4,330 research outputs found
The Gravitomagnetic Influence on Gyroscopes and on the Lunar Orbit
Gravitomagnetism--a motional coupling of matter analogous to the Lorentz
force in electromagnetism--has observable consequences for any scenario
involving differing mass currents. Examples include gyroscopes located near a
rotating massive body, and the interaction of two orbiting bodies. In the
former case, the resulting precession of the gyroscope is often called ``frame
dragging,'' and is the principal measurement sought by the Gravity Probe-B
experiment. The latter case is realized in the earth-moon system, and the
effect has in fact been confirmed via lunar laser ranging (LLR) to
approximately 0.1% accuracy--better than the anticipated accuracy of the
Gravity-Probe-B result. This paper shows the connnection between these
seemingly disparate phenomena by employing the same gravitomagnetic term in the
equation of motion to obtain both gyroscopic precession and modification of the
lunar orbit. Since lunar ranging currently provides a part in a thousand fit to
the gravitomagnetic contributions to the lunar orbit, this feature of
post-Newtonian gravity is not adjustable to fit any anomalous result beyond the
0.1% level from Gravity Probe-B without disturbing the existing fit of theory
to the 36 years of LLR data.Comment: 4 pages; accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter
Detecting a Lorentz-Violating Field in Cosmology
We consider cosmology in the Einstein-aether theory (the generally covariant
theory of gravitation coupled to a dynamical timelike Lorentz-violating vector
field) with a linear aether-Lagrangian. The 3+1 spacetime splitting approach is
used to derive covariant and gauge invariant perturbation equations which are
valid for a general class of Lagrangians. Restricting attention to the
parameter space of these theories which is consistent with local gravity
experiments, we show that there are tracking behaviors for the aether field,
both in the background cosmology and at linear perturbation level. The
primordial power-spectrum of scalar perturbations in this model is shown to be
the same that predicted by standard general relativity. However, the
power-spectrum of tensor perturbation is different from that in general
relativity, but has a smaller amplitude and so cannot be detected at present.
We also study the implications for late-time cosmology and find that the
evolution of photon and neutrino anisotropic stresses can source the aether
field perturbation during the radiation and matter dominated epochs, and as a
result the CMB and matter power spectra are modified. However these effects are
degenerate with respect to other cosmological parameters, such as neutrino
masses and the bias parameter in the observed galaxy spectrum.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures; modified version to appear in Physical Review
Extended coherence time on the clock transition of optically trapped Rubidium
Optically trapped ensembles are of crucial importance for frequency
measurements and quantum memories, but generally suffer from strong dephasing
due to inhomogeneous density and light shifts. We demonstrate a drastic
increase of the coherence time to 21 s on the magnetic field insensitive clock
transition of Rb-87 by applying the recently discovered spin self-rephasing.
This result confirms the general nature of this new mechanism and thus shows
its applicability in atom clocks and quantum memories. A systematic
investigation of all relevant frequency shifts and noise contributions yields a
stability of 2.4E-11 x tau^(-1/2), where tau is the integration time in
seconds. Based on a set of technical improvements, the presented frequency
standard is predicted to rival the stability of microwave fountain clocks in a
potentially much more compact setup.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Cadmium electrode mechanism electrode morphology and capacity Final report
Morphology and capacity of cadmium electrodes on repeated charge and discharg
Generic bounds on dipolar gravitational radiation from inspiralling compact binaries
Various alternative theories of gravity predict dipolar gravitational
radiation in addition to quadrupolar radiation. We show that gravitational wave
(GW) observations of inspiralling compact binaries can put interesting
constraints on the strengths of the dipole modes of GW polarizations. We put
forward a physically motivated gravitational waveform for dipole modes, in the
Fourier domain, in terms of two parameters: one which captures the relative
amplitude of the dipole mode with respect to the quadrupole mode () and
the other a dipole term in the phase (). We then use this two parameter
representation to discuss typical bounds on their values using GW measurements.
We obtain the expected bounds on the amplitude parameter and the phase
parameter for Advanced LIGO (AdvLIGO) and Einstein Telescope (ET) noise
power spectral densities using Fisher information matrix. AdvLIGO and ET may at
best bound to an accuracy of and and
to an accuracy of and respectively.Comment: Matches with the published versio
Massive motion in Brans-Dicke geometry and beyond
Gravity theories that can be viewed as dynamics for area metric manifolds,
for which Brans-Dicke theory presents a recently studied example, require for
their physical interpretation the identification of the distinguished curves
that serve as the trajectories of light and massive matter. Complementing
previous results on the propagation of light, we study effective massive point
particle motion. We show that the relevant geometrical structure is a special
Finsler norm determined by the area metric, and that massive point particles
follow Finsler geodesics.Comment: 12 page
Scalar-tensor cosmologies: fixed points of the Jordan frame scalar field
We study the evolution of homogeneous and isotropic, flat cosmological models
within the general scalar-tensor theory of gravity with arbitrary coupling
function and potential. After introducing the limit of general relativity we
describe the details of the phase space geometry. Using the methods of
dynamical systems for the decoupled equation of the Jordan frame scalar field
we find the fixed points of flows in two cases: potential domination and matter
domination. We present the conditions on the mathematical form of the coupling
function and potential which determine the nature of the fixed points
(attractor or other). There are two types of fixed points, both are
characterized by cosmological evolution mimicking general relativity, but only
one of the types is compatible with the Solar System PPN constraints. The phase
space structure should also carry over to the Einstein frame as long as the
transformation between the frames is regular which however is not the case for
the latter (PPN compatible) fixed point.Comment: 21 pages, 4 figures, some comments and references adde
Gravitation and inertia; a rearrangement of vacuum in gravity
We address the gravitation and inertia in the framework of 'general gauge
principle', which accounts for 'gravitation gauge group' generated by hidden
local internal symmetry implemented on the flat space. We connect this group to
nonlinear realization of the Lie group of 'distortion' of local internal
properties of six-dimensional flat space, which is assumed as a toy model
underlying four-dimensional Minkowski space. The agreement between proposed
gravitational theory and available observational verifications is satisfactory.
We construct relativistic field theory of inertia and derive the relativistic
law of inertia. This theory furnishes justification for introduction of the
Principle of Equivalence. We address the rearrangement of vacuum state in
gravity resulting from these ideas.Comment: 17 pages, no figures, revtex4, Accepted for publication in Astrophys.
Space Sc
Solar system constraints on the Dvali-Gabadadze-Porrati braneworld theory of gravity
A number of proposals have been put forward to account for the observed
accelerating expansion of the Universe through modifications of gravity. One
specific scenario, Dvali-Gabadadze-Porrati (DGP) gravity, gives rise to a
potentially observable anomaly in the solar system: all planets would exhibit a
common anomalous precession, dw/dt, in excess of the prediction of General
Relativity. We have used the Planetary Ephemeris Program (PEP) along with
planetary radar and radio tracking data to set a constraint of |dw/dt| < 0.02
arcseconds per century on the presence of any such common precession. This
sensitivity falls short of that needed to detect the estimated universal
precession of |dw/dt| = 5e-4 arcseconds per century expected in the DGP
scenario. We discuss the fact that ranging data between objects that orbit in a
common plane cannot constrain the DGP scenario. It is only through the relative
inclinations of the planetary orbital planes that solar system ranging data
have sensitivity to the DGP-like effect of universal precession. In addition,
we illustrate the importance of performing a numerical evaluation of the
sensitivity of the data set and model to any perturbative precession.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
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