3,803 research outputs found
Non semi-simple sl(2) quantum invariants, spin case
Invariants of 3-manifolds from a non semi-simple category of modules over a
version of quantum sl(2) were obtained by the last three authors in
[arXiv:1404.7289]. In their construction the quantum parameter is a root of
unity of order where is odd or congruent to modulo . In this
paper we consider the remaining cases where is congruent to zero modulo
and produce invariants of -manifolds with colored links, equipped with
generalized spin structure. For a given -manifold , the relevant
generalized spin structures are (non canonically) parametrized by
.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figure
Spatial modeling of extreme snow depth
The spatial modeling of extreme snow is important for adequate risk
management in Alpine and high altitude countries. A natural approach to such
modeling is through the theory of max-stable processes, an infinite-dimensional
extension of multivariate extreme value theory. In this paper we describe the
application of such processes in modeling the spatial dependence of extreme
snow depth in Switzerland, based on data for the winters 1966--2008 at 101
stations. The models we propose rely on a climate transformation that allows us
to account for the presence of climate regions and for directional effects,
resulting from synoptic weather patterns. Estimation is performed through
pairwise likelihood inference and the models are compared using penalized
likelihood criteria. The max-stable models provide a much better fit to the
joint behavior of the extremes than do independence or full dependence models.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/11-AOAS464 the Annals of
Applied Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aoas/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Gravitational-Wave Inspiral of Compact Binary Systems to 7/2 Post-Newtonian Order
The inspiral of compact binaries, driven by gravitational-radiation reaction,
is investigated through 7/2 post-Newtonian (3.5PN) order beyond the quadrupole
radiation. We outline the derivation of the 3.5PN-accurate binary's
center-of-mass energy and emitted gravitational flux. The analysis consistently
includes the relativistic effects in the binary's equations of motion and
multipole moments, as well as the contributions of tails, and tails of tails,
in the wave zone. However the result is not fully determined because of some
physical incompleteness, present at the 3PN order, of the model of
point-particle and the associated Hadamard-type self-field regularization. The
orbital phase, whose prior knowledge is crucial for searching and analyzing the
inspiral signal, is computed from the standard energy balance argument.Comment: 12 pages, version which includes the correction of an Erratum to be
published in Phys. Rev. D (2005
Third post-Newtonian dynamics of compact binaries: Equations of motion in the center-of-mass frame
The equations of motion of compact binary systems and their associated
Lagrangian formulation have been derived in previous works at the third
post-Newtonian (3PN) approximation of general relativity in harmonic
coordinates. In the present work we investigate the binary's relative dynamics
in the center-of-mass frame (center of mass located at the origin of the
coordinates). We obtain the 3PN-accurate expressions of the center-of-mass
positions and equations of the relative binary motion. We show that the
equations derive from a Lagrangian (neglecting the radiation reaction), from
which we deduce the conserved center-of-mass energy and angular momentum at the
3PN order. The harmonic-coordinates center-of-mass Lagrangian is equivalent,
{\it via} a contact transformation of the particles' variables, to the
center-of-mass Hamiltonian in ADM coordinates that is known from the
post-Newtonian ADM-Hamiltonian formalism. As an application we investigate the
dynamical stability of circular binary orbits at the 3PN order.Comment: 31 pages, to appear in Classical and Quantum Gravit
Gravitational waves from inspiralling compact binaries: Energy loss and waveform to second--post-Newtonian order
Gravitational waves generated by inspiralling compact binaries are
investigated to the second--post-Newtonian (2PN) approximation of general
relativity. Using a recently developed 2PN-accurate wave generation formalism,
we compute the gravitational waveform and associated energy loss rate from a
binary system of point-masses moving on a quasi-circular orbit. The crucial new
input is our computation of the 2PN-accurate ``source'' quadrupole moment of
the binary. Tails in both the waveform and energy loss rate at infinity are
explicitly computed. Gravitational radiation reaction effects on the orbital
frequency and phase of the binary are deduced from the energy loss. In the
limiting case of a very small mass ratio between the two bodies we recover the
results obtained by black hole perturbation methods. We find that finite mass
ratio effects are very significant as they increase the 2PN contribution to the
phase by up to 52\%. The results of this paper should be of use when
deciphering the signals observed by the future LIGO/VIRGO network of
gravitational-wave detectors.Comment: 43 pages, LaTeX-ReVTeX, no figures
Distortion of Gravitational-Wave Packets Due to their Self-Gravity
When a source emits a gravity-wave (GW) pulse over a short period of time,
the leading edge of the GW signal is redshifted more than the inner boundary of
the pulse. The GW pulse is distorted by the gravitational effect of the
self-energy residing in between these shells. We illustrate this distortion for
GW pulses from the final plunge of black hole (BH) binaries, leading to the
evolution of the GW profile as a function of the radial distance from the
source. The distortion depends on the total GW energy released and the duration
of the emission, scaled by the total binary mass, M. The effect should be
relevant in finite box simulations where the waveforms are extracted within a
radius of <~ 100M. For characteristic emission parameters at the final plunge
between binary BHs of arbitrary spins, this effect could distort the simulated
GW templates for LIGO and LISA by a fraction of 0.001. Accounting for the wave
distortion would significantly decrease the waveform extraction errors in
numerical simulations.Comment: accepted for publication in Physical Review
Gravitational Self Force in a Schwarzschild Background and the Effective One Body Formalism
We discuss various ways in which the computation of conservative
Gravitational Self Force (GSF) effects on a point mass moving in a
Schwarzschild background can inform us about the basic building blocks of the
Effective One-Body (EOB) Hamiltonian. We display the information which can be
extracted from the recently published GSF calculation of the first-GSF-order
shift of the orbital frequency of the last stable circular orbit, and we
combine this information with the one recently obtained by comparing the EOB
formalism to high-accuracy numerical relativity (NR) data on coalescing binary
black holes. The information coming from GSF data helps to break the degeneracy
(among some EOB parameters) which was left after using comparable-mass NR data
to constrain the EOB formalism. We suggest various ways of obtaining more
information from GSF computations: either by studying eccentric orbits, or by
focussing on a special zero-binding zoom-whirl orbit. We show that logarithmic
terms start entering the post-Newtonian expansions of various (EOB and GSF)
functions at the fourth post-Newtonian (4PN) level, and we analytically compute
the first logarithm entering a certain, gauge-invariant "redshift" GSF function
(defined along the sequence of circular orbits).Comment: 44 page
The Statistical Mechanics of Horizons and Black Hole Thermodynamics
Although we know that black holes are characterized by a temperature and an
entropy, we do not yet have a satisfactory microscopic ``statistical
mechanical'' explanation for black hole thermodynamics. I describe a new
approach that attributes the thermodynamic properties to ``would-be gauge''
degrees of freedom that become dynamical on the horizon. For the
(2+1)-dimensional black hole, this approach gives the correct entropy. (Talk
given at the Pacific Conference on Gravitation and Cosmology, Seoul, February
1996.)Comment: 11 pages, LaTe
Gravitational wave forms for a three-body system in Lagrange's orbit: parameter determinations and a binary source test
Continuing work initiated in an earlier publication [Torigoe et al. Phys.
Rev. Lett. {\bf 102}, 251101 (2009)], gravitational wave forms for a three-body
system in Lagrange's orbit are considered especially in an analytic method.
First, we derive an expression of the three-body wave forms at the mass
quadrupole, octupole and current quadrupole orders. By using the expressions,
we solve a gravitational-wave {\it inverse} problem of determining the source
parameters to this particular configuration (three masses, a distance of the
source to an observer, and the orbital inclination angle to the line of sight)
through observations of the gravitational wave forms alone. For this purpose,
the chirp mass to a three-body system in the particular configuration is
expressed in terms of only the mass ratios by deleting initial angle positions.
We discuss also whether and how a binary source can be distinguished from a
three-body system in Lagrange's orbit or others.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures, 1 table; text improved, typos corrected;
accepted for publication in PR
Gravitational radiation reaction in the equations of motion of compact binaries to 3.5 post-Newtonian order
We compute the radiation reaction force on the orbital motion of compact
binaries to the 3.5 post-Newtonian (3.5PN) approximation, i.e. one PN order
beyond the dominant effect. The method is based on a direct PN iteration of the
near-zone metric and equations of motion of an extended isolated system, using
appropriate ``asymptotically matched'' flat-space-time retarded potentials. The
formalism is subsequently applied to binary systems of point particles, with
the help of the Hadamard self-field regularisation. Our result is the 3.5PN
acceleration term in a general harmonic coordinate frame. Restricting the
expression to the centre-of-mass frame, we find perfect agreement with the
result derived in a class of coordinate systems by Iyer and Will using the
energy and angular momentum balance equations.Comment: 28 pages, references added, to appear in Classical and Quantum
Gravit
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