47,848 research outputs found
Spherically symmetric monopoles in noncommutative space
We construct a spherically symmetric noncommutative space in three dimensions
by foliating the space with concentric fuzzy spheres. We show how to construct
a gauge theory in this space and in particular we derive the noncommutative
version of a Yang-Mills-Higgs theory. We find numerical monopole solutions of
the equations of motion.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
New gamma/hadron separation parameters for a neural network for HAWC
The High-Altitude Water Cherenkov experiment (HAWC) observatory is located
4100 meters above sea level. HAWC is able to detect secondary particles from
extensive air showers (EAS) initiated in the interaction of a primary particle
(either a gamma or a charged cosmic ray) with the upper atmosphere. Because an
overwhelming majority of EAS events are triggered by cosmic rays, background
noise suppression plays an important role in the data analysis process of the
HAWC observatory. Currently, HAWC uses cuts on two parameters (whose values
depend on the spatial distribution and luminosity of an event) to separate
gamma-ray events from background hadronic showers. In this work, a search for
additional gamma-hadron separation parameters was conducted to improve the
efficiency of the HAWC background suppression technique. The best-performing
parameters were integrated to a feed-foward Multilayer Perceptron Neural
Network (MLP-NN), along with the traditional parameters. Various iterations of
MLP-NN's were trained on Monte Carlo data, and tested on Crab data. Preliminary
results show that the addition of new parameters can improve the significance
of the point source at high-energies (~ TeV), at the expense of slightly worse
performance in conventional low-energy bins (~ GeV). Further work is underway
to improve the efficiency of the neural network at low energies.Comment: Presented at the 35th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC2017),
Bexco, Busan, Korea. See arXiv:1708.02572 for all HAWC contribution
Modelling Planner-Carrier Interactions in Road Freight Transport: Optimization of Road Maintenance Costs Via Overloading Control
A bi-level modelling approach is proposed to represent the interaction between the vehicle loading practices of road freight transport carriers, and the decisions of a road planning authority responsible both for road maintenance and for the enforcement of overloading control. At the lower (reactive) level, the overloading decisions of the carriers impact on road maintenance expenditure, while at the upper (anticipatory) level the planner decides fine and enforcement levels by anticipating the responses of the carriers. A case study using data from Mexico is used to illustrate the method
The Wess-Zumino-Witten term in non-commutative two-dimensional fermion models
We study the effective action associated to the Dirac operator in two
dimensional non-commutative Field Theory. Starting from the axial anomaly, we
compute the determinant of the Dirac operator and we find that even in the U(1)
theory, a Wess-Zumino-Witten like term arises.Comment: 11 pages, no figures, LaTex fil
Noncommutative fermions and Morita equivalence
We study the Morita equivalence for fermion theories on noncommutative
two-tori. For rational values of the parameter (in appropriate units)
we show the equivalence between an abelian noncommutative fermion theory and a
nonabelian theory of twisted fermions on ordinary space. We study the chiral
anomaly and compute the determinant of the Dirac operator in the dual theories
showing that the Morita equivalence also holds at this level.Comment: 12 pages, LaTex file, no figures. Minor corrections, version to
appear in Phys. Lett.
Quasi-perpendicular fast magnetosonic shock with wave precursor in collisionless plasma
A one-dimensional particle-in-cell (PIC) simulation tracks a fast
magnetosonic shock over time scales comparable to an inverse ion gyrofrequency.
The magnetic pressure is comparable to the thermal pressure upstream. The shock
propagates across a uniform background magnetic field with a pressure that
equals the thermal pressure upstream at the angle 85 at a speed that is
1.5 times the fast magnetosonic speed in the electromagnetic limit.
Electrostatic contributions to the wave dispersion increase its phase speed at
large wave numbers, which leads to a convex dispersion curve. A fast
magnetosonic precursor forms ahead of the shock with a phase speed that exceeds
the fast magnetosonic speed by about . The wave is slower than the
shock and hence it is damped.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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