8,959 research outputs found
Phase conversion dissipation in multicomponent compact stars
We propose a mechanism for the damping of density oscillations in
multicomponent compact stars. The mechanism is the periodic conversion between
different phases, i.e., the movement of the interface between them, induced by
pressure oscillations in the star. The damping grows nonlinearly with the
amplitude of the oscillation. We study in detail the case of r-modes in a
hybrid star with a sharp interface, and we find that this mechanism is powerful
enough to saturate the r-mode at very low saturation amplitude, of order
, and is therefore likely to be the dominant r-mode saturation
mechanism in hybrid stars with a sharp interface.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures. Typos in Eq. (15), Eqs. (64)-(65) and Eqs.
(B4)-(B5) correcte
Signatures for quark matter from multi-messenger observations
We review the prospects for detecting quark matter in neutron star cores. We
survey the proposed signatures and emphasize the importance of data from
neutron star mergers, which provide access to dynamical properties that operate
on short timescales that are not probed by other neutron star observables.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures; refs. added, accepted for publicatio
Efficient Downlink Channel Reconstruction for FDD Multi-Antenna Systems
In this paper, we propose an efficient downlink channel reconstruction scheme
for a frequency-division-duplex multi-antenna system by utilizing uplink
channel state information combined with limited feedback. Based on the spatial
reciprocity in a wireless channel, the downlink channel is reconstructed by
using frequency-independent parameters. We first estimate the gains, delays,
and angles during uplink sounding. The gains are then refined through downlink
training and sent back to the base station (BS). With limited overhead, the
refinement can substantially improve the accuracy of the downlink channel
reconstruction. The BS can then reconstruct the downlink channel with the
uplink-estimated delays and angles and the downlink-refined gains. We also
introduce and extend the Newtonized orthogonal matching pursuit (NOMP)
algorithm to detect the delays and gains in a multi-antenna multi-subcarrier
condition. The results of our analysis show that the extended NOMP algorithm
achieves high estimation accuracy. Simulations and over-the-air tests are
performed to assess the performance of the efficient downlink channel
reconstruction scheme. The results show that the reconstructed channel is close
to the practical channel and that the accuracy is enhanced when the number of
BS antennas increases, thereby highlighting that the promising application of
the proposed scheme in large-scale antenna array systems
Pair Production of Doubly-Charged Scalars: Neutrino Mass Constraints and Signals at the LHC
We study the pair production of doubly charged Higgs bosons at the Large
Hadron Collider (LHC), assuming the doubly charged Higgs to be part of an
SU(2)_L triplet which generates Majorana masses for left-handed neutrinos. Such
pair-production has the advantage that it is not constrained by the triplet
vacuum expectation value, which tends to make the single production rate rather
small. We point out that, in addition to the Drell-Yan (DY) production
mechanism, two-photon processes also contribute to H++H++ production at a level
comparable to the QCD corrections to the DY channel. Decays of the doubly
charged Higgs into both the l+l+ and W+W+ modes are studied in detail to
optimize the signal observation over the backgrounds. Doubly charged scalars
should be observable at the LHC with 300 fb^-1 integrated luminosity in the ll
channel upto the mass range of 1 TeV even with a branching fraction of about 60
%, and in the WW channel upto a mass of 700 GeV. Such a doubly charged Higgs,
if it is a member of a triplet generating neutrino masses,cannot be long-lived
on the scale of collider detectors although it might lead to a displaced
secondary vertex during its decay if it is lighter than about 250 GeV.Comment: revtex4, 23 pages, 14 figures, version published in Physical Review
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