11,536 research outputs found
Hadronic Lorentz Violation in Chiral Perturbation Theory Including the Coupling to External Fields
If any violation of Lorentz symmetry exists in the hadron sector, its
ultimate origins must lie at the quark level. We continue the analysis of how
the theories at these two levels are connected, using chiral perturbation
theory. Considering a two-flavor quark theory, with dimension-4 operators that
break Lorentz symmetry, we derive a low-energy theory of pions and nucleons
that is invariant under local chiral transformations and includes the coupling
to external fields. The pure meson and baryon sectors, as well as the couplings
between them and the couplings to external electromagnetic and weak gauge
fields, contain forms of Lorentz violation which depend on linear combinations
of quark-level coefficients. In particular, at leading order the
electromagnetic couplings depend on the very same combinations as appear in the
free particle propagators. This means that observations of electromagnetic
processes involving hadrons--such as vacuum Cerenkov radiation, which may be
allowed in Lorentz-violating theories--can only reliably constrain certain
particular combinations of quark coefficients.Comment: 21 page
Statistical Time Series Models of Pilot Control with Applications to Instrument Discrimination
A general description of the methodology used in obtaining the transfer function models and verification of model fidelity, frequency domain plots of the modeled transfer functions, numerical results obtained from an analysis of poles and zeroes obtained from z plane to s-plane conversions of the transfer functions, and the results of a study on the sequential introduction of other variables, both exogenous and endogenous into the loop are contained
Limits on Neutron Lorentz Violation from the Stability of Primary Cosmic Ray Protons
Recent evidence appears to confirm that the ultra-high-energy primary cosmic
ray spectrum consists mostly of protons. The fact that these protons can
traverse large distances to reach Earth allows us to place bounds on Lorentz
violations. The protons neither emit vacuum Cerenkov radiation nor
-decay into neutrons, and this constrains six previously unmeasured
coefficients in the neutron sector at the 5 x 10^(-14) level. Among the
coefficients bounded here for the first time are those that control
spin-independent boost anisotropy for neutrons. This is a phenomenon which
could have existed (in light of the preexisting bounds) without additional fine
tuning. There are also similar bounds for others species of hadrons. The bounds
on Lorentz violation for neutral pions are particularly strong, at the 4 x
10^(-21) level, eleven orders of magnitude better than previous constraints.Comment: 13 pages, version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Pairwise alignment incorporating dipeptide covariation
Motivation: Standard algorithms for pairwise protein sequence alignment make
the simplifying assumption that amino acid substitutions at neighboring sites
are uncorrelated. This assumption allows implementation of fast algorithms for
pairwise sequence alignment, but it ignores information that could conceivably
increase the power of remote homolog detection. We examine the validity of this
assumption by constructing extended substitution matrixes that encapsulate the
observed correlations between neighboring sites, by developing an efficient and
rigorous algorithm for pairwise protein sequence alignment that incorporates
these local substitution correlations, and by assessing the ability of this
algorithm to detect remote homologies. Results: Our analysis indicates that
local correlations between substitutions are not strong on the average.
Furthermore, incorporating local substitution correlations into pairwise
alignment did not lead to a statistically significant improvement in remote
homology detection. Therefore, the standard assumption that individual residues
within protein sequences evolve independently of neighboring positions appears
to be an efficient and appropriate approximation
Distributed BLAST in a grid computing context
The Basic Local Alignment Search Tool (BLAST) is one of the best known sequence comparison programs available in bioinformatics. It is used to compare query sequences to a set of target sequences, with the intention of finding similar sequences in the target set. Here, we present a distributed BLAST service which operates over a set of heterogeneous Grid resources and is made available through a Globus toolkit v.3 Grid service. This work has been carried out in the context of the BRIDGES project, a UK e-Science project aimed at providing a Grid based environment for biomedical research. Input consisting of multiple query sequences is partitioned into sub-jobs on the basis of the number of idle compute nodes available and then processed on these in batches. To achieve this, we have implemented our own Java-based scheduler which distributes sub-jobs across an array of resources utilizing a variety of local job scheduling systems
Biodiversity informatics: the challenge of linking data and the role of shared identifiers
A major challenge facing biodiversity informatics is integrating data stored in widely distributed databases. Initial efforts have relied on taxonomic names as the shared identifier linking records in different databases. However, taxonomic names have limitations as identifiers, being neither stable nor globally unique, and the pace of molecular taxonomic and phylogenetic research means that a lot of information in public sequence databases is not linked to formal taxonomic names. This review explores the use of other identifiers, such as specimen codes and GenBank accession numbers, to link otherwise disconnected facts in different databases. The structure of these links can also be exploited using the PageRank algorithm to rank the results of searches on biodiversity databases. The key to rich integration is a commitment to deploy and reuse globally unique, shared identifiers (such as DOIs and LSIDs), and the implementation of services that link those identifiers
Laboratory Bounds on Electron Lorentz Violation
Violations of Lorentz boost symmetry in the electron and photon sectors can
be constrained by studying several different high-energy phenomenon. Although
they may not lead to the strongest bounds numerically, measurements made in
terrestrial laboratories produce the most reliable results. Laboratory bounds
can be based on observations of synchrotron radiation, as well as the observed
absences of vacuum Cerenkov radiation. Using measurements of synchrotron energy
losses at LEP and the survival of TeV photons, we place new bounds on the three
electron Lorentz violation coefficients c_(TJ), at the 3 x 10^(-13) to 6 x
10^(-15) levels.Comment: 18 page
CPT and Lorentz violation as signatures for Planck-scale physics
In recent years, the breakdown of spacetime symmetries has been identified as
a promising research field in the context of Planck-scale phenomenology. For
example, various theoretical approaches to the quantum-gravity problem are
known to accommodate minute violations of CPT invariance. This talk covers
various topics within this research area. In particular, some mechanisms for
spacetime-symmetry breaking as well as the Standard-Model Extension (SME) test
framework will be reviewed; the connection between CPT and Lorentz invariance
in quantum field theory will be exposed; and various experimental CPT tests
with emphasis on matter--antimatter comparisons will be discussed.Comment: 6 page
Statistical Mechanics and Lorentz Violation
The theory of statistical mechanics is studied in the presence of
Lorentz-violating background fields. The analysis is performed using the
Standard-Model Extension (SME) together with a Jaynesian formulation of
statistical inference. Conventional laws of thermodynamics are obtained in the
presence of a perturbed hamiltonian that contains the Lorentz violating terms.
As an example, properties of the nonrelativistic ideal gas are calculated in
detail. To lowest order in Lorentz violation, the scalar thermodynamic
variables are only corrected by a rotationally invariant combination of
parameters that mimics a (frame dependent) effective mass. Spin couplings can
induce a temperature independent polarization in the classical gas that is not
present in the conventional case. Precision measurements in the residual
expectation values of the magnetic moment of Fermi gases in the limit of high
temperature may provide interesting limits on these parameters.Comment: 7 pages, revte
Clustering with shallow trees
We propose a new method for hierarchical clustering based on the optimisation
of a cost function over trees of limited depth, and we derive a
message--passing method that allows to solve it efficiently. The method and
algorithm can be interpreted as a natural interpolation between two well-known
approaches, namely single linkage and the recently presented Affinity
Propagation. We analyze with this general scheme three biological/medical
structured datasets (human population based on genetic information, proteins
based on sequences and verbal autopsies) and show that the interpolation
technique provides new insight.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure
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