CWRU PAT Coffee Agenda

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

+2 A new general relativistic contribution to Mercury's perihelion advance.

jtd55 +1 kxp265 +1

+1 Machine learning cosmological structure formation.

mro28 +1

+1 Constraining screened fifth forces with the electron magnetic moment.

oxg34 +1

+1 Compactified Cosmological Simulations of the Infinite Universe. - [UPDATED]

cxt282 +1

Showing votes from 2018-02-13 11:30 to 2018-02-16 12:30 | Next meeting is Tuesday Aug 5th, 10:30 am.

users

  • No papers in this section today!

astro-ph.CO

  • Constraining screened fifth forces with the electron magnetic moment.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Philippe Brax, Anne-Christine Davis, Benjamin Elder, Leong Khim Wong
     

    Chameleon and symmetron theories serve as archetypal models for how light scalar fields can couple to matter with gravitational strength or greater, yet evade the stringent constraints from classical tests of gravity on Earth and in the Solar System. In this work, we investigate how a precision measurement of the electron magnetic moment places meaningful constraints on both chameleons and symmetrons. Two effects are identified: First, virtual chameleons and symmetrons run in loops to generate quantum corrections to the intrinsic value of the magnetic moment; a common process widely considered in the literature for many beyond-the-Standard-Model scenarios. A second effect, however, is unique to scalar fields that exhibit screening. A scalar bubble-like profile forms inside the experimental vacuum chamber and exerts a fifth force on the electron, leading to a systematic shift in the experimental measurement. In quantifying this latter effect, we present a novel approach that combines analytic arguments and a small number of numerical simulations to solve for the bubble-like profile quickly for a large range of model parameters. Taken together, both effects yield interesting constraints in complementary regions of parameter space. While the constraints we obtain for the chameleon are largely uncompetitive with those in the existing literature, this still represents the tightest constraint achievable yet from an experiment not originally designed to search for fifth forces. We break more ground with the symmetron, for which our results exclude a large and previously unexplored region of parameter space. Central to this achievement are the quantum correction terms, which are able to constrain symmetrons with masses in the range $\mu \in [10^{-3.88},10^8]\,\text{eV}$, whereas other experiments have hitherto only been sensitive to one or two orders of magnitude at a time. [Abridged]

  • Compactified Cosmological Simulations of the Infinite Universe.- [PDF] - [Article] - [UPDATED]

    Gábor Rácz, István Szapudi, István Csabai, László Dobos
     

    We present a novel $N$-body simulation method that compactifies the infinite spatial extent of the Universe into a finite sphere with isotropic boundary conditions to follow the evolution of the large-scale structure. Our approach eliminates the need for periodic boundary conditions, a mere numerical convenience which is not supported by observation and which modifies the law of force on large scales in an unrealistic fashion. We demonstrate that our method outclasses standard simulations executed on workstation-scale hardware in dynamic range, it is balanced in following a comparable number of high and low $k$ modes and, its fundamental geometry and topology match observations. Our approach is also capable of simulating an expanding, infinite universe in static coordinates with Newtonian dynamics. The price of these achievements is that most of the simulated volume has smoothly varying mass and spatial resolution, an approximation that carries different systematics than periodic simulations. Our initial implementation of the method is called StePS which stands for Stereographically Projected Cosmological Simulations. It uses stereographic projection for space compactification and naive $\mathcal{O}(N^2)$ force calculation which is nevertheless faster to arrive at a correlation function of the same quality than any standard (tree or P$^3$M) algorithm with similar spatial and mass resolution. The $N^2$ force calculation is easy to adapt to modern graphics cards, hence our code can function as a high-speed prediction tool for modern large-scale surveys. To learn about the limits of the respective methods, we compare StePS with GADGET-2 \citep{Gadget2_2005MNRAS.364.1105S} running matching initial conditions.

astro-ph.HE

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astro-ph.GA

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astro-ph.IM

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gr-qc

  • A new general relativistic contribution to Mercury's perihelion advance.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Clifford M. Will
     

    We point out the existence of a new general relativistic contribution to the perihelion advance of Mercury that, while smaller than the contributions arising from the solar quadrupole moment and angular momentum, is 100 times larger than the second-post-Newtonian contribution. It arises in part from relativistic "cross-terms" in the post-Newtonian equations of motion between Mercury's interaction with the Sun and with the other planets, and in part from an interaction between Mercury's motion and the gravitomagnetic field of the moving planets. At a few parts in $10^6$ of the leading general relativistic precession of 42.98 arcseconds per century, these effects are likely to be detectable by the BepiColombo mission to place and track two orbiters around Mercury, scheduled for launch around 2018.

hep-ph

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hep-th

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hep-ex

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quant-ph

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other

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