1,449 research outputs found
Gas flow environmental and heat transfer nonrotating 3D program
A complete set of benchmark quality data for the flow and heat transfer within a large rectangular turning duct is being compiled. These data will be used to evaluate and verify three dimensional internal viscous flow models and computational codes. The analytical objective is to select such a computational code and define the capabilities of this code to predict the experimental results. Details of the proper code operation will be defined and improvements to the code modeling capabilities will be formulated
New insights on the matter-gravity coupling paradigm
The coupling between matter and gravity in General Relativity is given by a
proportionality relation between the stress tensor and the geometry. This is an
oriented assumption driven by the fact that both the stress tensor and the
Einstein tensor are divergenceless. However, General Relativity is in essence a
nonlinear theory, so there is no obvious reason why the coupling to matter
should be linear. On another hand, modified theories of gravity usually affect
the vacuum dynamics, yet keep the coupling to matter linear. In this Letter we
address the implications of consistent nonlinear gravity/matter coupling. The
Eddington inspired Born-Infeld theory recently introduced by Banados and
Ferreira provides an enlightening realization of such coupling modifications.
We find that this theory coupled to a perfect fluid reduces to General
Relativity coupled to a nonlinearly modified perfect fluid, leading to an
ambiguity between modified coupling and modified equation of state. We discuss
observational consequences of this degeneracy and argue that such a completion
of General Relativity is viable from both an experimental and theoretical point
of view through energy conditions, consistency, and singularity-avoidance
perspectives. We use these results to discuss the impact of changing the
coupling paradigm.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, v2: revised version, v3: published versio
Breakdown of the classical double copy for the effective action of dilaton-gravity at NNLO
We demonstrate that a recently proposed classical double copy procedure to construct the effective action of two massive particles in dilaton-gravity from the analogous problem of two color charged particles in Yang-Mills gauge theory fails at next-to-next-to-leading orders in the post-Minkowskian (3PM) or post-Newtonian (2PN) expansions
Reduced Hamiltonian for next-to-leading order Spin-Squared Dynamics of General Compact Binaries
Within the post Newtonian framework the fully reduced Hamiltonian (i.e., with
eliminated spin supplementary condition) for the next-to-leading order
spin-squared dynamics of general compact binaries is presented. The Hamiltonian
is applicable to the spin dynamics of all kinds of binaries with
self-gravitating components like black holes and/or neutron stars taking into
account spin-induced quadrupolar deformation effects in second post-Newtonian
order perturbation theory of Einstein's field equations. The corresponding
equations of motion for spin, position and momentum variables are given in
terms of canonical Poisson brackets. Comparison with a nonreduced potential
calculated within the Effective Field Theory approach is made.Comment: 11 pages, minor changes to match published version at CQ
Isotopic evidence for biogenic molecular hydrogen production in the Atlantic Ocean
Oceans are a net source of molecular hydrogen (H2) to the atmosphere. The production of marine H2 is assumed to be mainly biological by N2 fixation, but photochemical pathways are also discussed. We present measurements of mole fraction and isotopic composition of dissolved and atmospheric H2 from the southern and northern Atlantic between 2008 and 2010. In total almost 400 samples were taken during five cruises along a transect between Punta Arenas (Chile) and Bremerhaven (Germany), as well as at the coast of Mauretania.
The isotopic source signatures of dissolved H2 extracted from surface water are highly deuterium-depleted and correlate negatively with temperature, showing δD values of (−629 ± 54) ‰ for water temperatures at (27 ± 3) °C and (−249 ± 88) ‰ below (19 ± 1) °C. The results for warmer water masses are consistent with biological production of H2. This is the first time that marine H2 excess has been directly attributed to biological production by isotope measurements. However, the isotope values obtained in the colder water masses indicate that beside possible biological production a significant different source should be considered.
The atmospheric measurements show distinct differences between both hemispheres as well as between seasons. Results from the global chemistry transport model TM5 reproduce the measured H2 mole fractions and isotopic composition well. The climatological global oceanic emissions from the GEMS database are in line with our data and previously published flux calculations. The good agreement between measurements and model results demonstrates that both the magnitude and the isotopic signature of the main components of the marine H2 cycle are in general adequately represented in current atmospheric models despite a proposed source different from biological production or a substantial underestimation of nitrogen fixation by several authors
Spin-squared Hamiltonian of next-to-leading order gravitational interaction
The static, i.e., linear momentum independent, part of the next-to-leading
order (NLO) gravitational spin(1)-spin(1) interaction Hamiltonian within the
post-Newtonian (PN) approximation is calculated from a 3-dim. covariant ansatz
for the Hamilton constraint. All coefficients in this ansatz can be uniquely
fixed for black holes. The resulting Hamiltonian fits into the canonical
formalism of Arnowitt, Deser, and Misner (ADM) and is given in their
transverse-traceless (ADMTT) gauge. This completes the recent result for the
momentum dependent part of the NLO spin(1)-spin(1) ADM Hamiltonian for binary
black holes (BBH). Thus, all PN NLO effects up to quadratic order in spin for
BBH are now given in Hamiltonian form in the ADMTT gauge. The equations of
motion resulting from this Hamiltonian are an important step toward more
accurate calculations of templates for gravitational waves.Comment: REVTeX4, 10 pages, v2: minor improvements in the presentation, v3:
added omission in Eq. (4) and corrected coefficients in the result, Eq. (9);
version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Non-Relativistic Gravitation: From Newton to Einstein and Back
We present an improvement to the Classical Effective Theory approach to the
non-relativistic or Post-Newtonian approximation of General Relativity. The
"potential metric field" is decomposed through a temporal Kaluza-Klein ansatz
into three NRG-fields: a scalar identified with the Newtonian potential, a
3-vector corresponding to the gravito-magnetic vector potential and a 3-tensor.
The derivation of the Einstein-Infeld-Hoffmann Lagrangian simplifies such that
each term corresponds to a single Feynman diagram providing a clear physical
interpretation. Spin interactions are dominated by the exchange of the
gravito-magnetic field. Leading correction diagrams corresponding to the 3PN
correction to the spin-spin interaction and the 2.5PN correction to the
spin-orbit interaction are presented.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures. v2: published version. v3: Added a computation
of Einstein-Infeld-Hoffmann in higher dimensions within our improved ClEFT
which partially confirms and partially corrects a previous computation. See
notes added at end of introductio
Entanglement and nonclassical properties of hypergraph states
Hypergraph states are multi-qubit states that form a subset of the locally
maximally entangleable states and a generalization of the well--established
notion of graph states. Mathematically, they can conveniently be described by a
hypergraph that indicates a possible generation procedure of these states;
alternatively, they can also be phrased in terms of a non-local stabilizer
formalism. In this paper, we explore the entanglement properties and
nonclassical features of hypergraph states. First, we identify the equivalence
classes under local unitary transformations for up to four qubits, as well as
important classes of five- and six-qubit states, and determine various
entanglement properties of these classes. Second, we present general conditions
under which the local unitary equivalence of hypergraph states can simply be
decided by considering a finite set of transformations with a clear
graph-theoretical interpretation. Finally, we consider the question whether
hypergraph states and their correlations can be used to reveal contradictions
with classical hidden variable theories. We demonstrate that various
noncontextuality inequalities and Bell inequalities can be derived for
hypergraph states.Comment: 29 pages, 5 figures, final versio
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