150,233 research outputs found

    Study of rotation curves of spiral galaxies with a scalar field dark matter model

    Full text link
    In this work we study rotation curves of spiral galaxies using a model of dark matter based on a scalar-tensor theory of gravity. We show how to estimate the scalar field dark matter parameters using a sample of observed rotation curves.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1112.520

    Uniqueness of SRB measures for transitive diffeomorphisms on surfaces

    Full text link
    We give a description of ergodic components of SRB measures in terms of ergodic homoclinic classes associated to hyperbolic periodic points. For transitive surface diffeomorphisms, we prove that there exists at most one SRB measure.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure

    The Vector Curvaton

    Full text link
    We analyze a massive vector field with a non-canonical kinetic term in the action, minimally coupled to gravity, where the mass and kinetic function of the vector field vary as functions of time during inflation. The vector field is introduced following the same idea of a scalar curvaton, which must not affect the inflationary dynamics since its energy density during inflation is negligible compared to the total energy density in the Universe. Using this hypothesis, the vector curvaton will be solely responsible for generating the primordial curvature perturbation \zeta. We have found that the spectra of the vector field perturbations are scale-invariant in superhorizon scales due to the suitable choice of the time dependence of the kinetic function and the effective mass during inflation. The preferred direction, generated by the vector field, makes the spectrum of \zeta depend on the wavevector, i.e. there exists statistical anisotropy in \zeta. This is discussed principally in the case where the mass of the vector field increases with time during inflation, where it is possible to find a heavy field (M >> H) at the end of inflation, making the particle production be practically isotropic; thus, the longitudinal and transverse spectra are nearly the same order which in turn causes that the statistical anisotropy generated by the vector field is within the observational bounds.Comment: LaTex file in Aipproc style, 6 pages, no figures. Prepared for the conference proceedings of the IX Mexican School of the DGFM-SMF: Cosmology for the XXIst Century. This work is entirely based on Refs. [23-26] and is the result of Andres A. Navarro's MSc thesi
    corecore