13,639 research outputs found
Quantum cosmology of quadratic f(R) theories with a FRW metric
We study the quantum cosmology of a quadratic theory with a FRW
metric, via one of its equivalent Horndeski type actions, where the dynamics of
the scalar field is induced. The classical equations of motion and the
Weeler-deWitt equation, in their exact versions, are solved numerically. From
the choice of a free parameter in the action follow two cases, inflation + exit
and inflation alone. The numerical solution of the Wheeler-DeWitt equation
depends strongly on the boundary conditions, which can be chosen so that the
resulting wave function of the universe seems to be normalizable and consistent
with hermitian operators.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Scattering approach to fidelity decay in closed systems and parametric level correlations
This paper is based on recent work which provided an exact analytical
description of scattering fidelity experiments with a microwave cavity under
the variation of an antenna coupling [K\"ober et al., Phys. Rev. E 82, 036207
(2010)]. It is shown that this description can also be used to predict the
decay of the fidelity amplitude for arbitrary Hermitian perturbations of a
closed system. Two applications are presented: First, the known result for
global perturbations is re-derived, and second, the exact analytical expression
for the perturbation due to a moving S-wave scatterer is worked out. The latter
is compared to measured data from microwave experiments, which have been
reported some time ago. Finally, we generalize an important relation between
fidelity decay and parametric level correlations to arbitrary perturbations.Comment: 20 pages, 2 figures, research article, (v2: stylistic changes, ref.
added
Gravitational Lorentz Violations from M-Theory
In an attempt to bridge the gap between M-theory and braneworld
phenomenology, we present various gravitational Lorentz-violating braneworlds
which arise from p-brane systems. Lorentz invariance is still preserved locally
on the braneworld. For certain p-brane intersections, the massless graviton is
quasi-localized. This also results from an M5-brane in a C-field. In the case
of a p-brane perturbed from extremality, the quasi-localized graviton is
massive. For a braneworld arising from global AdS_5, gravitons travel faster
when further in the bulk, thereby apparently traversing distances faster than
light.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figure, LaTeX, references added, minor corrections and
addition
Creating agent platforms to host agent-mediated services that share resources
After a period where the Internet was exclusively filled with content,
the present
efforts are moving towards services, which handle the raw information to
create
value from it. Therefore labors to create a wide collection of
agent-based services
are being perfomed in several projects, such as Agentcities does.
In this work we present an architecture for agent platforms named
a-Buildings. The
aim of the proposed architecture is to ease the creation, installation,
search and
management of agent-mediated services and the share of resources among
services.
To do so the a-Buildings architecture creates a new level of abstraction
on top of
the standard FIPA agent platform specification.
Basically, an a-Building is a service-oriented platform which offers a
set of
low level services to the agents it hosts. We define low level services
as those
required services that are neccesary to create more complex high level
composed
services.Postprint (published version
Dependence of the Star Formation Efficiency on the Parameters of Molecular Cloud Formation Simulations
We investigate the response of the star formation efficiency (SFE) to the
main parameters of simulations of molecular cloud formation by the collision of
warm diffuse medium (WNM) cylindrical streams, neglecting stellar feedback and
magnetic fields. The parameters we vary are the Mach number of the inflow
velocity of the streams, Msinf, the rms Mach number of the initial background
turbulence in the WNM, and the total mass contained in the colliding gas
streams, Minf. Because the SFE is a function of time, we define two estimators
for it, the "absolute" SFE, measured at t = 25 Myr into the simulation's
evolution (sfeabs), and the "relative" SFE, measured 5 Myr after the onset of
star formation in each simulation (sferel). The latter is close to the "star
formation rate per free-fall time" for gas at n = 100 cm^-3. We find that both
estimators decrease with increasing Minf, although by no more than a factor of
2 as Msinf increases from 1.25 to 3.5. Increasing levels of background
turbulence similarly reduce the SFE, because the turbulence disrupts the
coherence of the colliding streams, fragmenting the cloud, and producing
small-scale clumps scattered through the numerical box, which have low SFEs.
Finally, the SFE is very sensitive to the mass of the inflows, with sferel
decreasing from ~0.4 to ~0.04 as the the virial parameter in the colliding
streams increases from ~0.15 to ~1.5. This trend is in partial agreement with
the prediction by Krumholz & McKee (2005), since the latter lies within the
same range as the observed efficiencies, but with a significantly shallower
slope. We conclude that the observed variability of the SFE is a highly
sensitive function of the parameters of the cloud formation process, and may be
the cause of significant scatter in observational determinations.Comment: 19 pages, submitted to MNRA
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