482 research outputs found
Towards a formal description of the collapse approach to the inflationary origin of the seeds of cosmic structure
Inflation plays a central role in our current understanding of the universe.
According to the standard viewpoint, the homogeneous and isotropic mode of the
inflaton field drove an early phase of nearly exponential expansion of the
universe, while the quantum fluctuations (uncertainties) of the other modes
gave rise to the seeds of cosmic structure. However, if we accept that the
accelerated expansion led the universe into an essentially homogeneous and
isotropic space-time, with the state of all the matter fields in their vacuum
(except for the zero mode of the inflaton field), we can not escape the
conclusion that the state of the universe as a whole would remain always
homogeneous and isotropic. It was recently proposed in [A. Perez, H. Sahlmann
and D. Sudarsky, "On the quantum origin of the seeds of cosmic structure,"
Class. Quant. Grav. 23, 2317-2354 (2006)] that a collapse (representing physics
beyond the established paradigm, and presumably associated with a
quantum-gravity effect a la Penrose) of the state function of the inflaton
field might be the missing element, and thus would be responsible for the
emergence of the primordial inhomogeneities. Here we will discuss a formalism
that relies strongly on quantum field theory on curved space-times, and within
which we can implement a detailed description of such a process. The picture
that emerges clarifies many aspects of the problem, and is conceptually quite
transparent. Nonetheless, we will find that the results lead us to argue that
the resulting picture is not fully compatible with a purely geometric
description of space-time.Comment: 53 pages, no figures. Revision to match the published versio
The shape of SN 1993J re-analysed
SN 1993J is one of the best-studied Type IIb supernovae. Spectropolarimetric data analyses were published over two decades ago at a time when the field of supernova spectropolarimetry was in its infancy. Here, we present a new analysis of the spectropolarimetric data of SN 1993J and an improved estimate of its interstellar polarization (ISP) as well as a critical review of ISP removal techniques employed in the field. The polarization of SN 1993J is found to show significant alignment on the q − u plane, suggesting the presence of a dominant axis and therefore of continuum polarization. We also see strong line polarization features, including H β, He I λ5876, H α, He I λ6678, He I λ7065, and high velocity (HV) components of He I λ5876 and H α. SN 1993J is therefore the second example of a stripped-envelope supernova, alongside iPTF13bvn, with prominent HV helium polarization features, and the first to show a likely HV H α contribution. Overall, we determine that the observed features can be interpreted as the superposition of anisotropically distributed line forming regions over ellipsoidal ejecta. We cannot exclude the possibility of an off-axis energy source within the ejecta. These data demonstrate the rich structures that are inaccessible if solely considering the flux spectra but can be probed by spectropolarimetric observations. In future studies, the new ISP corrected data can be used in conjunction with 3D radiative transfer models to better map the geometry of the ejecta of SN 1993J
A perspective on the landscape problem
I discuss the historical roots of the landscape problem and propose criteria
for its successful resolution. This provides a perspective to evaluate the
possibility to solve it in several of the speculative cosmological scenarios
under study including eternal inflation, cosmological natural selection and
cyclic cosmologies.Comment: Invited contribution for a special issue of Foundations of Physics
titled: Forty Years Of String Theory: Reflecting On the Foundations. 31
pages, no figure
Louse (Insecta : Phthiraptera) mitochondrial 12S rRNA secondary structure is highly variable
Lice are ectoparasitic insects hosted by birds and mammals. Mitochondrial 12S rRNA sequences obtained from lice show considerable length variation and are very difficult to align. We show that the louse 12S rRNA domain III secondary structure displays considerable variation compared to other insects, in both the shape and number of stems and loops. Phylogenetic trees constructed from tree edit distances between louse 12S rRNA structures do not closely resemble trees constructed from sequence data, suggesting that at least some of this structural variation has arisen independently in different louse lineages. Taken together with previous work on mitochondrial gene order and elevated rates of substitution in louse mitochondrial sequences, the structural variation in louse 12S rRNA confirms the highly distinctive nature of molecular evolution in these insects
Two-loop corrections to the decay rate of parapositronium
Order corrections to the decay rate of parapositronium are
calculated. A QED scattering calculation of the amplitude for electron-positron
annihilation into two photons at threshold is combined with the technique of
effective field theory to determine an NRQED Hamiltonian, which is then used in
a bound state calculation to determine the decay rate. Our result for the
two-loop correction is in units of times the
lowest order rate. This is consistent with but more precise than the result
of a previous calculation.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figure
Structure of SPH (Self-Incompatibility Protein Homologue) Proteins: a Widespread Family of Small, Highly Stable, Secreted Proteins
SPH proteins are a large family of small, disulphide-bonded, secreted proteins, initially found in the self-incompatibility response in the field poppy , but now known to be widely distributed in plants, many containing multiple members of this protein family. Using the Origami strain of , we expressed one member of this family, SPH15 from , as a folded thioredoxin-fusion protein and purified it from the cytosol. The fusion protein was cleaved and characterised by analytical ultracentrifugation, circular dichroism, and NMR spectroscopy. This showed that SPH15 is monomeric and temperature stable, with a beta-sandwich structure. The four strands in each sheet have the same topology as the unrelated proteins; human transthyretin, bacterial TSSJ, and pneumolysin, with no discernable sequence similarity. The NMR-derived structure was compared with a model, made using a new deep learning algorithm based on co-evolution/correlated mutations, DeepCDPred, validating the method. The DeepCDPred method and homology modelling to SPH15 were then both used to derive models of the 3D structure of the three known PrsS proteins from , which have only 15-18% sequence homology to SPH15. The DeepCDPred method gave models with lower Discreet Optimised Protein Energy (DOPE) scores than the homology models. Three loops at one end of the poppy structures are postulated to interact with their respective pollen receptors to instigate programmed cell death in pollen tubes. [Abstract copyright: ©2019 The Author(s).
From the Big Bang Theory to the Theory of a Stationary Universe
We consider chaotic inflation in the theories with the effective potentials
phi^n and e^{\alpha\phi}. In such theories inflationary domains containing
sufficiently large and homogeneous scalar field \phi permanently produce new
inflationary domains of a similar type. We show that under certain conditions
this process of the self-reproduction of the Universe can be described by a
stationary distribution of probability, which means that the fraction of the
physical volume of the Universe in a state with given properties (with given
values of fields, with a given density of matter, etc.) does not depend on
time, both at the stage of inflation and after it. This represents a strong
deviation of inflationary cosmology from the standard Big Bang paradigm. We
compare our approach with other approaches to quantum cosmology, and illustrate
some of the general conclusions mentioned above with the results of a computer
simulation of stochastic processes in the inflationary Universe.Comment: No changes to the file, but original figures are included. They
substantially help to understand this paper, as well as eternal inflation in
general, and what is now called the "multiverse" and the "string theory
landscape." High quality figures can be found at
http://www.stanford.edu/~alinde/LLMbigfigs
Scale-free static and dynamical correlations in melts of monodisperse and Flory-distributed homopolymers: A review of recent bond-fluctuation model studies
It has been assumed until very recently that all long-range correlations are
screened in three-dimensional melts of linear homopolymers on distances beyond
the correlation length characterizing the decay of the density
fluctuations. Summarizing simulation results obtained by means of a variant of
the bond-fluctuation model with finite monomer excluded volume interactions and
topology violating local and global Monte Carlo moves, we show that due to an
interplay of the chain connectivity and the incompressibility constraint, both
static and dynamical correlations arise on distances . These
correlations are scale-free and, surprisingly, do not depend explicitly on the
compressibility of the solution. Both monodisperse and (essentially)
Flory-distributed equilibrium polymers are considered.Comment: 60 pages, 49 figure
Gravitational radiation from gamma-ray bursts as observational opportunities for LIGO and VIRGO
Gamma-ray bursts are believed to originate in core-collapse of massive stars.
This produces an active nucleus containing a rapidly rotating Kerr black hole
surrounded by a uniformly magnetized torus represented by two counter-oriented
current rings. We quantify black hole spin-interactions with the torus and
charged particles along open magnetic flux-tubes subtended by the event
horizon. A major output of Egw=4e53 erg is radiated in gravitational waves of
frequency fgw=500 Hz by a quadrupole mass-moment in the torus. Consistent with
GRB-SNe, we find (i) Ts=90s (tens of s, Kouveliotou et al. 1993), (ii)
aspherical SNe of kinetic energy Esn=2e51 erg (2e51 erg in SN1998bw, Hoeflich
et al. 1999) and (iii) GRB-energies Egamma=2e50 erg (3e50erg in Frail et al.
2001). GRB-SNe occur perhaps about once a year within D=100Mpc. Correlating
LIGO/Virgo detectors enables searches for nearby events and their spectral
closure density 6e-9 around 250Hz in the stochastic background radiation in
gravitational waves. At current sensitivity, LIGO-Hanford may place an upper
bound around 150MSolar in GRB030329. Detection of Egw thus provides a method
for identifying Kerr black holes by calorimetry.Comment: to appear in PRD, 49
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