7,238 research outputs found
A solid-state crossbar switch for automatic analog-computer patching
Solid-state crossbar switch for automatic, analog computer patchin
Lower limit on the entropy of black holes as inferred from gravitational wave observations
Black hole (BH) thermodynamics was established by Bekenstein and Hawking, who
made abstract theoretical arguments about the second law of thermodynamics and
quantum theory in curved spacetime respectively. Testing these ideas
experimentally has, so far, been impractical because the putative flux of
Hawking radiation from astrophysical BHs is too small to be distinguished from
the rest of the hot environment. Here, it is proposed that the spectrum of
emitted gravitational waves (GWs) after the merger of two BHs, in particular
the spectrum of GW150914, can be used to infer a lower limit on the magnitude
of the entropy of the post-merger BH. This lower bound is potentially
significant as it could be of the same order as the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy.
To infer this limit, we first assume that the result of the merger is an
ultracompact object with an external geometry which is Schwarzschild or Kerr,
but with an outer surface which is capable of reflecting in-falling GWs rather
than fully absorbing them. If the absence of deviations from the predictions of
general relativity in detected GW signals will be verified, we will then obtain
a bound on the minimal redshift factor of GWs that emerge from the vicinity of
the object's surface. This lack of deviations would also mean that the remnant
of the merger has to have a strongly absorbing surface and must then be a BH
for all practical purposes. We conclude that a relationship between the minimal
redshift factor and the BH entropy, which was first proposed by 't Hooft, could
then be used to set a lower bound on the entropy of the post-merger BH.Comment: Corrected error in estimation of current bounds on the entropy.
Improved discussion of energy stored in echoes, V3 replaced to match
published version, clarifications and explanations adde
Direct observation of the mass renormalization in SrVO by angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy
We have performed an angle-resolved photoemission study of the
three-dimensional perovskite-type SrVO. Observed spectral weight
distribution of the coherent part in the momentum space shows cylindrical Fermi
surfaces consisting of the V 3 orbitals as predicted by
local-density-approximation (LDA) band-structure calculation. The observed
energy dispersion shows a moderately enhanced effective mass compared to the
LDA results, corresponding to the effective mass enhancement seen in the
thermodynamic properties. Contributions from the bulk and surface electronic
structures to the observed spectra are discussed based on model calculations.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Thermodynamic potential with correct asymptotics for PNJL model
An attempt is made to resolve certain incongruities within the Nambu -
Jona-Lasinio (NJL) and Polyakov loop extended NJL models (PNJL) which currently
are used to extract the thermodynamic characteristics of the quark-gluon
system. It is argued that the most attractive resolution of these incongruities
is the possibility to obtain the thermodynamic potential directly from the
corresponding extremum conditions (gap equations) by integrating them, an
integration constant being fixed in accordance with the Stefan-Boltzmann law.
The advantage of the approach is that the regulator is kept finite both in
divergent and finite valued integrals at finite temperature and chemical
potential. The Pauli-Villars regularization is used, although a standard 3D
sharp cutoff can be applied as well.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, extended version, title change
A dozen new galaxies caught in the act: Gas stripping and extended emission line regions in the Coma cluster
We present images of extended H-alpha clouds associated with 14 member
galaxies in the Coma cluster obtained from deep narrow band imaging
observations with Suprime-Cam at the Subaru Telescope. The parent galaxies of
the extended H-alpha clouds are distributed farther than 0.2 Mpc from the peak
of X-ray emission of the cluster. Most of the galaxies have colors bluer than
g-r approx 0.5 and they account for 57% of the blue (g-r<0.5) bright (r<17.8
mag) galaxies in the central region of the Coma cluster. They reside near the
red- and blue-shifted edges of the Coma cluster's radial velocity distribution.
These findings suggest that the most of the parent galaxies were recently
captured by the Coma cluster potential and are now infalling toward the cluster
center with their disk gas being stripped off and producing the observed
H-alpha clouds.Comment: 22 pages, 46 figures, AJ accepte
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