3,755 research outputs found
Strong lensing optical depths in a \LambdaCDM universe
We investigate strong gravitational lensing in the concordance CDM
cosmology by carrying out ray-tracing along past light cones through the
Millennium Simulation, the largest simulation of cosmic structure formation
ever carried out. We extend previous ray-tracing methods in order to take full
advantage of the large volume and the excellent spatial and mass resolution of
the simulation. As a function of source redshift we evaluate the probability
that an image will be highly magnified, will be highly elongated or will be one
of a set of multiple images. We show that such strong lensing events can almost
always be traced to a single dominant lensing object and we study the mass and
redshift distribution of these primary lenses. We fit analytic models to the
simulated dark halos in order to study how our optical depth measurements are
affected by the limited resolution of the simulation and of the lensing planes
that we construct from it. We conclude that such effects lead us to
underestimate total strong-lensing cross sections by about 15 percent. This is
smaller than the effects expected from our neglect of the baryonic components
of galaxies. Finally we investigate whether strong lensing is enhanced by
material in front of or behind the primary lens. Although strong lensing
lines-of-sight are indeed biased towards higher than average mean densities,
this additional matter typically contributes only a few percent of the total
surface density.Comment: version accepted for publicatio
Sufficient conditions for convergence of the Sum-Product Algorithm
We derive novel conditions that guarantee convergence of the Sum-Product
algorithm (also known as Loopy Belief Propagation or simply Belief Propagation)
to a unique fixed point, irrespective of the initial messages. The
computational complexity of the conditions is polynomial in the number of
variables. In contrast with previously existing conditions, our results are
directly applicable to arbitrary factor graphs (with discrete variables) and
are shown to be valid also in the case of factors containing zeros, under some
additional conditions. We compare our bounds with existing ones, numerically
and, if possible, analytically. For binary variables with pairwise
interactions, we derive sufficient conditions that take into account local
evidence (i.e., single variable factors) and the type of pair interactions
(attractive or repulsive). It is shown empirically that this bound outperforms
existing bounds.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures. Major changes and new results in this revised
version. Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Information Theor
eIF4G stimulates the activity of the DEAD box protein eIF4A by a conformational guidance mechanism
The activity of eIF4A, a key player in translation initiation, is regulated by other translation factors through currently unknown mechanisms. Here, we provide the necessary framework to understand the mechanism of eIF4A?s regulation by eIF4G. In solution, eIF4A adopts a defined conformation that is different from the crystal structure. Binding of eIF4G induces a ?half-open? conformation by interactions with both domains, such that the helicase motifs are pre-aligned for activation. A primary interface acts as an anchor for complex formation. We show here that formation of the secondary interface is essential for imposing the ?half-open? conformation on eIF4A, and it is critical for the functional interaction of eIF4G with eIF4A. Via this bipartite interaction, eIF4G guides the transition of eIF4A between the ?half-open? and closed conformations, and stimulates its activity by accelerating the rate-limiting step of phosphate release. Subtle changes induced by eIF4G may be amplified by input signals from other translation factors, leading to an efficient regulation of translation initiation
Noether symmetries, energy-momentum tensors and conformal invariance in classical field theory
In the framework of classical field theory, we first review the Noether
theory of symmetries, with simple rederivations of its essential results, with
special emphasis given to the Noether identities for gauge theories. Will this
baggage on board, we next discuss in detail, for Poincar\'e invariant theories
in flat spacetime, the differences between the Belinfante energy-momentum
tensor and a family of Hilbert energy-momentum tensors. All these tensors
coincide on shell but they split their duties in the following sense:
Belinfante's tensor is the one to use in order to obtain the generators of
Poincar\'e symmetries and it is a basic ingredient of the generators of other
eventual spacetime symmetries which may happen to exist. Instead, Hilbert
tensors are the means to test whether a theory contains other spacetime
symmetries beyond Poincar\'e. We discuss at length the case of scale and
conformal symmetry, of which we give some examples. We show, for Poincar\'e
invariant Lagrangians, that the realization of scale invariance selects a
unique Hilbert tensor which allows for an easy test as to whether conformal
invariance is also realized. Finally we make some basic remarks on metric
generally covariant theories and classical field theory in a fixed curved
bakground.Comment: 31 pa
Cosmic shear results from the deep lens survey - I: Joint constraints on omega_m and sigma_8 with a two-dimensional analysis
We present a cosmic shear study from the Deep Lens Survey (DLS), a deep BVRz
multi-band imaging survey of five 4 sq. degree fields with two National Optical
Astronomy Observatory (NOAO) 4-meter telescopes at Kitt Peak and Cerro Tololo.
For both telescopes, the change of the point-spread-function (PSF) shape across
the focal plane is complicated, and the exposure-to-exposure variation of this
position-dependent PSF change is significant. We overcome this challenge by
modeling the PSF separately for individual exposures and CCDs with principal
component analysis (PCA). We find that stacking these PSFs reproduces the final
PSF pattern on the mosaic image with high fidelity, and the method successfully
separates PSF-induced systematics from gravitational lensing effects. We
calibrate our shears and estimate the errors, utilizing an image simulator,
which generates sheared ground-based galaxy images from deep Hubble Space
Telescope archival data with a realistic atmospheric turbulence model. For
cosmological parameter constraints, we marginalize over shear calibration
error, photometric redshift uncertainty, and the Hubble constant. We use
cosmology-dependent covariances for the Markov Chain Monte Carlo analysis and
find that the role of this varying covariance is critical in our parameter
estimation. Our current non-tomographic analysis alone constrains the
Omega_M-sigma_8 likelihood contour tightly, providing a joint constraint of
Omega_M=0.262+-0.051 and sigma_8=0.868+-0.071. We expect that a future DLS
weak-lensing tomographic study will further tighten these constraints because
explicit treatment of the redshift dependence of cosmic shear more efficiently
breaks the Omega_M-sigma_8 degeneracy. Combining the current results with the
Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe 7-year (WMAP7) likelihood data, we obtain
Omega_M=0.278+-0.018 and sigma_8=0.815+-0.020.Comment: Accepted to ApJ. Replaced with the accepted versio
Cosmic Shear Results from the Deep Lens Survey - II: Full Cosmological Parameter Constraints from Tomography
We present a tomographic cosmic shear study from the Deep Lens Survey (DLS),
which, providing a limiting magnitude r_{lim}~27 (5 sigma), is designed as a
pre-cursor Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) survey with an emphasis on
depth. Using five tomographic redshift bins, we study their auto- and
cross-correlations to constrain cosmological parameters. We use a
luminosity-dependent nonlinear model to account for the astrophysical
systematics originating from intrinsic alignments of galaxy shapes. We find
that the cosmological leverage of the DLS is among the highest among existing
>10 sq. deg cosmic shear surveys. Combining the DLS tomography with the 9-year
results of the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP9) gives
Omega_m=0.293_{-0.014}^{+0.012}, sigma_8=0.833_{-0.018}^{+0.011},
H_0=68.6_{-1.2}^{+1.4} km/s/Mpc, and Omega_b=0.0475+-0.0012 for LCDM, reducing
the uncertainties of the WMAP9-only constraints by ~50%. When we do not assume
flatness for LCDM, we obtain the curvature constraint
Omega_k=-0.010_{-0.015}^{+0.013} from the DLS+WMAP9 combination, which however
is not well constrained when WMAP9 is used alone. The dark energy equation of
state parameter w is tightly constrained when Baryonic Acoustic Oscillation
(BAO) data are added, yielding w=-1.02_{-0.09}^{+0.10} with the DLS+WMAP9+BAO
joint probe. The addition of supernova constraints further tightens the
parameter to w=-1.03+-0.03. Our joint constraints are fully consistent with the
final Planck results and also the predictions of a LCDM universe.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Imaging the Cosmic Matter Distribution using Gravitational Lensing of Pregalactic HI
21-cm emission from neutral hydrogen during and before the epoch of cosmic
reionisation is gravitationally lensed by material at all lower redshifts.
Low-frequency radio observations of this emission can be used to reconstruct
the projected mass distribution of foreground material, both light and dark. We
compare the potential imaging capabilities of such 21-cm lensing with those of
future galaxy lensing surveys. We use the Millennium Simulation to simulate
large-area maps of the lensing convergence with the noise, resolution and
redshift-weighting achievable with a variety of idealised observation
programmes. We find that the signal-to-noise of 21-cm lens maps can far exceed
that of any map made using galaxy lensing. If the irreducible noise limit can
be reached with a sufficiently large radio telescope, the projected convergence
map provides a high-fidelity image of the true matter distribution, allowing
the dark matter halos of individual galaxies to be viewed directly, and giving
a wealth of statistical and morphological information about the relative
distributions of mass and light. For instrumental designs like that planned for
the Square Kilometer Array (SKA), high-fidelity mass imaging may be possible
near the resolution limit of the core array of the telescope.Comment: version accepted for publication in MNRAS (reduced-resolution
figures
Discriminants, symmetrized graph monomials, and sums of squares
Motivated by the necessities of the invariant theory of binary forms J. J.
Sylvester constructed in 1878 for each graph with possible multiple edges but
without loops its symmetrized graph monomial which is a polynomial in the
vertex labels of the original graph. In the 20-th century this construction was
studied by several authors. We pose the question for which graphs this
polynomial is a non-negative resp. a sum of squares. This problem is motivated
by a recent conjecture of F. Sottile and E. Mukhin on discriminant of the
derivative of a univariate polynomial, and an interesting example of P. and A.
Lax of a graph with 4 edges whose symmetrized graph monomial is non-negative
but not a sum of squares. We present detailed information about symmetrized
graph monomials for graphs with four and six edges, obtained by computer
calculations
Ray-tracing through the Millennium Simulation: Born corrections and lens-lens coupling in cosmic shear and galaxy-galaxy lensing
(abridged) We study the accuracy of various approximations to cosmic shear
and weak galaxy-galaxy lensing and investigate effects of Born corrections and
lens-lens coupling. We use ray-tracing through the Millennium Simulation to
calculate various cosmic-shear and galaxy-galaxy-lensing statistics. We compare
the results from ray-tracing to semi-analytic predictions. We find: (i) The
linear approximation provides an excellent fit to cosmic-shear power spectra as
long as the actual matter power spectrum is used as input. Common fitting
formulae, however, strongly underestimate the cosmic-shear power spectra. Halo
models provide a better fit to cosmic shear-power spectra, but there are still
noticeable deviations. (ii) Cosmic-shear B-modes induced by Born corrections
and lens-lens coupling are at least three orders of magnitude smaller than
cosmic-shear E-modes. Semi-analytic extensions to the linear approximation
predict the right order of magnitude for the B-mode. Compared to the
ray-tracing results, however, the semi-analytic predictions may differ by a
factor two on small scales and also show a different scale dependence. (iii)
The linear approximation may under- or overestimate the galaxy-galaxy-lensing
shear signal by several percent due to the neglect of magnification bias, which
may lead to a correlation between the shear and the observed number density of
lenses. We conclude: (i) Current semi-analytic models need to be improved in
order to match the degree of statistical accuracy expected for future
weak-lensing surveys. (ii) Shear B-modes induced by corrections to the linear
approximation are not important for future cosmic-shear surveys. (iii)
Magnification bias can be important for galaxy-galaxy-lensing surveys.Comment: version taking comments into accoun
Persistence of a pinch in a pipe
The response of low-dimensional solid objects combines geometry and physics
in unusual ways, exemplified in structures of great utility such as a
thin-walled tube that is ubiquitous in nature and technology. Here we provide a
particularly surprising consequence of this confluence of geometry and physics
in tubular structures: the anomalously large persistence of a localized pinch
in an elastic pipe whose effect decays very slowly as an oscillatory
exponential with a persistence length that diverges as the thickness of the
tube vanishes, which we confirm experimentally. The result is more a
consequence of geometry than material properties, and is thus equally
applicable to carbon nanotubes as it is to oil pipelines.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
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