460 research outputs found
Time Dependence of Brans-Dicke Parameter w for an Expanding Universe
We have studied the time dependence of w for an expanding universe in the
generalised B-D theory and have obtained its explicit dependence on the nature
of matter contained in the universe,in different era.Lastly we discuss how the
observed accelerated expansion of the present universe can be accomodated in
the formalism.Comment: 10 pages,No figure
In vivo nematicidal potential of camel milk on Heligmosomoides polygyrus gastro-intestinal nematode of rodents
Following our previous fi ndings on the in vitro anthelmintic effect of camel milk on Haemonchus
contortus, the current study aimed at investigating its in vivo effect. Investigations were carried out
using mice infected with Heligmosomoides polygyrus which is a parasite commonly used to test
the effi cacy of anthelmintics. Thirty six Swiss white mice of both sexes aged 5 – 6 weeks old, and
weighing between 20 and 25 g were orally infected with 0.5 ml dose of 100, 1-week-old H. polygyrus
infective larvae (L3
). After the pre-patent period, infected animals were randomly divided into
6 groups of 6 animals each. The nematicidal effi cacy of camel milk was monitored through faecal
egg count reduction (FECR) and total worm count reduction (TWCR). Four doses (8.25; 16.5; 33.0;
66.0 ml/kg body weight (bw)) for fresh camel milk and 22 mg/kg bw for albendazole were studied
using a bioassay. Albendazole and 4 % dimethylsulfoxide were included in the protocol as reference
drug and placebo, respectively. For all tested doses except 8.25 ml/kg bw, camel milk was effective
in vivo against H. polygyrus reducing both faecal egg count and worm count (p < 0.05). The dose
66 ml/kg bw showed the highest nematicidal activity causing a 76.75 % FECR and a 69.62 % TWCR
7 day after initiating the treatment. These results support the possible use of camel milk in the control
of gastro-intestinal helminthiasis
The Abnormally Weighting Energy Hypothesis: the Missing Link between Dark Matter and Dark Energy
We generalize tensor-scalar theories of gravitation by the introduction of an
abnormally weighting type of energy. This theory of tensor-scalar anomalous
gravity is based on a relaxation of the weak equivalence principle that is now
restricted to ordinary visible matter only. As a consequence, the convergence
mechanism toward general relativity is modified and produces naturally cosmic
acceleration as an inescapable gravitational feedback induced by the
mass-variation of some invisible sector. The cosmological implications of this
new theoretical framework are studied. From the Hubble diagram cosmological
test \textit{alone}, this theory provides an estimation of the amount of
baryons and dark matter in the Universe that is consistent with the independent
cosmological tests of Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) and Big Bang
Nucleosynthesis (BBN). Cosmic coincidence is naturally achieved from a equally
natural assumption on the amplitude of the scalar coupling strength. Finally,
from the adequacy to supernovae data, we derive a new intriguing relation
between the space-time dependences of the gravitational coupling and the dark
matter mass, providing an example of crucial constraint on microphysics from
cosmology. This glimpses at an enticing new symmetry between the visible and
invisible sectors, namely that the scalar charges of visible and invisible
matter are exactly opposite.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures, new version with extended discussions and added
references. Accepted for publication in JCAP (sept. 2008
Models of G time variations in diverse dimensions
A review of different cosmological models in diverse dimensions leading to a
relatively small time variation of the effective gravitational constant G is
presented. Among them: 4-dimensional general scalar-tensor model,
multidimensional vacuum model with two curved Einstein spaces, multidimensional
model with multicomponent anisotropic "perfect fluid", S-brane model with
scalar fields and two form field etc. It is shown that there exist different
possible ways of explanation of relatively small time variation of the
effective gravitational constant G compatible with present cosmological data
(e.g. acceleration): 4-dimensional scalar-tensor theories or multidimensional
cosmological models with different matter sources. The experimental bounds on
G-dot may be satisfied ether in some restricted interval or for all allowed
values of the synchronous time variable.Comment: 27 pages, Late
Generalized Brans-Dicke cosmology in the presence of matter and dark energy
We study the Generalized Brans-Dicke cosmology in the presence of matter and
dark energy. Of particular interest for a constant Brans-Dicke parameter, the
de Sitter space has also been investigated.Comment: 9 page
Scalar-Tensor Cosmological Models
We analyze the qualitative behaviors of scalar-tensor cosmologies with an
arbitrary monotonic function. In particular, we are interested
on scalar-tensor theories distinguishable at early epochs from General
Relativity (GR) but leading to predictions compatible with solar-system
experiments. After extending the method developed by Lorentz-Petzold and
Barrow, we establish the conditions required for convergence towards GR at
. Then, we obtain all the asymptotic analytical solutions
at early times which are possible in the framework of these theories. The
subsequent qualitative evolution, from these asymptotic solutions until their
later convergence towards GR, has been then analyzed by means of numerical
computations. From this analysis, we have been able to establish a
classification of the different qualitative behaviors of scalar-tensor
cosmological models with an arbitrary monotonic function.Comment: uuencoded compressed postscript file containing 41 pages, with 9
figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Luminosity- and morphology-dependent clustering of galaxies
How does the clustering of galaxies depend on their inner properties like
morphological type and luminosity? We address this question in the mathematical
framework of marked point processes and clarify the notion of luminosity and
morphological segregation. A number of test quantities such as conditional
mark-weighted two-point correlation functions are introduced. These descriptors
allow for a scale-dependent analysis of luminosity and morphology segregation.
Moreover, they break the degeneracy between an inhomogeneous fractal point set
and actual present luminosity segregation. Using the Southern Sky Redshift
Survey~2 (da Costa et al. 1998, SSRS2) we find both luminosity and
morphological segregation at a high level of significance, confirming claims by
previous works using these data (Benoist et al. 1996, Willmer et al. 1998).
Specifically, the average luminosity and the fluctuations in the luminosity of
pairs of galaxies are enhanced out to separations of 15Mpc/h. On scales smaller
than 3Mpc/h the luminosities on galaxy pairs show a tight correlation. A
comparison with the random-field model indicates that galaxy luminosities
depend on the spatial distribution and galaxy-galaxy interactions. Early-type
galaxies are also more strongly correlated, indicating morphological
segregation. The galaxies in the PSCz catalog (Saunders et al. 2000) do not
show significant luminosity segregation. This again illustrates that mainly
early-type galaxies contribute to luminosity segregation. However, based on
several independent investigations we show that the observed luminosity
segregation can not be explained by the morphology-density relation alone.Comment: aastex, emulateapj5, 20 pages, 13 figures, several clarifying
comments added, ApJ accepte
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