8,928 research outputs found
Magnification relations in gravitational lensing via multidimensional residue integrals
We investigate the so-called magnification relations of gravitational lensing
models. We show that multidimensional residue integrals provide a simple
explanation for the existence of these relations, and an effective method of
computation. We illustrate the method with several examples, thereby deriving
new magnification relations for galaxy lens models and microlensing (point mass
lensing).Comment: 16 pages, uses revtex4, submitted to Journal of Mathematical Physic
Lensing Properties of Cored Galaxy Models
A method is developed to evaluate the magnifications of the images of
galaxies with lensing potentials stratified on similar concentric ellipses. A
simple contour integral is provided which enables the sums of the
magnifications of even parity or odd parity or the central image to be easily
calculated. The sums for pairs of images vary considerably with source
position, while the signed sums can be remarkably uniform inside the tangential
caustic in the absence of naked cusps. For a family of models in which the
potential is a power-law of the elliptic radius, the number of visible images
is found as a function of flattening, external shear and core radius. The
magnification of the central image depends on the core radius and the slope of
the potential. For typical source and lens redshifts, the missing central image
leads to strong constraints; the mass distribution in the lensing galaxy must
be nearly cusped, and the cusp must be isothermal or stronger. This is in
accord with the cuspy cores seen in high resolution photometry of nearby,
massive, early-type galaxies, which typically have the surface density falling
like distance^{-1.3} outside a break radius of a few hundred parsecs. Cuspy
cores by themselves can provide an explanation of the missing central images.
Dark matter at large radii may alter the slope of the projected density;
provided the slope remains isothermal or steeper and the break radius remains
small, then the central image remains unobservable. The sensitivity of the
radio maps must be increased fifty-fold to find the central images in
abundance.Comment: 42 pages, 11 figures, ApJ in pres
Gravitational Lenses With More Than Four Images: I. Classification of Caustics
We study the problem of gravitational lensing by an isothermal elliptical
density galaxy in the presence of a tidal perturbation. When the perturbation
is fairly strong and oriented near the galaxy's minor axis, the lens can
produce image configurations with six or even eight highly magnified images
lying approximately on a circle. We classify the caustic structures in the
model and identify the range of models that can produce such lenses. Sextuple
and octuple lenses are likely to be rare because they require special lens
configurations, but a full calculation of the likelihood will have to include
both the existence of lenses with multiple lens galaxies and the strong
magnification bias that affects sextuple and octuple lenses. At optical
wavelengths these lenses would probably appear as partial or complete Einstein
rings, but at radio wavelengths the individual images could probably be
resolved.Comment: 30 pages, including 12 postscript figures; accepted for publication
in Ap
Roll diffusion bonding of titanium alloy panels
Roll diffusion bonding technique is used for fabricating T-stiffened panel assemblies from titanium alloy. The single unit fabrication exhibits excellent strength characteristics under tensile and compressive loads. This program is applied to structures in which weight/strength ratio and integral construction are important considerations
Exotic Statistics for Ordinary Particles in Quantum Gravity
Objects exhibiting statistics other than the familiar Bose and Fermi ones are
natural in theories with topologically nontrivial objects including geons,
strings, and black holes. It is argued here from several viewpoints that the
statistics of ordinary particles with which we are already familiar are likely
to be modified due to quantum gravity effects. In particular, such
modifications are argued to be present in loop quantum gravity and in any
theory which represents spacetime in a fundamentally piecewise-linear fashion.
The appearance of unusual statistics may be a generic feature (such as the
deformed position-momentum uncertainty relations and the appearance of a
fundamental length scale) which are to be expected in any theory of quantum
gravity, and which could be testable.Comment: Awarded an honourable mention in the 2008 Gravity Research Foundation
Essay Competitio
Technical guidelines for economic valuation of inland small-scale fisheries in developing countries
These ĂŽTechnical Guidelines for Economic Valuation of Inland Small-scale Fisheries in Developing Countriesö are one of the outputs of the project on ĂŽFood security and poverty alleviation through improved valuation and governance of river fisheries in Africaö. The guidelines draw upon research results and experience gained during the course of the project. The project was coordinated and implemented by the WorldFish Center and was carried out in cooperation with the National Agricultural Research Institutes (NARs) from the participating countries: the Nigeria Institute for Freshwater Fisheries Research, the Departments of Fishery of Niger, Malawi and Zambia, and the Cameroonian MinistĂŠre de lĂâ Elevage, des PĂ©ches et de lĂâ Industrie Animale; and three advanced research institutes (ARIs): the Leibniz University of Hannover in Germany, the Institute for Sustainable Development and Aquatic Resources in UK, and the University of Cape Town in South Africa.Rural development, Sustainable development, Livelihoods, Economic analysis, Research, Artisanal fishing
Localized energy for wave equations with degenerate trapping
Localized energy estimates have become a fundamental tool when studying wave
equations in the presence of asymptotically at background geometry. Trapped
rays necessitate a loss when compared to the estimate on Minkowski space. A
loss of regularity is a common way to incorporate such. When trapping is
sufficiently weak, a logarithmic loss of regularity suffices. Here, by studying
a warped product manifold introduced by Christianson and Wunsch, we encounter
the first explicit example of a situation where an estimate with an algebraic
loss of regularity exists and this loss is sharp. Due to the global-in-time
nature of the estimate for the wave equation, the situation is more complicated
than for the Schr\"{o}dinger equation. An initial estimate with sub-optimal
loss is first obtained, where extra care is required due to the low frequency
contributions. An improved estimate is then established using energy
functionals that are inspired by WKB analysis. Finally, it is shown that the
loss cannot be improved by any power by saturating the estimate with a
quasimode.Comment: 18 page
Classical and quantum time dependent solutions in string theory
Using the ontological interpretation of quantum mechanics in a particular
sense, we obtain the classical behaviour of the scale factor and two scalar
fields, derived from a string effective action for the FRW time dependent
model. Besides, the Wheeler-DeWitt equation is solved exactly. We speculate
that the same procedure could also be applied to S-branes.Comment: 11 pages, To appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
Astrometric Microlensing as a Method of Discovering and Characterizing Extra-Solar Planets
We introduce a new method of searching for and characterizing extra-solar
planets. We show that by monitoring the center-of-light motion of microlensing
alerts using the next generation of high precision astrometric instruments the
probability of detecting a planet orbiting the lens is high. We show that
adding astrometric information to the photometric microlensing lightcurve
greatly helps in determining the planetary mass and semi-major axis. We
introduce astrometric maps as a new way for calculating astrometric motion and
planet detection probabilities. Finite source effects are important for low
mass planets, but even Earth mass planets can give detectable signals.Comment: 9 pages includes 8 postscript figures, AAS Latex, submitted to Ap
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