6,591 research outputs found
The British film industry: creativity and constraint
An article on the potential impact of the changes to film policy, culture and infrastructure in light of significant changes in 2010-11
Cosmological Bounds on Spatial Variations of Physical Constants
We derive strong observational limits on any possible large-scale spatial
variation in the values of physical 'constants' whose space-time evolution is
driven by a scalar field. The limits are imposed by the isotropy of the
microwave background on large angular scales in theories which describe space
and time variations in the fine structure constant, the electron-proton mass
ratio, and the Newtonian gravitational constant, G. Large-scale spatial
fluctuations in the fine structure constant are bounded by 2x10^-9 and
1.2x10^-8 in the BSBM and VSL theories respectively, fluctuations in the
electron-proton mass ratio by 9x10^-5 in the BM theory and fluctuations in G by
3.6x10^-10 in Brans-Dicke theory. These derived bounds are significantly
stronger than any obtainable by direct observations of astrophysical objects at
the present time.Comment: 13 pages, 1 table, typos corrected, refs added. Published versio
A time-space varying speed of light and the Hubble Law in static Universe
We consider a hypothetical possibility of the variability of light velocity
with time and position in space which is derived from two natural postulates.
For the consistent consideration of such variability we generalize
translational transformations of the Theory of Relativity. The formulae of
transformations between two rest observers within one inertial system are
obtained. It is shown that equality of velocities of two particles is as
relative a statement as simultaneity of two events is. We obtain the expression
for the redshift of radiation of a rest source which formally reproduces the
Hubble Law. Possible experimental implications of the theory are discussed.Comment: 7 page
Gradient expansion(s) and dark energy
Motivated by recent claims stating that the acceleration of the present
Universe is due to fluctuations with wavelength larger than the Hubble radius,
we present a general analysis of various perturbative solutions of fully
inhomogeneous Einstein equations supplemented by a perfect fluid. The
equivalence of formally different gradient expansions is demonstrated. If the
barotropic index vanishes, the deceleration parameter is always positive
semi-definite.Comment: 17 pages, no figure
The Andante Regime of Scalar Field Dynamics
The andante regime of scalar field dynamics in the chaotic inflationary
Universe is defined as the epoch when the field is rolling moderately slowly
down its interaction potential, but at such a rate that first-order corrections
to the slow-roll approximation become important. These conditions should apply
towards the end of inflation as the field approaches the global minimum of the
potential. Solutions to the Einstein-scalar field equations for the class of
power law potentials are found in this regime in
terms of the inverse error function.Comment: 11 pages of plain Latex, FNAL-Pub-94/226-
Large-scale magnetic fields, curvature fluctuations and the thermal history of the Universe
It is shown that gravitating magnetic fields affect the evolution of
curvature perturbations in a way that is reminiscent of a pristine
non-adiabatic pressure fluctuation. The gauge-invariant evolution of curvature
perturbations is used to constrain the magnetic power spectrum. Depending on
the essential features of the thermodynamic history of the Universe, the
explicit derivation of the bound is modified. The theoretical uncertainty in
the constraints on the magnetic energy spectrum is assessed by comparing the
results obtained in the case of the conventional thermal history with the
estimates stemming from less conventional (but phenomenologically allowed)
post-inflationary evolutions.Comment: 21 pages, 6 included figure
Observable Effects of Scalar Fields and Varying Constants
We show by using the method of matched asymptotic expansions that a
sufficient condition can be derived which determines when a local experiment
will detect the cosmological variation of a scalar field which is driving the
spacetime variation of a supposed constant of Nature. We extend our earlier
analyses of this problem by including the possibility that the local region is
undergoing collapse inside a virialised structure, like a galaxy or galaxy
cluster. We show by direct calculation that the sufficient condition is met to
high precision in our own local region and we can therefore legitimately use
local observations to place constraints upon the variation of "constants" of
Nature on cosmological scales.Comment: Invited Festscrift Articl
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