17,360 research outputs found
Observe matter falling into a black hole
It has been well known that in the point of view of a distant observer, all
in-falling matter to a black hole (BH) will be eventually stalled and "frozen"
just outside the event horizon of the BH, although an in-falling observer will
see the matter falling straight through the event horizon. Thus in this "frozen
star" scenario, as distant observers, we could never observe matter falling
into a BH, neither could we see any "real" BH other than primordial ones, since
all other BHs are believed to be formed by matter falling towards singularity.
Here we first obtain the exact solution for a pressureless mass shell around a
pre-existing BH. The metrics inside and interior to the shell are all different
from the Schwarzschild metric of the enclosed mass. The metric interior to the
shell can be transformed to the Schwarzschild metric for a slower clock which
is dependent of the location and mass of the shell. Another result is that
there does not exist a singularity nor event horizon in the shell. Therefore
the "frozen star" scenario is incorrect. We also show that for all practical
astrophysical settings the in-falling time recorded by an external observer is
sufficiently short that future astrophysical instruments may be able to follow
the whole process of matter falling into BHs. The distant observer could not
distinguish between a "real" BH and a "frozen star", until two such objects
merge together. It has been proposed that electromagnetic waves will be
produced when two "frozen stars" merge together, but not true when two "real"
bare BHs merge together. However gravitational waves will be produced in both
cases. Thus our solution is testable by future high sensitivity astronomical
observations.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures. Proceeding of the conference "Astrophysics of
Compact Objects", 1-7 July, Huangshan, China. Abridged abstrac
A simple proof of exponential decay in the two dimensional percolation model
Kesten showed the exponential decay of percolation probability in the
subcritical phase for the two-dimensional percolation model. This result
implies his celebrated computation that for bond percolation in the
square lattice, and site percolation in the triangular lattice, respectively.
In this paper, we present a simpler proof for Kesten's theorem.Comment: 9 pages and one figur
Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Service Life Design for Infrastructure (SLD4)
SLD4 is a conference on Service Life Design for Infrastructures which is jointly organised by
Delft University and Tongji University as part of the RILEM week 2018 in Delft, The Netherlands.
The conference builds on the success of the previous three events on this topic held in Shanghai
(2006), Delft (2010) and Zhuhai (2014). Service Life Design for Infrastructure is a very
broad topic involving aspects starting from the material properties and behaviour, via structural
performance, serviceability and durability to integral design and asset management. All
related topics from experimental research to modelling and from codes and standards to applications
are welcomed to the conference.
The conference consist of 3 key-note papers and 132 regular papers presented over 3 days.
Parallel to the SLD4 Conference a symposium on Concrete Modelling (CONMOD2018) and
a workshop honouring Professor Klaas van Breugel were organised with topics that are related
to Service Life Design.
In total more than 350 participants took part in the events organised during the RILEM week
2018
Population Density-based Hospital Recommendation with Mobile LBS Big Data
The difficulty of getting medical treatment is one of major livelihood issues
in China. Since patients lack prior knowledge about the spatial distribution
and the capacity of hospitals, some hospitals have abnormally high or sporadic
population densities. This paper presents a new model for estimating the
spatiotemporal population density in each hospital based on location-based
service (LBS) big data, which would be beneficial to guiding and dispersing
outpatients. To improve the estimation accuracy, several approaches are
proposed to denoise the LBS data and classify people by detecting their various
behaviors. In addition, a long short-term memory (LSTM) based deep learning is
presented to predict the trend of population density. By using Baidu
large-scale LBS logs database, we apply the proposed model to 113 hospitals in
Beijing, P. R. China, and constructed an online hospital recommendation system
which can provide users with a hospital rank list basing the real-time
population density information and the hospitals' basic information such as
hospitals' levels and their distances. We also mine several interesting
patterns from these LBS logs by using our proposed system
Atomically phase-matched second-harmonic generation in a 2D crystal.
Second-harmonic generation (SHG) has found extensive applications from hand-held laser pointers to spectroscopic and microscopic techniques. Recently, some cleavable van der Waals (vdW) crystals have shown SHG arising from a single atomic layer, where the SH light elucidated important information such as the grain boundaries and electronic structure in these ultra-thin materials. However, despite the inversion asymmetry of the single layer, the typical crystal stacking restores inversion symmetry for even numbers of layers leading to an oscillatory SH response, drastically reducing the applicability of vdW crystals such as molybdenum disulfide (MoS2). Here, we probe the SHG generated from the noncentrosymmetric 3R crystal phase of MoS2. We experimentally observed quadratic dependence of second-harmonic intensity on layer number as a result of atomically phase-matched nonlinear dipoles in layers of the 3R crystal that constructively interfere. By studying the layer evolution of the A and B excitonic transitions in 3R-MoS2 using SHG spectroscopy, we also found distinct electronic structure differences arising from the crystal structure and the dramatic effect of symmetry and layer stacking on the nonlinear properties of these atomic crystals. The constructive nature of the SHG in this 2D crystal provides a platform to reliably develop atomically flat and controllably thin nonlinear media
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