8,983 research outputs found
The phenomenology of beyond Horndeski gravity
We study the phenomenology of the beyond Horndeski class of scalar-tensor
theories of gravity, which on cosmological scales can be characterised in terms
of one extra function of time, , as well as the usual four
Horndeski set of free functions. We show that can be directly
related to the the damping of the matter power spectrum on both large and small
scales. We also find that the temperature power spectrum of the cosmic
microwave background (CMB) is enhanced at low multipoles and the lensing
potential is decreased, as a function of . We find constraints
on of order using measurements of the
temperature and polarisation of the CMB, as well as the lensing potential
derived from it, combined with large scale structure data. We find that
redshift space distortion measurements can play a significant role in
constraining these theories. Finally, we comment on the recent constraints from
the observation of an electromagnetic counterpart to a gravitational wave
signal; we find that these constraints reduce the number of free parameters of
the model but do not significantly change the constraints on the remaining
parameters.Comment: 33 pages; 10 figures; 4 tables; Version as accepted for publication
in JCA
Neutrino oscillations
In the last decades, a very important breakthrough has been brought in the
elementary particle physics by the discovery of the phenomenon of the neutrino
oscillations, which has shown neutrino properties beyond the Standard Model.
But a full understanding of the various aspects of the neutrino oscillations is
far to be achieved. In this paper the theoretical background of the neutrino
oscillation phenomenon is described, referring in particular to the
paradigmatic models. Then the various techniques and detectors which studied
neutrinos from different sources are discussed, starting from the pioneering
ones up to the detectors still in operation and to those in preparation. The
physics results are finally presented adopting the same research path which has
crossed this long saga. The problems not yet fixed in this field are discussed,
together with the perspectives of their solutions in the near future
A confirmation of agreement of different approaches for scalar gauge-invariant metric perturbations during inflation
We revisit an extension of the well-known formalism for gauge-invariant
scalar metric fluctuations, to study the spectrums for both, the inflaton and
gauge invariant (scalar) metric fluctuations in the framework of a single field
inflationary model where the quasi-exponential expansion is driven by an
inflation which is minimally coupled to gravity. The proposal here examined is
valid also for fluctuations with large amplitude, but for cosmological scales,
where vector and tensor perturbations can be neglected and the fluid is
irrotacional.Comment: Version accepted in EPJC with new title. 11 pages, no figure
Battery choice and management for New Generation Electric Vehicles
Different types of electric vehicles (EVs) have been recently designed with the aim of solving pollution problems caused by the emission of gasoline-powered engines. Environmental problems promote the adoption of new-generation electric vehicles for urban transportation. As it is well known, one of the weakest points of electric vehicles is the battery system. Vehicle autonomy and, therefore, accurate detection of battery state of charge (SoC) together with battery expected life, i.e., battery state of health, are among the major drawbacks that prevent the introduction of electric vehicles in the consumer market. The electric scooter may provide the most feasible opportunity among EVs. They may be a replacement product for the primary-use vehicle, especially in Europe and Asia, provided that drive performance, safety, and cost issues are similar to actual engine scooters. The battery system choice is a crucial item, and thanks to an increasing emphasis on vehicle range and performance, the Li-ion battery could become a viable candidate. This paper deals with the design of a battery pack based on Li-ion technology for a prototype electric scooter with high performance and autonomy. The adopted battery system is composed of a suitable number of cells series connected, featuring a high voltage level. Therefore, cell equalization and monitoring need to be provided. Due to manufacturing asymmetries, charge and discharge cycles lead to cell unbalancing, reducing battery capacity and, depending on cell type, causing safety troubles or strongly limiting the storage capacity of the full pack. No solution is available on the market at a cheap price, because of the required voltage level and performance, therefore, a dedicated battery management system was designed, that also includes a battery SoC monitoring. The proposed solution features a high capability of energy storing in braking conditions, charge equalization, overvoltage and undervoltage protection and, obviously, SoC information in order to optimize autonomy instead of performance or vice-versa
Geo-neutrinos
We review a new interdisciplinary field between Geology and Physics: the
study of the Earth's geo-neutrino flux. We describe competing models for the
composition of the Earth, present geological insights into the make up of the
continental and oceanic crust, those parts of the Earth that concentrate Th and
U, the heat producing elements, and provide details of the regional settings in
the continents and oceans where operating and planned detectors are sited.
Details are presented for the only two operating detectors that are capable of
measuring the Earth's geo-neutrinos flux: Borexino and KamLAND; results
achieved to date are presented, along with their impacts on geophysical and
geochemical models of the Earth. Finally, future planned experiments are
highlighted
hi_class: Horndeski in the Cosmic Linear Anisotropy Solving System
We present the public version of hi_class (www.hiclass-code.net), an
extension of the Boltzmann code CLASS to a broad ensemble of modifications to
general relativity. In particular, hi_class can calculate predictions for
models based on Horndeski's theory, which is the most general scalar-tensor
theory described by second-order equations of motion and encompasses any
perfect-fluid dark energy, quintessence, Brans-Dicke, and covariant
Galileon models. hi_class has been thoroughly tested and can be readily used to
understand the impact of alternative theories of gravity on linear structure
formation as well as for cosmological parameter extraction.Comment: 17 pages + appendices, 4 figures, code available on
https://github.com/miguelzuma/hi_class_publi
A general theory of linear cosmological perturbations: stability conditions, the quasistatic limit and dynamics
We analyse cosmological perturbations around a homogeneous and isotropic
background for scalar-tensor, vector-tensor and bimetric theories of gravity.
Building on previous results, we propose a unified view of the effective
parameters of all these theories. Based on this structure, we explore the
viable space of parameters for each family of models by imposing the absence of
ghosts and gradient instabilities. We then focus on the quasistatic regime and
confirm that all these theories can be approximated by the phenomenological
two-parameter model described by an effective Newton's constant and the
gravitational slip. Within the quasistatic regime we pinpoint signatures which
can distinguish between the broad classes of models (scalar-tensor,
vector-tensor or bimetric). Finally, we present the equations of motion for our
unified approach in such a way that they can be implemented in
Einstein-Boltzmann solvers
Chemical composition of stellar populations in Omega Centauri
We derive abundances of Fe, Na, O, and s-elements from GIRAFFE@VLT spectra
for more than 200 red giant stars in the Milky Way satellite Omega Centauri.
Our preliminary results are that: (i) we confirm that Omega Centauri exibiths
large star-to-star metallicity variations ( 1.4 dex); (ii) the
metallicity distribution reveals the presence of at least five stellar
populations with different [Fe/H]; (iii) a clear Na-O anticorrelation is
clearly observed for the metal-poor and metal-intermediate populations while
apparently the anticorrelation disappears for the most metal-rich populations.
Interestingly the Na level grows with iron.Comment: 2 pages, 2 figures. To appear in the proceedings of IAU Symp. 268
"Light elements in the Universe" (C. Charbonnel, M. Tosi, F. Primas, C.
Chiappini, eds., Cambridge Univ. Press
Ground-based astrometry with wide field imagers. V. Application to near-infrared detectors: HAWK-I@VLT/ESO
High-precision astrometry requires accurate point-spread function modeling
and accurate geometric-distortion corrections. This paper demonstrates that it
is possible to achieve both requirements with data collected at the high acuity
wide-field K-band imager (HAWK-I), a wide-field imager installed at the Nasmyth
focus of UT4/VLT ESO 8m telescope. Our final astrometric precision reaches ~3
mas per coordinate for a well-exposed star in a single image with a systematic
error less than 0.1 mas. We constructed calibrated astro-photometric catalogs
and atlases of seven fields: the Baade's Window, NGC 6656, NGC 6121, NGC 6822,
NGC 6388, NGC 104, and the James Webb Space Telescope calibration field in the
Large Magellanic Cloud. We make these catalogs and images electronically
available to the community. Furthermore, as a demonstration of the efficacy of
our approach, we combined archival material taken with the optical wide-field
imager at the MPI/ESO 2.2m with HAWK-I observations. We showed that we are able
to achieve an excellent separation between cluster members and field objects
for NGC 6656 and NGC 6121 with a time base-line of about 8 years. Using both
HST and HAWK-I data, we also study the radial distribution of the SGB
populations in NGC 6656 and conclude that the radial trend is flat within our
uncertainty. We also provide membership probabilities for most of the stars in
NGC 6656 and NGC 6121 catalogs and estimate membership for the published
variable stars in these two fields.Comment: 36 pages (included appendix), 13 tables, 35 figures (26 in low
resolution), accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics. Online
materials will be soon available on CDS. Meanwhile, online materials can be
requested directly to the first autho
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