CWRU PAT Coffee Agenda

Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30

+2 Preferred axis in cosmology.

mro28 +1 jtd55 +1

+1 Isolating the Lyman Alpha Forest BAO Anomaly.

sxa507 +1

+1 Mission to the Gravitational Focus of the Sun: A Critical Analysis.

cjc5 +1

+1 gevolution: a cosmological N-body code based on General Relativity.

jbm120 +1

+1 Statistical Test of Distance-Duality Relation with Type Ia Supernovae and Baryon Acoustic Oscillations.

cjc5 +1

+1 Pure Gravitational Dark Matter, Its Mass and Signatures.

jtd55 +1

+1 One Bubble to Rule Them All.

bump   kxp265 +1

+1 New Forces and the 750 GeV Resonance.

kxp265 +1

+1 Understanding the LIGO GW150914 event.

jtd55 +1

0 Measurement of the integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect using the AllWISE data release.

bump   mro28 +1

Showing votes from 2016-04-19 11:30 to 2016-04-22 12:30 | Next meeting is Friday May 1st, 11:30 am.

users

  • No papers in this section today!

astro-ph.CO

  • Understanding the LIGO GW150914 event.- [PDF] - [Article]

    P. Naselsky, A. D. Jackson, Hao Liu
     

    We present a simplified method for the extraction of meaningful signals from Hanford and Livingstone 32 seconds data for the GW150914 event made publicly available by the LIGO collaboration and demonstrate its ability to reproduce the LIGO collaboration's own results quantitatively given the assumption that all narrow peaks in the power spectrum are a consequence of physically uninteresting signals and can be removed. After the clipping of these peaks and return to the time domain, the GW150914 event is readily distinguished from broadband background noise. This simple technique allows us to identify the GW150914 event without any assumption regarding its physical origin and with minimal assumptions regarding its shape. We also confirm that the LIGO GW150914 event is uniquely correlated in the Hanford and Livingston detectors for 4096 second data at the level of $6-7\,\sigma$ with a temporal displacement of $\tau=6.9 \pm 0.4\,$ms. We have also identified a few events that are morphologically close to GW150914 but less strongly cross correlated with it.

astro-ph.HE

  • No papers in this section today!

astro-ph.GA

  • No papers in this section today!

astro-ph.IM

  • Mission to the Gravitational Focus of the Sun: A Critical Analysis.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Geoffrey A. Landis
     

    The gravitational field of the sun will focus light from a distant source to a focal point at a minimal distance of 500 Astronomical Units from the sun. A proposed mission to this gravitational focus could use the sun as a very large lens, allowing (in principle) a large amplification of signal from the target, and a very high magnification. This article discusses some of the difficulties involved in using the sun as such a gravitational telescope for a candidate mission, that of imaging the surface of a previously-detected exoplanet. These difficulties include the pointing and focal length, and associated high magnification; the signal to noise ratio associated with the solar corona, and the focal blur. In addition, a method to calculate the signal gain and magnification is derived using the first-order deflection calculation and classical optics, showing that the gain is finite for an on-axis source of non-zero area.

gr-qc

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hep-ph

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hep-th

  • No papers in this section today!

hep-ex

  • No papers in this section today!

quant-ph

  • No papers in this section today!

other

  • No papers in this section today!