic and genomic studies of these highly repetitive sequences. The recent development of better tools for evaluating TE derived sequences in genomic studies has enabled an increasing appreciation for the contribution of TEs to human development and disease. While some TEs have contributed novel and beneficial host functions, this review will summarize the evidence for detrimental TE activity in neurodegenerative disorders. Much of the evidence for pathogenicity implicates endogenous retroviruses (ERVs), a subset of TEs that entered the genome by retroviral infections of germline cells in our evolutionary ancestors and have since been passed down as a substantial fraction of the human genome. Human specific ERVs (HERVs) represent some of the youngest ERVs in the genome, and thus are presumed to retain greater function and resultant pathogenic potential

    Persistence in Cluster--Cluster Aggregation

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    Persistence is considered in diffusion--limited cluster--cluster aggregation, in one dimension and when the diffusion coefficient of a cluster depends on its size ss as D(s)∌sÎłD(s) \sim s^\gamma. The empty and filled site persistences are defined as the probabilities, that a site has been either empty or covered by a cluster all the time whereas the cluster persistence gives the probability of a cluster to remain intact. The filled site one is nonuniversal. The empty site and cluster persistences are found to be universal, as supported by analytical arguments and simulations. The empty site case decays algebraically with the exponent ΞE=2/(2−γ)\theta_E = 2/(2 - \gamma). The cluster persistence is related to the small ss behavior of the cluster size distribution and behaves also algebraically for 0≀γ<20 \le \gamma < 2 while for Îł<0\gamma < 0 the behavior is stretched exponential. In the scaling limit t→∞t \to \infty and K(t)→∞K(t) \to \infty with t/K(t)t/K(t) fixed the distribution of intervals of size kk between persistent regions scales as n(k;t)=K−2f(k/K)n(k;t) = K^{-2} f(k/K), where K(t)∌tΞK(t) \sim t^\theta is the average interval size and f(y)=e−yf(y) = e^{-y}. For finite tt the scaling is poor for kâ‰Ștzk \ll t^z, due to the insufficient separation of the two length scales: the distances between clusters, tzt^z, and that between persistent regions, tΞt^\theta. For the size distribution of persistent regions the time and size dependences separate, the latter being independent of the diffusion exponent Îł\gamma but depending on the initial cluster size distribution.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, RevTeX, submitted to Phys. Rev.

    Decision analysis applied to the fishery of the sea snail Concholepas concholepas from central northern coast of Chile

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    Formal decision analysis was applied to the management of loco (Concholepas concholepas, Fam. Muricidae) in Chile, 29-35 degrees S. Four interested groups were considered &quot;Fishers&quot;, &quot;Scientists&quot;, &quot;Buyers&quot; and the &quot;State&quot;, along with three fishing effort levels and four subobjectives. The method was found to encourage the emergence of a consensus (here: halving of effort), and is recommended for use in other fisheries

    A sandpile model with tokamak-like enhanced confinement phenomenology

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    Confinement phenomenology characteristic of magnetically confined plasmas emerges naturally from a simple sandpile algorithm when the parameter controlling redistribution scalelength is varied. Close analogues are found for enhanced confinement, edge pedestals, and edge localised modes (ELMs), and for the qualitative correlations between them. These results suggest that tokamak observations of avalanching transport are deeply linked to the existence of enhanced confinement and ELMs.Comment: Manuscript is revtex (latex) 1 file, 7 postscript figures Revised version is final version accepted for publication in PRL Revisions are mino

    Persistence with Partial Survival

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    We introduce a parameter pp, called partial survival, in the persistence of stochastic processes and show that for smooth processes the persistence exponent Ξ(p)\theta(p) changes continuously with pp, Ξ(0)\theta(0) being the usual persistence exponent. We compute Ξ(p)\theta(p) exactly for a one-dimensional deterministic coarsening model, and approximately for the diffusion equation. Finally we develop an exact, systematic series expansion for Ξ(p)\theta(p), in powers of Ï”=1−p\epsilon=1-p, for a general Gaussian process with finite density of zero crossings.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, references added, to appear in Phys.Rev.Let
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