2,597 research outputs found
Constraints on the variability of quark masses from nuclear binding
Based on recent work on nuclear binding, we update and extend the anthropic
constraints on the light quark masses, with results that are more tightly
constrained than previously obtained. We find that heavy nuclei would fall
apart (because the attractive nuclear central potential becomes too weak) if
the sum of the light quark masses m_u+m_d would exceed their physical values by
64% (at 95% confidence level). We summarize the anthropic constraints that
follow from requiring the existence both of heavy atoms and of hydrogen. With
the additional assumption that the quark Yukawa couplings do not vary, these
constraints provide a remarkably tight anthropic window for the Higgs vacuum
expectation value: 0.39 < v/v_physical < 1.64.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figure
Wormholes as Black Hole Foils
We study to what extent wormholes can mimic the observational features of
black holes. It is surprisingly found that many features that could be thought
of as ``characteristic'' of a black hole (endowed with an event horizon) can be
closely mimicked by a globally static wormhole, having no event horizon. This
is the case for: the apparently irreversible accretion of matter down a hole,
no-hair properties, quasi-normal-mode ringing, and even the dissipative
properties of black hole horizons, such as a finite surface resistivity equal
to 377 Ohms. The only way to distinguish the two geometries on an
observationally reasonable time scale would be through the detection of
Hawking's radiation, which is, however, too weak to be of practical relevance
for astrophysical black holes. We point out the existence of an interesting
spectrum of quantum microstates trapped in the throat of a wormhole which could
be relevant for storing the information ``lost'' during a gravitational
collapse.Comment: 13 pages, no figures, Late
Accurate mass measurements of Ne, Na, Mg performed with the {\sc Mistral} spectrometer
The minuteness of the nuclear binding energy requires that mass measurements
be highly precise and accurate. Here we report on new measurements Mg
and Na performed with the {\sc Mistral} mass spectrometer at {\sc
Cern}'s {\sc Isolde} facility. Since mass measurements are prone to systematic
errors, considerable effort has been devoted to their evaluation and
elimination in order to achieve accuracy and not only precision. We have
therefore conducted a campaign of measurements for calibration and error
evaluation. As a result, we now have a satisfactory description of the {\sc
Mistral} calibration laws and error budget. We have applied our new
understanding to previous measurements of Ne, Na and
Mg for which re-evaluated values are reported.Comment: submitted to Nuclear Physics
EEG-engagement index and auditory alarm misperception: an inattentional deafness study in actual flight condition
The inability to detect auditory alarms is a critical issue in many do- mains such as aviation. An interesting prospect for flight safety is to understand the neural mechanisms underpinning auditory alarm misperception under actual flight condition. We conducted an experiment in which four pilots were to re- spond by button press when they heard an auditory alarm. The 64 channel Cognionics dry-wireless EEG system was used to measure brain activity in a 4 seat light aircraft. An instructor was present on all flights and in charge of initi- ating the various scenarios to induce two levels of task engagement (simple navigation task vs. complex maneuvering task). Our experiment revealed that inattentional deafness to single auditory alarms could take place as the pilots missed a mean number of 12.5 alarms occurring mostly during the complex maneuvering condition, when the EEG engagement index was high
Quantum effects in gravitational wave signals from cuspy superstrings
We study the gravitational emission, in Superstring Theory, from fundamental
strings exhibiting cusps. The classical computation of the gravitational
radiation signal from cuspy strings features strong bursts in the special null
directions associated to the cusps. We perform a quantum computation of the
gravitational radiation signal from a cuspy string, as measured in a
gravitational wave detector using matched filtering and located in the special
null direction associated to the cusp. We study the quantum statistics
(expectation value and variance) of the measured filtered signal and find that
it is very sharply peaked around the classical prediction. Ultimately, this
result follows from the fact that the detector is a low-pass filter which is
blind to the violent high-frequency quantum fluctuations of both the string
worldsheet, and the incoming gravitational field.Comment: 16 pages, no figur
Effective action approach to higher-order relativistic tidal interactions in binary systems and their effective one body description
The gravitational-wave signal from inspiralling neutron-star--neutron-star
(or black-hole--neutron-star) binaries will be influenced by tidal coupling in
the system. An important science goal in the gravitational-wave detection of
these systems is to obtain information about the equation of state of neutron
star matter via the measurement of the tidal polarizability parameters of
neutron stars. To extract this piece of information will require to have
accurate analytical descriptions of both the motion and the radiation of
tidally interacting binaries. We improve the analytical description of the late
inspiral dynamics by computing the next-to-next-to-leading order relativistic
correction to the tidal interaction energy. Our calculation is based on an
effective-action approach to tidal interactions, and on its transcription
within the effective-one-body formalism. We find that second-order relativistic
effects (quadratic in the relativistic gravitational potential ) significantly increase the effective tidal polarizability of
neutron stars by a distance-dependent amplification factor of the form where, say for an equal-mass binary,
(as previously known) and (as
determined here for the first time). We argue that higher-order relativistic
effects will lead to further amplification, and we suggest a Pad\'e-type way of
resumming them. We recommend to test our results by comparing
resolution-extrapolated numerical simulations of inspiralling-binary neutron
stars to their effective one body description.Comment: 29 pages, Physical Review D, to appea
Light deflection by gravitational waves from localized sources
We study the deflection of light (and the redshift, or integrated time delay)
caused by the time-dependent gravitational field generated by a localized
material source lying close to the line of sight. Our calculation explicitly
takes into account the full, near-zone, plus intermediate-zone, plus wave-zone,
retarded gravitational field. Contrary to several recent claims in the
literature, we find that the deflections due to both the wave-zone 1/r
gravitational wave and the intermediate-zone 1/r^2 retarded fields vanish
exactly. The leading total time-dependent deflection caused by a localized
material source, such as a binary system, is proven to be given by the
quasi-static, near-zone quadrupolar piece of the gravitational field, and
therefore to fall off as the inverse cube of the impact parameter.Comment: 12 pages, REVTeX 3.0, no figur
The wider context of the Lower Jurassic Toarcian oceanic anoxic event in Yorkshire coastal outcrops, UK
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in this record.The Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event (T-OAE, âŒ183 Ma) was characterized by enhanced carbon burial, a prominent negative carbon-isotope excursion (CIE) in marine carbonate and organic matter, and numerous geochemical anomalies. A precursor excursion has also been documented at the Pliensbachian/Toarcian boundary, but its possible causes are less constrained. The T-OAE is intensively studied in the Cleveland Basin, Yorkshire, UK, whose sedimentary deposits have been litho-, bio- and chemostratigraphically characterised. Here, we present new elemental data produced by hand-held X-ray fluorescence analysis to test the expression of redox-sensitive trace metals and detrital elements across the upper Pliensbachian to mid-Toarcian of the Cleveland Basin. Detrital elemental concentrations (Al, Si, Ti, Zr) are used as proxies for siliciclastic grain content and thus, sea-level change, which match previous sequence stratigraphic interpretations from the Cleveland Basin. The timescale of the event is debated, though our new elemental proxies of relative sea level change show evidence for a cyclicity of 350 cm that may be indicative of âŒ405 kyr eccentricity cycles in Yorkshire. Trends in total organic carbon and redox-sensitive elements (S, Fe, Mo, As) confirm scenarios of widespread ocean deoxygenation across the T-OAE. The correlation of comparable trends in Mo across the T-OAE in Yorkshire and the Paris Basin suggests a similar oceanic drawdown of this element accompanying widespread anoxia in the two basins. Data from Yorkshire point to a transgressive trend at the time of the Mo drawdown, which contradicts the âbasin restrictionâ model for the euxinic conditions that characterise the CIE interval.The Carlsberg Foundation (project 2011-01-0737 to CK) and the Danish Council for Independent Research-Natural Sciences (project 09-072715 to CK) are acknowledged for contributions to financing this project
A Loewner-based Approach for the Approximation of Engagement-related Neurophysiological Features
Currently, in order to increase both safety and performance of human-machine systems, researchers from various domains gather together to work towards the use of operators' mental state estimation in the systems control-loop. Mental state estimation is performed using neurophysiological data recorded, for instance, using electroencephalography (EEG). Features such as power spectral densities in specific frequency bands are extracted from these data and used as indices or metrics. Another interesting approach could be to identify the dynamic model of such features. Hence, this article discusses the potential use of tools derived from the linear algebra and control communities to perform an approximation of the neurophysiological features model that could be explored to monitor the engagement of an operator. The method provides a smooth interpolation of all the data points allowing to extract frequential features that reveal fluctuations in engagement with growing time-on-task
- âŠ