313 research outputs found
A critical-density closed Universe in Brans-Dicke theory
In a Brans-Dicke (BD) cosmological model, the energy density associated with
some scalar field decreases as \displaystyle a^{{-2}(\frac{\omega_{o}+
{\frac12}%}{\omega_{o}+1})} with the scale factor of the Universe,
giving a matter with an Equation of state . In this model, the Universe
could be closed but still have a nonrelativistic-matter density corresponding
to its critical value, . Different cosmological expressions, such
as, luminosity distance, angular diameter, number count and ratio of the
redshift tickness-angular size, are determined in terms of the redshift for
this model.Comment: To appear in MNRAS, 7 pages, 5 eps figure
Universality in solar flare and earthquake occurrence
Earthquakes and solar flares are phenomena involving huge and rapid releases
of energy characterized by complex temporal occurrence. By analysing available
experimental catalogs, we show that the stochastic processes underlying these
apparently different phenomena have universal properties. Namely both problems
exhibit the same distributions of sizes, inter-occurrence times and the same
temporal clustering: we find afterflare sequences with power law temporal
correlations as the Omori law for seismic sequences. The observed universality
suggests a common approach to the interpretation of both phenomena in terms of
the same driving physical mechanism
Long-Term Clustering, Scaling, and Universality in the Temporal Occurrence of Earthquakes
Scaling analysis reveals striking regularities in earthquake occurrence. The
time between any one earthquake and that following it is random, but it is
described by the same universal-probability distribution for any spatial region
and magnitude range considered. When time is expressed in rescaled units, set
by the averaged seismic activity, the self-similar nature of the process
becomes apparent. The form of the probability distribution reveals that
earthquakes tend to cluster in time, beyond the duration of aftershock
sequences. Furthermore, if aftershock sequences are analysed in an analogous
way, yet taking into account the fact that seismic activity is not constant but
decays in time, the same universal distribution is found for the rescaled time
between events.Comment: short paper, only 2 figure
The Full-sky Astrometric Mapping Explorer -- Astrometry for the New Millennium
FAME is designed to perform an all-sky, astrometric survey with unprecedented
accuracy. It will create a rigid astrometric catalog of 4x10^7 stars with 5 <
m_V < 15. For bright stars, 5 < m_V < 9, FAME will determine positions and
parallaxes accurate to < 50 microarcseconds, with proper motion errors < 50
microarcseconds/year. For fainter stars, 9 < m_V < 15, FAME will determine
positions and parallaxes accurate to < 500 microarcseconds, with proper motion
errors < 500 microarcseconds/year. It will also collect photometric data on
these 4 x 10^7 stars in four Sloan DSS colors.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, to appear in "Working on the Fringe
A note on light velocity anisotropy
It is proved that in experiments on or near the Earth, no anisotropy in the
one-way velocity of light may be detected. The very accurate experiments which
have been performed to detect such an effect are to be considered significant
tests of both special relativity and the equivalence principleComment: 8 pages, LaTex, Gen. Relat. Grav. accepte
Matter-gravity couplings and Lorentz violation
The gravitational couplings of matter are studied in the presence of Lorentz
and CPT violation. At leading order in the coefficients for Lorentz violation,
the relativistic quantum hamiltonian is derived from the gravitationally
coupled minimal Standard-Model Extension. For spin-independent effects, the
nonrelativistic quantum hamiltonian and the classical dynamics for test and
source bodies are obtained. A systematic perturbative method is developed to
treat small metric and coefficient fluctuations about a Lorentz-violating and
Minkowski background. The post-newtonian metric and the trajectory of a test
body freely falling under gravity in the presence of Lorentz violation are
established. An illustrative example is presented for a bumblebee model. The
general methodology is used to identify observable signals of Lorentz and CPT
violation in a variety of gravitational experiments and observations, including
gravimeter measurements, laboratory and satellite tests of the weak equivalence
principle, antimatter studies, solar-system observations, and investigations of
the gravitational properties of light. Numerous sensitivities to coefficients
for Lorentz violation can be achieved in existing or near-future experiments at
the level of parts in 10^3 down to parts in 10^{15}. Certain coefficients are
uniquely detectable in gravitational searches and remain unmeasured to date.Comment: 59 pages two-column REVTe
Testing the equivalence principle: why and how?
Part of the theoretical motivation for improving the present level of testing
of the equivalence principle is reviewed. The general rationale for optimizing
the choice of pairs of materials to be tested is presented. One introduces a
simplified rationale based on a trichotomy of competing classes of theoretical
models.Comment: 11 pages, Latex, uses ioplppt.sty, submitted to Class. Quantum Gra
Newtonian Limit of Conformal Gravity
We study the weak-field limit of the static spherically symmetric solution of
the locally conformally invariant theory advocated in the recent past by
Mannheim and Kazanas as an alternative to Einstein's General Relativity. In
contrast with the previous works, we consider the physically relevant case
where the scalar field that breaks conformal symmetry and generates fermion
masses is nonzero. In the physical gauge, in which this scalar field is
constant in space-time, the solution reproduces the weak-field limit of the
Schwarzschild--(anti)DeSitter solution modified by an additional term that,
depending on the sign of the Weyl term in the action, is either oscillatory or
exponential as a function of the radial distance. Such behavior reflects the
presence of, correspondingly, either a tachion or a massive ghost in the
spectrum, which is a serious drawback of the theory under discussion.Comment: 9 pages, comments and references added; the version to be published
in Phys. Rev.
Quintessence, the Gravitational Constant, and Gravity
Dynamical vacuum energy or quintessence, a slowly varying and spatially
inhomogeneous component of the energy density with negative pressure, is
currently consistent with the observational data. One potential difficulty with
the idea of quintessence is that couplings to ordinary matter should be
strongly suppressed so as not to lead to observable time variations of the
constants of nature. We further explore the possibility of an explicit coupling
between the quintessence field and the curvature. Since such a scalar field
gives rise to another gravity force of long range (\simg H^{-1}_0), the solar
system experiments put a constraint on the non-minimal coupling: |\xi| \siml
10^{-2}.Comment: 9 pages, a version to be published in Phys.Rev.
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