4,294 research outputs found
Ultraviolet modified photons and anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background radiation
We discuss a minimal canonical modification of electrodynamics in order to
account for ultraviolet Lorentz violating effects. This modification creates a
birefringence that rotates the polarization planes from different directions.
Such effects might be detectable in the anisotropic polarization of the Cosmic
Microwave Background radiation.Comment: RevTeX, 4p
Behavioral Differences Between Two Recently Sympatric Paper Wasps, the Native \u3ci\u3ePolistes Fuscatus\u3c/i\u3e and the Invasive \u3ci\u3ePolistes Dominulus\u3c/i\u3e
Polistes dominulus (Christ), an old world paper wasp, was introduced into the eastern United States in the 1970s and has been rapidly spreading westward. Recently, it has displaced the native Polistes fuscatus (F.) in at least some areas of Michigan. In order to understand why P. dominulus has been so successful, several behavioral attributes were compared between P. dominulus and P. fuscatus at a Michigan field site that contained colonies of both species nest- ing semi-naturally in plywood nestboxes.
Preworker colonies of P. dominulus had a significantly greater tendency to store nectar (and had significantly higher proportions of cells with nectar) than preworker colonies of P. fuscatus. This finding may explain the higher survivorship of P. dominulus foundresses reported in a previous study. P. dominulus also had a significantly greater tendency to build vertical nests and had significantly more pedicels per comb and per cell than P. fuscatus. These findings suggest that compared to P. fuscatus, P. dominulus may have more flexibility in the positioning of its combs and, because of a possibly stronger attachment of the comb to a substrate, may be less susceptible to bird predation. The higher winter survivorship reported for P. fuscatus over P. dominulus in a previous study does not appear to be due to differences in the proportions of gynes stranded on their nests late in the fall. Finally, behavioral evidence from videography was consistent with previous reports that P. dominulus is not replacing P. fuscatus through direct agonistic interactions
On gauge invariant regularization of fermion currents
We compare Schwinger and complex powers methods to construct regularized
fermion currents. We show that although both of them are gauge invariant they
not always yield the same result.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur
Duality and bosonization in Schwinger-Keldysh formulation
We present a path-integral bosonization approach for systems out of
equilibrium based on a duality transformation of the original Dirac fermion
theory combined with the Schwinger-Keldysh time closed contour technique, to
handle the non-equilibrium situation. The duality approach to bosonization that
we present is valid for space-time dimensions leading for to
exact results. In this last case we present the bosonization rules for fermion
currents, calculate current-current correlation functions and establish the
connection between the fermionic and bosonic distribution functions in a
generic, nonequilibrium situation.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figur
An alternative well-posedness property and static spacetimes with naked singularities
In the first part of this paper, we show that the Cauchy problem for wave
propagation in some static spacetimes presenting a singular time-like boundary
is well posed, if we only demand the waves to have finite energy, although no
boundary condition is required. This feature does not come from essential
self-adjointness, which is false in these cases, but from a different
phenomenon that we call the alternative well-posedness property, whose origin
is due to the degeneracy of the metric components near the boundary.
Beyond these examples, in the second part, we characterize the type of
degeneracy which leads to this phenomenon.Comment: 34 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in Class. Quantum Gra
U(1) Noncommutative Gauge Fields and Magnetogenesis
The connection between the Lorentz invariance violation in the lagrangean
context and the quantum theory of noncommutative fields is established for the
U(1) gauge field. The modified Maxwell equations coincide with other
derivations obtained using different procedures. These modified equations are
interpreted as describing macroscopic ones in a polarized and magnetized
medium. A tiny magnetic field (seed) emerges as particular static solution that
gradually increases once the modified Maxwell equations are solved as a
self-consistent equations system.Comment: 4 page
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