1,582 research outputs found
Prospects for the measurement of B_s oscillations with the ATLAS detector at LHC
The prospects for the measurement of oscillations with the ATLAS
detector at the Large Hadron Collider are presented. candidates in
the and decay modes from semileptonic
events were fully simulated and reconstructed, using a detailed detector
description. The sensitivity and the expected accuracy for the measurement of
the oscillation frequency were derived from unbinned maximum likelihood
amplitude fits as functions of the integrated luminosity. A detailed treatment
of the systematic uncertainties was performed. The dependence of the
measurement sensitivity on various parameters was also evaluated.Comment: Invited talk at the Workshop on the CKM Unitarity Triangle, IPPP
Durham, April 2003 (eConf C0304052). 4 pages LaTeX, 2 eps figure
Quasilocal Conservation Laws: Why We Need Them
We argue that conservation laws based on the local matter-only
stress-energy-momentum tensor (characterized by energy and momentum per unit
volume) cannot adequately explain a wide variety of even very simple physical
phenomena because they fail to properly account for gravitational effects. We
construct a general quasi}local conservation law based on the Brown and York
total (matter plus gravity) stress-energy-momentum tensor (characterized by
energy and momentum per unit area), and argue that it does properly account for
gravitational effects. As a simple example of the explanatory power of this
quasilocal approach, consider that, when we accelerate toward a freely-floating
massive object, the kinetic energy of that object increases (relative to our
frame). But how, exactly, does the object acquire this increasing kinetic
energy? Using the energy form of our quasilocal conservation law, we can see
precisely the actual mechanism by which the kinetic energy increases: It is due
to a bona fide gravitational energy flux that is exactly analogous to the
electromagnetic Poynting flux, and involves the general relativistic effect of
frame dragging caused by the object's motion relative to us.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figur
Geoids in General Relativity: Geoid Quasilocal Frames
We develop, in the context of general relativity, the notion of a geoid -- a
surface of constant "gravitational potential". In particular, we show how this
idea naturally emerges as a specific choice of a previously proposed, more
general and operationally useful construction called a quasilocal frame -- that
is, a choice of a two-parameter family of timelike worldlines comprising the
worldtube boundary of the history of a finite spatial volume. We study the
geometric properties of these geoid quasilocal frames, and construct solutions
for them in some simple spacetimes. We then compare these results -- focusing
on the computationally tractable scenario of a non-rotating body with a
quadrupole perturbation -- against their counterparts in Newtonian gravity (the
setting for current applications of the geoid), and we compute
general-relativistic corrections to some measurable geometric quantities.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figures; v2: reference added; v3: introduction clarified,
reference adde
Prospects of the measurement of Bs0 oscillations with the ATLAS detector at LHC
An estimation of the sensitivity to measure Bs-Bsbar oscillations with the
ATLAS detector is given for the detector geometry of initial layout. The delta
ms reach is derived from unbinned maximum likelihood amplitude fits using Bs0
events generated with a simplified Monte Carlo method.Comment: Poster at the XXVI Physics in Collision Conference (PIC06), Buzios,
Brasil, July 2006, 4 pages, LaTeX, 6 eps figures. PSN THUPO0
Momentum in General Relativity: Local versus Quasilocal Conservation Laws
We construct a general relativistic conservation law for linear and angular
momentum for matter and gravitational fields in a finite volume of space that
does not rely on any spacetime symmetries. This work builds on our previous
construction of a general relativistic energy conservation law with the same
features. Our approach uses the Brown and York quasilocal
stress-energy-momentum tensor for matter and gravitational fields, plus the
concept of a rigid quasilocal frame (RQF) introduced in previous work. The RQF
approach allows us to construct, in a generic spacetime, frames of reference
whose boundaries are rigid (their shape and size do not change with time), and
that have precisely the same six arbitrary time-dependent degrees of freedom as
the accelerating and tumbling rigid frames we are familiar with in Newtonian
mechanics. These RQFs, in turn, give rise to a completely general conservation
law for the six components of momentum (three linear and three angular) of a
finite system of matter and gravitational fields. We compare in detail this
quasilocal RQF approach to constructing conservation laws with the usual local
one based on spacetime symmetries, and discuss the shortcomings of the latter.
These RQF conservation laws lead to a deeper understanding of physics in the
form of simple, exact, operational definitions of gravitational energy and
momentum fluxes, which in turn reveal, for the first time, the exact, detailed
mechanisms of gravitational energy and momentum transfer taking place in a wide
variety of physical phenomena, including a simple falling apple. As a concrete
example, we derive a general relativistic version of Archimedes' law that we
apply to understand electrostatic weight and buoyant force in the context of a
Reissner-Nordstrom black hole.Comment: 24 pages, 3 figure
The Autonomous Precision Landing and Hazard Detection and Avoidance Technology (ALHAT)
As NASA plans to send humans back to the Moon and develop a lunar outpost, technologies must be developed to place humans and cargo safely, precisely, repeatedly, on the lunar surface with the capability to avoid surface hazards. Exploration Space Architecture Study requirements include the need for global lunar surface access with safe, precise landing without lighting constraints on terrain that may have landing hazards for human scale landing vehicles. Landing accuracies of perhaps 1,000 meters for sortie crew missions to 10 s of meters for Outpost class missions are required. The Autonomous precision Landing Hazard Avoidance Technology (ALHAT) project will develop the new and unique descent and landing Guidance, Navigation and Control (GNC) hardware and software technologies necessary for these capabilities. The ALHAT project will qualify a lunar descent and landing GNC system to a Technology Readiness Level (TRL) of 6 capable of supporting lunar crewed, cargo, and robotic missions. The (ALHAT) development project was chartered by NASA Headquarters in October 2006. The initial effort to write a project plan and define an ALHAT Team was followed by a fairly aggressive research and analysis effort to determine what technologies existed that could be developed and applied to the lunar landing problems indicated above. This paper describes the project development, research, analysis and concept evolution that has occurred since the assignment of the project. This includes the areas of systems engineering, GNC, sensors, sensor algorithms, simulations, fielding testing, laboratory testing, Hardware-In-The-Loop testing, system avionics and system certification concepts
Dirac versus Reduced Quantization of the Poincar\'{e} Symmetry in Scalar Electrodynamics
The generators of the Poincar\'{e} symmetry of scalar electrodynamics are
quantized in the functional Schr\"{o}dinger representation. We show that the
factor ordering which corresponds to (minimal) Dirac quantization preserves the
Poincar\'{e} algebra, but (minimal) reduced quantization does not. In the
latter, there is a van Hove anomaly in the boost-boost commutator, which we
evaluate explicitly to lowest order in a heat kernel expansion using zeta
function regularization. We illuminate the crucial role played by the gauge
orbit volume element in the analysis. Our results demonstrate that preservation
of extra symmetries at the quantum level is sometimes a useful criterion to
select between inequivalent, but nevertheless self-consistent, quantization
schemes.Comment: 24 page
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