1,993 research outputs found
Relic density and CMB constraints on dark matter annihilation with Sommerfeld enhancement
We calculate how the relic density of dark matter particles is altered when
their annihilation is enhanced by the Sommerfeld mechanism due to a Yukawa
interaction between the annihilating particles. Maintaining a dark matter
abundance consistent with current observational bounds requires the
normalization of the s-wave annihilation cross section to be decreased compared
to a model without enhancement. The level of suppression depends on the
specific parameters of the particle model, with the kinetic decoupling
temperature having the most effect. We find that the cross section can be
reduced by as much as an order of magnitude for extreme cases. We also compute
the mu-type distortion of the CMB energy spectrum caused by energy injection
from such Sommerfeld-enhanced annihilation. Our results indicate that in the
vicinity of resonances, associated with bound states, distortions can be large
enough to be excluded by the upper limit |mu|<9.0x10^(-5) found by the
COBE/FIRAS experiment.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review D.
Corrections to eqs. 9,10,14 and 16. Figures updated accordingly. No major
changes to previous results. Website with online tools for Sommerfeld-related
calculations can be found at
http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~vogelsma/sommerfeld
Surprising Evolution of the Parsec-scale Faraday Rotation Gradients in the Jet of the BL Lac Object B1803+784
Several multi-frequency polarization studies have shown the presence of
systematic Faraday Rotation gradients across the parsec-scale jets of Active
Galactic Nuclei (AGN), taken to be due to the systematic variation of the
line-of-sight component of a helical magnetic (B) field across the jet. Other
studies have confirmed the presence and sense of these gradients in several
sources, thus providing evidence that these gradients persist over time and
over large distances from the core. However, we find surprising new evidence
for a reversal in the direction of the Faraday Rotation gradient across the jet
of B1803+784, for which multi-frequency polarization observations are available
at four epochs. At our three epochs and the epoch of Zavala & Taylor (2003), we
observe transverse Rotation Measure (RM) gradients across the jet, consistent
with the presence of a helical magnetic field wrapped around the jet. However,
we also observe a "flip" in the direction of the gradient between June 2000 and
August 2002. Although the origins of this phenomena are not entirely clear,
possibly explanations include (i) the sense of rotation of the central
supermassive black hole and accretion disc has remained the same, but the
dominant magnetic pole facing the Earth has changed from North to South; (ii) a
change in the direction of the azimuthal B field component as a result of
torsional oscillations of the jet; and (iii) a change in the relative
contributions to the observed rotation measures of the "inner" and "outer"
helical fields in a magnetic-tower model. Although we cannot entirely rule out
the possibility that the observed changes in the RM distribution are associated
instead with changes in the thermal-electron distribution in the vicinity of
the jet, we argue that this explanation is unlikely.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
BOIS: Bayesian Optimization of Interconnected Systems
Bayesian optimization (BO) has proven to be an effective paradigm for the
global optimization of expensive-to-sample systems. One of the main advantages
of BO is its use of Gaussian processes (GPs) to characterize model uncertainty
which can be leveraged to guide the learning and search process. However, BO
typically treats systems as black-boxes and this limits the ability to exploit
structural knowledge (e.g., physics and sparse interconnections). Composite
functions of the form , wherein GP modeling is shifted from the
performance function to an intermediate function , offer an avenue for
exploiting structural knowledge. However, the use of composite functions in a
BO framework is complicated by the need to generate a probability density for
from the Gaussian density of calculated by the GP (e.g., when is
nonlinear it is not possible to obtain a closed-form expression). Previous work
has handled this issue using sampling techniques; these are easy to implement
and flexible but are computationally intensive. In this work, we introduce a
new paradigm which allows for the efficient use of composite functions in BO;
this uses adaptive linearizations of to obtain closed-form expressions for
the statistical moments of the composite function. We show that this simple
approach (which we call BOIS) enables the exploitation of structural knowledge,
such as that arising in interconnected systems as well as systems that embed
multiple GP models and combinations of physics and GP models. Using a chemical
process optimization case study, we benchmark the effectiveness of BOIS against
standard BO and sampling approaches. Our results indicate that BOIS achieves
performance gains and accurately captures the statistics of composite
functions.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Antispasmodic effects and action mechanism of essential oil of Chrysactinia mexicana A. Gray on rabbit ileum
The Chrysactinia mexicana A. Gray (C. mexicana) plant is used in folk medicine to treat fever and rheumatism; it is used as a diuretic, antispasmodic; and it is used for its aphrodisiac properties. This study investigates the effects of the essential oil of C. mexicana (EOCM) on the contractility of rabbit ileum and the mechanisms of action involved. Muscle contractility studies in vitro in an organ bath to evaluate the response to EOCM were performed in the rabbit ileum. EOCM (1–100 µg·mL-1) reduced the amplitude and area under the curve of spontaneous contractions of the ileum. The contractions induced by carbachol 1 µM, potassium chloride (KCl) 60 mM or Bay K8644 1 µM were reduced by EOCM (30 µg·mL-1). Apamin 1 µM and charybdotoxin 0.01 µM decreased the inhibition induced by EOCM. The d-cAMP 1 µM decreased the inhibition induced by EOCM. l-NNA 10 µM, Rp-8-Br-PET-cGMPS 1 µM, d, l-propargylglycine 2 mM, or aminooxyacetic acid hemihydrochloride 2 mM did not modify the EOCM effect. In conclusion, EOCM induces an antispasmodic effect and could be used in the treatment of intestinal spasms or diarrhea processes. This effect would be mediated by Ca2+, Ca2+-activated K+ channels and cAMP
New Paradigms for Exploiting Parallel Experiments in Bayesian Optimization
Bayesian optimization (BO) is one of the most effective methods for
closed-loop experimental design and black-box optimization. However, a key
limitation of BO is that it is an inherently sequential algorithm (one
experiment is proposed per round) and thus cannot directly exploit
high-throughput (parallel) experiments. Diverse modifications to the BO
framework have been proposed in the literature to enable exploitation of
parallel experiments but such approaches are limited in the degree of
parallelization that they can achieve and can lead to redundant experiments
(thus wasting resources and potentially compromising performance). In this
work, we present new parallel BO paradigms that exploit the structure of the
system to partition the design space. Specifically, we propose an approach that
partitions the design space by following the level sets of the performance
function and an approach that exploits partially-separable structures of the
performance function found. We conduct extensive numerical experiments using a
reactor case study to benchmark the effectiveness of these approaches against a
variety of state-of-the-art parallel algorithms reported in the literature. Our
computational results show that our approaches significantly reduce the
required search time and increase the probability of finding a global (rather
than local) solution.Comment: 32 pages, 16 figures, 7 algorithm
The "Arauco State" against the spanish conquest: Ritual and socio-political structure of the araucano-mapuches in the Nahuelbuta valleys during the 16th and 17th centuries
Este artículo presenta evidencias arqueológicas y etnohistóricas que muestran la complejidad de la organización sociopolítica de
las poblaciones que habitaban los valles que entrecruzan y circundan la cordillera de Nahuelbuta durante el siglo XVI y principios del siglo XVII, particularmente en el valle de Purén-Lumaco. La hipótesis que se sostiene es que la estructura sociopolítica, la densidad demográfica y las características económicas y culturales de las poblaciones de dicha área presentan una mayor complejidad y dimensiones superiores a lo que comúnmente se admite en la literatura arqueológica, histórica y antropológica. Las formas de organización sociopolíticas y los modos de asentamiento de las poblaciones araucano-mapuches de los siglos XVI y principios del
siglo XVII tenderían a aproximarse, desde esta perspectiva, a modelos complejos característicos del mundo andino
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