7,406 research outputs found
Cosmological perturbation theory in 1+1 dimensions
Many recent studies have highlighted certain failures of the standard
Eulerian-space cosmological perturbation theory (SPT). Its problems include (1)
not capturing large-scale bulk flows [leading to an O(1) error in the 1-loop
SPT prediction for the baryon acoustic peak in the correlation function], (2)
assuming that the Universe behaves as a pressureless, inviscid fluid, and (3)
treating fluctuations on scales that are non-perturbative as if they were.
Recent studies have highlighted the successes of perturbation theory in
Lagrangian space or theories that solve equations for the effective dynamics of
smoothed fields. Both approaches mitigate some or all of the aforementioned
issues with SPT. We discuss these physical developments by specializing to the
simplified 1D case of gravitationally interacting sheets, which allows us to
substantially reduces the analytic overhead and still (as we show) maintain
many of the same behaviors as in 3D. In 1D, linear-order Lagrangian
perturbation theory ("the Zeldovich approximation") is exact up to shell
crossing, and we prove that n^{th}-order Eulerian perturbation theory converges
to the Zeldovich approximation as n goes to infinity. In no 1D cosmology that
we consider (including a CDM-like case and power-law models) do these theories
describe accurately the matter power spectrum on any mildly nonlinear scale. We
find that theories based on effective equations are much more successful at
describing the dynamics. Finally, we discuss many topics that have recently
appeared in the perturbation theory literature such as beat coupling, the shift
and smearing of the baryon acoustic oscillation feature, and the advantages of
Fourier versus configuration space. Our simplified 1D case serves as an
intuitive review of these perturbation theory results.Comment: 28 pages + appendices; 10 figures; matches version accepted to JCA
Targeting vaccination against novel infections : risk, age and spatial structure for pandemic influenza in Great Britain
The emergence of a novel strain of H1N1 influenza virus in Mexico in 2009, and its subsequent worldwide spread, has focused attention to the question of optimal deployment of mass vaccination campaigns. Here, we use three relatively simple models to address three issues of primary concern in the targeting of any vaccine. The advantages of such simple models are that the underlying assumptions and effects of individual parameters are relatively clear, and the impact of uncertainty in the parametrization can be readily assessed in the early stages of an outbreak. In particular, we examine whether targeting risk-groups, age-groups or spatial regions could be optimal in terms of reducing the predicted number of cases or severe effects; and how these targeted strategies vary as the epidemic progresses. We examine the conditions under which it is optimal to initially target vaccination towards those individuals within the population who are most at risk of severe effects of infection. Using age-structured mixing matrices, we show that targeting vaccination towards the more epidemiologically important age groups (5-14 year olds and then 15-24 year olds) leads to the greatest reduction in the epidemic growth and hence reduces the total number of cases. Finally, we consider how spatially targeting the vaccine towards regions of country worst affected could provide an advantage. We discuss how all three of these priorities change as both the speed at which vaccination can be deployed and the start of the vaccination programme is varied
Compression of Correlation Matrices and an Efficient Method for Forming Matrix Product States of Fermionic Gaussian States
Here we present an efficient and numerically stable procedure for compressing
a correlation matrix into a set of local unitary single-particle gates, which
leads to a very efficient way of forming the matrix product state (MPS)
approximation of a pure fermionic Gaussian state, such as the ground state of a
quadratic Hamiltonian. The procedure involves successively diagonalizing
subblocks of the correlation matrix to isolate local states which are purely
occupied or unoccupied. A small number of nearest neighbor unitary gates
isolates each local state. The MPS of this state is formed by applying the
many-body version of these gates to a product state. We treat the simple case
of compressing the correlation matrix of spinless free fermions with definite
particle number in detail, though the procedure is easily extended to fermions
with spin and more general BCS states (utilizing the formalism of Majorana
modes). We also present a DMRG-like algorithm to obtain the compressed
correlation matrix directly from a hopping Hamiltonian. In addition, we discuss
a slight variation of the procedure which leads to a simple construction of the
multiscale entanglement renormalization ansatz (MERA) of a fermionic Gaussian
state, and present a simple picture of orthogonal wavelet transforms in terms
of the gate structure we present in this paper. As a simple demonstration we
analyze the Su-Schrieffer-Heeger model (free fermions on a 1D lattice with
staggered hopping amplitudes).Comment: 15 pages, 17 figure
New ΔR for the southwest Pacific Ocean
ΔR results of known-age shells from the Solomon and Coral Seas and the northwest coast of New Ireland are presented. The results are too few to be conclusive but indicate that ΔR in this region is variable. An average ΔR value of 370 ± 25 yr is recorded for a range of shell species from Kavieng Harbor, New Ireland, and is primarily attributed to weak equatorial upwelling of depleted 14C due to seasonal current reversals. In contrast, values from the Solomon and Coral Seas are lower (average ΔR = 45 ± 19 yr). Higher ΔR values for some shellfish from these 2 seas is attributed to ingestion of 14Cdepleted sediment by deposit-feeding species
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