6,484 research outputs found
Second-order Perturbations of the Friedmann World Model
We consider instability of the Friedmann world model to the second-order in
perturbations. We present the perturbed set of equations up to the second-order
in the Friedmann background world model with general spatial curvature and the
cosmological constant. We consider systems with the completely general
imperfect fluids, the minimally coupled scalar fields, the electro-magnetic
field, and the generalized gravity theories. We also present the case of null
geodesic equations, and the one based on the relativistic Boltzmann equation.
In due stage a decomposition is made for the scalar-, vector- and tensor-type
perturbations which couple each other to the second-order. Gauge issue is
resolved to each order. The basic equations are presented without imposing any
gauge condition, thus in a gauge-ready form so that we can use the full
advantage of having the gauge freedom in analysing the problems. As an
application we show that to the second-order in perturbation the relativistic
pressureless ideal fluid of the scalar-type reproduces exactly the known
Newtonian result. As another application we rederive the large-scale conserved
quantities (of the pure scalar- and tensor-perturbations) to the second order,
first shown by Salopek and Bond, now from the exact equations. Several other
applications are made as well.Comment: 61 pages; published version in Phys. Rev.
Cosmological perturbations in a generalized gravity including tachyonic condensation
We present unified ways of handling the cosmological perturbations in a class
of gravity theory covered by a general action in eq. (1). This gravity includes
our previous generalized gravity and the gravity theory motivated
by the tachyonic condensation. We present general prescription to derive the
power spectra generated from vacuum quantum fluctuations in the slow-roll
inflation era. An application is made to a slow-roll inflation based on the
tachyonic condensation with an exponential potential.Comment: 5 page
Why Newton's gravity is practically reliable in the large-scale cosmological simulations
Until now, it has been common to use Newton's gravity to study the non-linear
clustering properties of the large-scale structures. Without confirmation from
Einstein's theory, however, it has been unclear whether we can rely on the
analysis, for example, near the horizon scale. In this work we will provide a
confirmation of using Newton's gravity in cosmology based on relativistic
analysis of weakly non-linear situations to the third order in perturbations.
We will show that, except for the gravitational wave contribution, the
relativistic zero-pressure fluid equations perturbed to the second order in a
flat Friedmann background coincide exactly with the Newtonian results. We will
also present the pure relativistic correction terms appearing in the third
order. The third-order correction terms show that these are the linear-order
curvature perturbation strength higher than the second-order
relativistic/Newtonian terms. Thus, the pure general relativistic corrections
in the third order are independent of the horizon scale and are small in the
large-scale due to the low-level temperature anisotropy of the cosmic microwave
background radiation. Since we include the cosmological constant, our results
are relevant to currently favoured cosmology. As we prove that the Newtonian
hydrodynamic equations are valid in all cosmological scales to the second
order, and that the third-order correction terms are small, our result has a
practically important implication that one can now use the large-scale
Newtonian numerical simulation more reliably as the simulation scale approaches
and even goes beyond the horizon.Comment: 8 pages, no figur
A high frequency analysis of electromagnetic plane wave scattering by perfectly-conducting semi-infinite parallel plate and rectangular waveguides with absorber coated inner walls
An approximate but sufficiently accurate high frequency solution which combines the uniform geometrical theory of diffraction (UTD) and the aperture integration (AI) method is developed for analyzing the problem of electromagnetic (EM) plane wave scattering by an open-ended, perfectly-conducting, semi-infinite hollow rectangular waveguide (or duct) with a thin, uniform layer of lossy or absorbing material on its inner wall, and with a planar termination inside. In addition, a high frequency solution for the EM scattering by a two dimensional (2-D), semi-infinite parallel plate waveguide with a absorber coating on the inner walls is also developed as a first step before analyzing the open-ended semi-infinite three dimensional (3-D) rectangular waveguide geometry. The total field scattered by the semi-infinite waveguide consists firstly of the fields scattered from the edges of the aperture at the open-end, and secondly of the fields which are coupled into the waveguide from the open-end and then reflected back from the interior termination to radiate out of the open-end. The first contribution to the scattered field can be found directly via the UTD ray method. The second contribution is found via the AI method which employs rays to describe the fields in the aperture that arrive there after reflecting from the interior termination. It is assumed that the direction of the incident plane wave and the direction of observation lie well inside the forward half space tht exists outside the half space containing the semi-infinite waveguide geometry. Also, the medium exterior to the waveguide is assumed to be free space
I/O Schedulers for Proportionality and Stability on Flash-Based SSDs in Multi-Tenant Environments
The use of flash based Solid State Drives (SSDs) has expanded rapidly into the cloud computing environment. In cloud computing, ensuring the service level objective (SLO) of each server is the major criterion in designing a system. In particular, eliminating performance interference among virtual machines (VMs) on shared storage is a key challenge. However, studies on SSD performance to guarantee SLO in such environments are limited. In this paper, we present analysis of I/O behavior for a shared SSD as storage in terms of proportionality and stability. We show that performance SLOs of SSD based storage systems being shared by VMs or tasks are not satisfactory. We present and analyze the reasons behind the unexpected behavior through examining the components of SSDs such as channels, DRAM buffer, and Native Command Queuing (NCQ). We introduce two novel SSD-aware host level I/O schedulers on Linux, called A & x002B;CFQ and H & x002B;BFQ, based on our analysis and findings. Through experiments on Linux, we analyze I/O proportionality and stability in multi-tenant environments. In addition, through experiments using real workloads, we analyze the performance interference between workloads on a shared SSD. We then show that the proposed I/O schedulers almost eliminate the interference effect seen in CFQ and BFQ, while still providing I/O proportionality and stability for various I/O weighted scenarios
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