2,627 research outputs found
Cosmic microwave background anisotropies: Nonlinear dynamics
We develop a new approach to local nonlinear effects in cosmic microwave
background anisotropies, and discuss the qualitative features of these effects.
New couplings of the baryonic velocity to radiation multipoles are found,
arising from nonlinear Thomson scattering effects. We also find a new nonlinear
shear effect on small angular scales. The full set of evolution and constraint
equations is derived, including the nonlinear generalizations of the radiation
multipole hierarchy, and of the dynamics of multi-fluids. These equations
govern radiation anisotropies in any inhomogeneous spacetime, but their main
application is to second-order effects in a universe that is close to the
Friedmann models. Qualitative analysis is given here, and quantitative
calculations are taken up in further papers.Comment: Revised version, with some important corrections and improved
clarity, highlighting the new results on nonlinear Thomson scattering effects
and nonlinear shear effects. To appear Phys Rev
The ESO Spectroscopic facility
We present the concept of a novel facility dedicated to massively-multiplexed
spectroscopy. The telescope has a very wide field Cassegrain focus optimised
for fibre feeding. With a Field of View (FoV) of 2.5 degrees diameter and a
11.4m pupil, it will be the largest etendue telescope. The large focal plane
can easily host up to 16.000 fibres. In addition, a gravity invariant focus for
the central 10 arc-minutes is available to host a giant integral field unit
(IFU). The 3 lenses corrector includes an ADC, and has good performance in the
360-1300 nm wavelength range. The top level science requirements were developed
by a dedicated ESO working group, and one of the primary cases is high
resolution spectroscopy of GAIA stars and, in general, how our Galaxy formed
and evolves. The facility will therefore be equipped with both, high and low
resolution spectrographs. We stress the importance of developing the telescope
and instrument designs simultaneously. The most relevant R\&D aspect is also
briefly discussed.Comment: 6 pages 4 figures , presented at IAU Symposium 334 "rediscovering our
galaxy
Semantic categorisation of a word supports its phonological integrity in verbal short-term memory
In three immediate serial recall (ISR) experiments we tested the hypothesis that interactive processing between semantics and phonology supports phonological coherence in verbal short-term memory (STM). Participants categorised spoken words in six-item lists as they were presented, according to their semantic or phonological properties, then repeated the items in presentation order (Experiment 1). Despite matched categorisation performance between conditions, semantically-categorised words were correctly recalled more often than phonologically-categorised words. This accuracy advantage in the semantic condition was accompanied by fewer phoneme recombination errors. Comparisons with a no- categorisation ISR baseline (Experiment 2) indicated that, although categorisations were disruptive overall, recombination errors were specifically rarer following semantic cate- gorisation. Experiment 3 replicated the key findings from Experiment 1 and also revealed fewer phonologically-related errors following semantic categorisation compared to a per- ceptual categorisation of high or low pitch. Therefore, augmented activation of semantic representations stabilises the phonological traces of words within verbal short-term memory, in line with the ‘‘semantic binding” hypothesis
Vision-based traffic surveys in urban environments
This paper presents a state-of-the-art, vision-based vehicle detection and type classification to perform traffic surveys from a roadside closed-circuit television camera. Vehicles are detected using background subtraction based on a Gaussian mixture model that can cope with vehicles that become stationary over a significant period of time. Vehicle silhouettes are described using a combination of shape and appearance features using an intensity-based pyramid histogram of orientation gradients (HOG). Classification is performed using a support vector machine, which is trained on a small set of hand-labeled silhouette exemplars. These exemplars are identified using a model-based preclassifier that utilizes calibrated images mapped by Google Earth to provide accurately surveyed scene geometry matched to visible image landmarks. Kalman filters track the vehicles to enable classification by majority voting over several consecutive frames. The system counts vehicles and separates them into four categories: car, van, bus, and motorcycle (including bicycles). Experiments with real-world data have been undertaken to evaluate system performance and vehicle detection rates of 96.45% and classification accuracy of 95.70% have been achieved on this data.The authors gratefully acknowledge the Royal Borough of Kingston for providing the video data. S.A. Velastin is grateful to funding received from the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration under grant agreement nº 600371, el Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (COFUND2013-51509) and Banco Santander
1+3 Covariant Cosmic Microwave Background anisotropies II: The almost - Friedmann Lemaitre model
This is the second of a series of papers extending the 1+3 covariant and
gauge invariant treatment of kinetic theory to an examination of Cosmic
Microwave Background temperature anisotropies arising from inhomogeneities in
the early universe. The first paper dealt with algebraic issues.
Here we derive the mode form of the integrated Boltzmann equations, first,
giving a covariant version of the standard derivation using the mode recursion
relations, second, demonstrating the link to the multipole divergence equations
and finally various analytic ways of solving the resulting equations are
discussed.
A general integral form of solution is obtained for the equations with
Thomson scattering. The covariant Friedmann-Lemaitre multipole form of the
transport equations are found using the covariant and gauge-invariant
generalization of the Peebles and Yu expansion in Thompson scattering time. The
dispersion relations and damping scale are then obtained from the covariant
approach. The equations are integrated to give the covariant and
gauge-invariant equivalent of the canonical scalar sourced anisotropies.
We carry out a simple treatment of the matter dominated free-streaming
projection, slow decoupling, and tight-coupling cases, with the aim both giving
a unified transparent derivation of this range of results and clarifying the
connection between the more usual approaches (for example that of Hu and
Sugiyama) and the treatment for scalar perturbations (for example the treatment
of Challinor and Lasenby).Comment: To appear in Annals of Physic
Cover crops in Missouri : putting them to work on your farm (2016)
New 8/15; Link updates 4/16/Web
Constructing a flexible model of integrated professional practice part 2 - process and practice issues
Four Generations and Higgs Physics
In the light of the LHC, we revisit the implications of a fourth generation
of chiral matter. We identify a specific ensemble of particle masses and
mixings that are in agreement with all current experimental bounds as well as
minimize the contributions to electroweak precision observables. Higgs masses
between 115-315 (115-750) GeV are allowed by electroweak precision data at the
68% and 95% CL. Within this parameter space, there are dramatic effects on
Higgs phenomenology: production rates are enhanced, weak-boson-fusion channels
are suppressed, angular distributions are modified, and Higgs pairs can we
observed. We also identify exotic signals, such as Higgs decay to same-sign
dileptons. Finally, we estimate the upper bound on the cutoff scale from vacuum
stability and triviality.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, REVTe
Continental breakup and UHP rock exhumation in action: GPS results from the Woodlark Rift, Papua New Guinea
We show results from a network of campaign Global Positioning System (GPS) sites in the Woodlark Rift, southeastern Papua New Guinea, in a transition from seafloor spreading to continental rifting. GPS velocities indicate anticlockwise rotation (at 2–2.7°/Myr, relative to Australia) of crustal blocks north of the rift, producing 10–15 mm/yr of extension in the continental rift, increasing to 20–40 mm/yr of seafloor spreading at the Woodlark Spreading Center. Extension in the continental rift is distributed among multiple structures. These data demonstrate that low-angle normal faults in the continents, such as the Mai'iu Fault, can slip at high rates nearing 10 mm/yr. Extensional deformation observed in the D'Entrecasteaux Islands, the site of the world's only actively exhuming Ultra-High Pressure (UHP) rock terrane, supports the idea that extensional processes play a critical role in UHP rock exhumation. GPS data do not require significant interseismic coupling on faults in the region, suggesting that much of the deformation may be aseismic. Westward transfer of deformation from the Woodlark Spreading Center to the main plate boundary fault in the continental rift (the Mai'iu fault) is accommodated by clockwise rotation of a tectonic block beneath Goodenough Bay, and by dextral strike slip on transfer faults within (and surrounding) Normanby Island. Contemporary extension rates in the Woodlark Spreading Center are 30–50% slower than those from seafloor spreading-derived magnetic anomalies. The 0.5 Ma to present seafloor spreading estimates for the Woodlark Basin may be overestimated, and a reevaluation of these data in the context of the GPS rates is warranted
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