276 research outputs found
LISA, binary stars, and the mass of the graviton
We extend and improve earlier estimates of the ability of the proposed LISA
(Laser Interferometer Space Antenna) gravitational wave detector to place upper
bounds on the graviton mass, m_g, by comparing the arrival times of
gravitational and electromagnetic signals from binary star systems. We show
that the best possible limit on m_g obtainable this way is ~ 50 times better
than the current limit set by Solar System measurements. Among currently known,
well-understood binaries, 4U1820-30 is the best for this purpose; LISA
observations of 4U1820-30 should yield a limit ~ 3-4 times better than the
present Solar System bound. AM CVn-type binaries offer the prospect of
improving the limit by a factor of 10, if such systems can be better understood
by the time of the LISA mission. We briefly discuss the likelihood that radio
and optical searches during the next decade will yield binaries that more
closely approach the best possible case.Comment: ReVTeX 4, 6 pages, 1 figure, submitted to Phys Rev
Testing Alternative Theories of Gravity using LISA
We investigate the possible bounds which could be placed on alternative
theories of gravity using gravitational wave detection from inspiralling
compact binaries with the proposed LISA space interferometer. Specifically, we
estimate lower bounds on the coupling parameter \omega of scalar-tensor
theories of the Brans-Dicke type and on the Compton wavelength of the graviton
\lambda_g in hypothetical massive graviton theories. In these theories,
modifications of the gravitational radiation damping formulae or of the
propagation of the waves translate into a change in the phase evolution of the
observed gravitational waveform. We obtain the bounds through the technique of
matched filtering, employing the LISA Sensitivity Curve Generator (SCG),
available online. For a neutron star inspiralling into a 10^3 M_sun black hole
in the Virgo Cluster, in a two-year integration, we find a lower bound \omega >
3 * 10^5. For lower-mass black holes, the bound could be as large as 2 * 10^6.
The bound is independent of LISA arm length, but is inversely proportional to
the LISA position noise error. Lower bounds on the graviton Compton wavelength
ranging from 10^15 km to 5 * 10^16 km can be obtained from one-year
observations of massive binary black hole inspirals at cosmological distances
(3 Gpc), for masses ranging from 10^4 to 10^7 M_sun. For the highest-mass
systems (10^7 M_sun), the bound is proportional to (LISA arm length)^{1/2} and
to (LISA acceleration noise)^{-1/2}. For the others, the bound is independent
of these parameters because of the dominance of white-dwarf confusion noise in
the relevant part of the frequency spectrum. These bounds improve and extend
earlier work which used analytic formulae for the noise curves.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Classical & Quantum Gravit
Evaluating Communication Tools and Increasing Fruit and Vegetable Consumption in Vermont Head Start Classrooms
Introduction:
We designed a program for four Head Start classrooms that aimed to: 1) Provide classrooms a tool that would facilitate communication with families about nutrition, 2) Educate families about the MyMeal tool, and 3) Increase fruit and vegetable consumption by providing families with fresh fruits and vegetables Fruit and vegetables are important components of a healthy diet, and sufficient consumption helps reduce the risk of developing cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes and obesity. Eating behaviors during childhood are highly parentally influenced and function as the foundation for future eating patterns. Studies have shown that the extent to which fruits and vegetables are present and accessible in the home correlates with the amount of fruit and vegetables eaten by children.https://scholarworks.uvm.edu/comphp_gallery/1210/thumbnail.jp
Dynamical orbital effects of General Relativity on the satellite-to-satellite range and range-rate in the GRACE mission: a sensitivity analysis
We numerically investigate the impact of GTR on the orbital part of the
satellite-to-satellite range \rho and range-rate \dot\rho of the twin GRACE A/B
spacecrafts through their dynamical equations of motion integrated in an
Earth-centered frame over a time span \Delta t=1 d. Instead, the GTR effects
connected with the propagation of the electromagnetic waves linking the
spacecrafts are neglected. The present-day accuracies in measuring the GRACE
biased range and range-rate are \sigma_\rho\sim 1-10 \mum, \sigma_\dot\rho\sim
0.1-1 \mum s^-1; studies for a follow-on of such a mission points toward a
range-rate accuracy of the order of \sigma_\dot\rho\sim 1 nm s^-1 or better.
The GTR range and range-rate effects turn out to be \Delta\rho=80 \mum and
\Delta\dot\rho=0.012 \mum s^-1 (Lense-Thirring), and \Delta\rho=6000 \mum and
\Delta\dot\rho=10 \mum s^-1 (Schwarzschild). We also compute the dynamical
range and range-rate perturbations caused by the first six zonal harmonic
coefficients J_L, L=2,3,4,5,6,7 of the classical multipolar expansion of the
terrestrial gravitational potential in order to evaluate their aliasing impact
on the relativistic effects. Conversely, we also quantitatively, and
preliminarily, assess the possible a-priori \virg{imprinting} of GTR itself,
not solved-for in all the GRACE-based Earth's gravity models produced so far,
on the estimated values of the low degree zonals of the geopotential. The
present sensitivity analysis can also be extended, in principle, to different
orbital configurations in order to design a suitable dedicated mission able to
accurately measure the relativistic effects considered.Comment: LaTex, 24 pages, 5 figures, 9 tables. Accepted for publication in
Advances in Space Research (ASR
Ambiguous Tests of General Relativity on Cosmological Scales
There are a number of approaches to testing General Relativity (GR) on linear
scales using parameterized frameworks for modifying cosmological perturbation
theory. It is sometimes assumed that the details of any given parameterization
are unimportant if one uses it as a diagnostic for deviations from GR. In this
brief report we argue that this is not necessarily so. First we show that
adopting alternative combinations of modifications to the field equations
significantly changes the constraints that one obtains. In addition, we show
that using a parameterization with insufficient freedom significantly tightens
the apparent theoretical constraints. Fundamentally we argue that it is almost
never appropriate to consider modifications to the perturbed Einstein equations
as being constraints on the effective gravitational constant, for example, in
the same sense that solar system constraints are. The only consistent
modifications are either those that grant near-total freedom, as in
decomposition methods, or ones which map directly to a particular part of
theory space
Using binary stars to bound the mass of the graviton
Interacting white dwarf binary star systems, including helium cataclysmic
variable (HeCV) systems, are expected to be strong sources of gravitational
radiation, and should be detectable by proposed space-based laser
interferometer gravitational wave observatories such as LISA. Several HeCV star
systems are presently known and can be studied optically, which will allow
electromagnetic and gravitational wave observations to be correlated.
Comparisons of the phases of a gravitational wave signal and the orbital light
curve from an interacting binary white dwarf star system can be used to bound
the mass of the graviton. Observations of typical HeCV systems by LISA could
potentially yield an upper bound on the inverse mass of the graviton as strong
as km (
eV), more than two orders of magnitude better than present solar system derived
bounds.Comment: 21 pages plus 4 figures; ReVTe
The Iowa Homemaker vol.34, no.5
What’s new, Carolyn Shehan, page 4
Christmas, Jane Brintlinger, page 7
Quick to make, Marilyn Mound, page 8
Belle Lowe goes to market, Jean Redman, page 9
Gift guide, Mary Vandecar, page 10
Holiday tables, Gwen Olson, page 12
Your electives have a future, Mary Vandecar, page 14
Is there a Santa Claus?, Mary Anne Larson, page 16
Felt, Carol Krebill, page 18
Heard at Frisco, Dorothy Will, page 19
Chafing dish hot, Kay Scholten, page 20
Trends, Donna Mumford, page 2
Constraints from CMB in the intermediate Brans-Dicke inflation
We study an intermediate inflationary stage in a Jordan-Brans-Dicke theory.
In this scenario we analyze the quantum fluctuations corresponding to adiabatic
and isocurvature modes. Our model is compared to that described by using the
intermediate model in Einstein general relativity theory. We assess the status
of this model in light of the seven-year WMAP data.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure
Understanding the faint red galaxy population using large-scale clustering measurements from SDSS DR7
We use data from the SDSS to investigate the evolution of the large-scale
galaxy bias as a function of luminosity for red galaxies. We carefully consider
correlation functions of galaxies selected from both photometric and
spectroscopic data, and cross-correlations between them, to obtain multiple
measurements of the large-scale bias. We find, for our most robust analyses, a
strong increase in bias with luminosity for the most luminous galaxies, an
intermediate regime where bias does not evolve strongly over a range of two
magnitudes in galaxy luminosity, and no evidence for an upturn in bias for
fainter red galaxies. Previous work has found an increase in bias to low
luminosities that has been widely interpreted as being caused by a strong
preference for red dwarf galaxies to be satellites in the most massive halos.
We can recover such an upturn in bias to faint luminosities if we push our
measurements to small scales, and include galaxy clustering measurements along
the line-of-sight, where we expect non-linear effects to be the strongest. The
results that we expect to be most robust suggest that the low luminosity
population of red galaxies is not dominated by satellite galaxies occupying the
most massive haloes.Comment: Matches version accepted by MNRA
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