44,354 research outputs found
A Conceptual Shift to Rectify a Defect in the Lorentz-Dirac Equation
In his analysis of the Classical Theory of Radiating Electrons, Dirac (1938)
draws attention to the characteristic instability of solutions to the third
order equation of motion. He remarks that changing the sign of the self-force
eliminates the runaway solutions and gives `reasonable behaviour'. Dirac
rejects such a change and proceeds with an ad hoc modification to the solutions
of the initial value problem that is not consistent with the principle of
causality. We argue that his reasons for rejecting the change of sign are
invalid on both physical and mathematical grounds.
The conceptual shift is to treat the physical particle as a composite of the
source particle and the energy-momentum that is reversibly generated in its
self-field by its motion. The reversibly generated energy in the self-field is
interpreted as kinetic energy, and the changes that follow result in Dirac's
change of sign. Several exact solutions to the new equation of motion and its
linearisation are given. For a particle in orbital motion the self-force
enables the applied force to generate radiation and kinetic energy in the
self-field that results in an outward spiral motion. The theory is consistent
with all well-established principles of physics, including the principle of
causality.Comment: 20 page
Electrical power grid network optimisation by evolutionary computing
A major factor in the consideration of an electrical power network of the scale of a national grid is the calculation of power flow and in particular, optimal power flow. This paper considers such a network, in which distributed generation is used, and examines how the network can be optimized, in terms of transmission line capacity, in order to obtain optimal or at least high-performing configurations, using multi-objective optimisation by evolutionary computing methods
Concepts and Actors in Organic Livestock Husbandry in Bolivia
Traditional smallholder livestock production is expected to correspond widely with principles of organic livestock farming. Though, the real magnitude of livestock under organic and alike management is unknown. From stakeholder analysis and structured interviews with key persons in Bolivia it is deduced that similarities are widely given, whereas it is questioned whether a formal individual certification approach for livestock products will match the farmer interests and consumer demands
Quantum Hamiltonian for gravitational collapse
Using a Hamiltonian formulation of the spherically symmetric gravity-scalar
field theory adapted to flat spatial slicing, we give a construction of the
reduced Hamiltonian operator. This Hamiltonian, together with the null
expansion operators presented in an earlier work, form a framework for studying
gravitational collapse in quantum gravity. We describe a setting for its
numerical implementation, and discuss some conceptual issues associated with
quantum dynamics in a partial gauge fixing.Comment: 17 pages, published version (minor changes
Monte Carlo Markov Chain parameter estimation in semi-analytic models of galaxy formation
We present a statistical exploration of the parameter space of the De Lucia and Blaizot version of the Munich semi-analytic (SA) model built upon the Millennium dark matter simulation. This is achieved by applying a Monte Carlo Markov Chain method to constrain the six free parameters that define the stellar and black hole mass functions at redshift zero. The model is tested against three different observational data sets, including the galaxy K-band luminosity function, B - V colours and the black hole-bulge mass relation, separately and combined, to obtain mean values, confidence limits and likelihood contours for the best-fitting model. Using each observational data set independently, we discuss how the SA model parameters affect each galaxy property and find that there are strong correlations between them. We analyse to what extent these are simply reflections of the observational constraints, or whether they can lead to improved understandings of the physics of galaxy formation.
When all the observations are combined, we find reasonable agreement between the majority of the previously published parameter values and our confidence limits. However, the need to suppress dwarf galaxy formation requires the strength of the supernova feedback to be significantly higher in our best-fitting solution than in previous work.
To balance this, we require the feedback to become ineffective in haloes of lower mass than before, so as to permit the formation of sufficient high-luminosity galaxies: unfortunately, this leads to an excess of galaxies around L*. Although the best fit is formally consistent with the data, there is no region of parameter space that reproduces the shape of galaxy luminosity function across the whole magnitude range.
For our best fit, we present the model predictions for the bJ-band luminosity and stellar mass functions. We find a systematic disagreement between the observed mass function and the predictions from the K-band constraint, which we explain in light of recent works that suggest uncertainties of up to 0.3 dex in the mass determination from stellar population synthesis models.
We discuss modifications to the SA model that might simultaneously improve the fit to the observed mass function and reduce the reliance on excessive supernova feedback in small haloes
HST imaging of hyperluminous infrared galaxies
We present HST WFPC2 I band imaging for a sample of 9 Hyperluminous Infrared
Galaxies spanning a redshift range 0.45 < z < 1.34. Three of the sample have
morphologies showing evidence for interactions, six are QSOs. Host galaxies in
the QSOs are reliably detected out to z ~ 0.8. The detected QSO host galaxies
have an elliptical morphology with scalelengths spanning 6.5 < r_{e}(Kpc) < 88
and absolute k corrected magnitudes spanning -24.5 < M_{I} < -25.2. There is no
clear correlation between the IR power source and the optical morphology. None
of the sources in the sample, including F15307+3252, show any evidence for
gravitational lensing. We infer that the IR luminosities are thus real. Based
on these results, and previous studies of HLIRGs, we conclude that this class
of object is broadly consistent with being a simple extrapolation of the ULIRG
population to higher luminosities; ULIRGs being mainly violently interacting
systems powered by starbursts and/or AGN. Only a small number of sources whose
infrared luminosities exceed 10^{13}Lsun are intrinsically less luminous
objects which have been boosted by gravitational lensing.Comment: 16 Pages. Accepted for publication in MNRA
The effects of magnetic-field geometry on longitudinal oscillations of solar prominences: Cross-sectional area variation for thin tubes
Solar prominences are subject to both field-aligned (longitudinal) and
transverse oscillatory motions, as evidenced by an increasing number of
observations. Large-amplitude longitudinal motions provide valuable information
on the geometry of the filament-channel magnetic structure that supports the
cool prominence plasma against gravity. Our pendulum model, in which the
restoring force is the gravity projected along the dipped field lines of the
magnetic structure, best explains these oscillations. However, several factors
can influence the longitudinal oscillations, potentially invalidating the
pendulum model. The aim of this work is to study the influence of large-scale
variations in the magnetic field strength along the field lines, i.e.,
variations of the cross-sectional area along the flux tubes supporting
prominence threads. We studied the normal modes of several flux tube
configurations, using linear perturbation analysis, to assess the influence of
different geometrical parameters on the oscillation properties. We found that
the influence of the symmetric and asymmetric expansion factors on longitudinal
oscillations is small.}{We conclude that the longitudinal oscillations are not
significantly influenced by variations of the cross-section of the flux tubes,
validating the pendulum model in this context.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
'It's a Form of Freedom': The experiences of people with disabilities within equestrian sport
This paper explores the embodied, gendered experiences of disabled horseâriders. Drawing on data from five inâdepth interviews with paradressage riders, the ways in which their involvement in elite disability sport impacts upon their sense of identity and confidence are explored, as well as the considerable health and social benefits that this involvement brings. Social models of disability are employed and the shortcomings of such models, when applied to disability sport, are highlighted. The data presented here demonstrates the necessity of seeing disability sport as an embodied experience and acknowledging the importance of impairment to the experiences of disabled athletes. Living within an impaired body is also a gendered experience and the implications of this when applied to elite disability sport are considered
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