CWRU PAT Coffee Agenda

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

+1 Dynamics and Observer-Dependence of Holographic Screens.

lxj154 +1

+1 MHz Gravitational Wave Constraints with Decameter Michelson Interferometers.

cjc5 +1

+1 Caustics for Spherical Waves.

gds6 +1

+1 Beyond WIMPs: the Quark (Anti) Nugget Dark Matter.

gds6 +1

+1 The maximum sizes of large scale structures in alternative theories of gravity.

jtd55 +1

+1 Detecting the Neutrinos Mass Hierarchy from Cosmological Data.

gds6 +1

+1 Constraint on a varying proton-to-electron mass ratio from H2 and HD absorption at z = 2.34.

gds6 +1

+1 Inflation and pseudo-Goldstone Higgs.

oxg34 +1

+1 Gravity Spy: Integrating Advanced LIGO Detector Characterization, Machine Learning, and Citizen Science.

jtd55 +1

+1 Future 100 TeV colliders' safety in the context of stable micro black holes production.

jtd55 +1

Showing votes from 2016-11-15 11:30 to 2016-11-18 12:30 | Next meeting is Tuesday May 26th, 10:30 am.

users

  • No papers in this section today!

astro-ph.CO

  • Inflation and pseudo-Goldstone Higgs.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Tommi Alanne, Francesco Sannino, Tommi Tenkanen, Kimmo Tuominen
     

    We consider inflation within a model framework where the Higgs boson arises as a pseudo-Goldstone boson associated with the breaking of a global symmetry at a scale significantly larger than the electroweak one. We show that in such a model the scalar self-couplings can be parametrically suppressed and, consequently, the non-minimal couplings to gravity can be of order one or less, while the inflationary predictions of the model remain compatible with the precision cosmological observations. Furthermore, in the model we study, the existence of the electroweak scale is entirely due to the inflaton field. Our model therefore suggests that inflation and low energy particle phenomenology may be more entwined than assumed so far.

astro-ph.HE

  • Gravity Spy: Integrating Advanced LIGO Detector Characterization, Machine Learning, and Citizen Science.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Michael Zevin, Scott Coughlin, Sara Bahaadini, Emre Besler, Neda Rohani, Sarah Allen, Miriam Cabero, Kevin Crowston, Aggelos Katsaggelos, Shane Larson, Tae Kyoung Lee, Chris Lintott, Tyson Littenberg, Andrew Lundgren, Carsten Oesterlund, Joshua Smith, Laura Trouille, Vicky Kalogera
     

    (abridged for arXiv) With the first direct detection of gravitational waves, the Advanced Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) has initiated a new field of astronomy by providing an alternate means of sensing the universe. The extreme sensitivity required to make such detections is achieved through exquisite isolation of all sensitive components of LIGO from non-gravitational-wave disturbances. Nonetheless, LIGO is still susceptible to a variety of instrumental and environmental sources of noise that contaminate the data. Of particular concern are noise features known as glitches, which are transient and non-Gaussian in their nature, and occur at a high enough rate so that accidental coincidence between the two LIGO detectors is non-negligible. In this paper we describe an innovative project that combines crowdsourcing with machine learning to aid in the challenging task of categorizing all of the glitches recorded by the LIGO detectors. Through the Zooniverse platform, we engage and recruit volunteers from the public to categorize images of glitches into pre-identified morphological classes and to discover new classes that appear as the detectors evolve. In addition, machine learning algorithms are used to categorize images after being trained on human-classified examples of the morphological classes. Leveraging the strengths of both classification methods, we create a combined method with the aim of improving the efficiency and accuracy of each individual classifier. The resulting classification and characterization should help LIGO scientists to identify causes of glitches and subsequently eliminate them from the data or the detector entirely, thereby improving the rate and accuracy of gravitational-wave observations. We demonstrate these methods using a small subset of data from LIGO's first observing run.

  • Future 100 TeV colliders' safety in the context of stable micro black holes production.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Anton V. Sokolov, Maxim S. Pshirkov
     

    In the theories with extra dimensions the higher-dimensional Planck mass could be as small as 1 TeV, that entails the possibility that a considerable amount of microscopic black holes can be produced during runs of future high energy colliders. According to the laws of quantum theory, these black holes are supposed to evaporate immediately; however, due to the lack of the experimental data confirming this process as well as in absence of a reliable theory of quantum gravity, for the exhaustive analysis of safety one has to consider the worst case in which the micro black holes could be stable. In this paper we consider the theories with the different number of extra dimensions and deduce which of them yield Earth's accretion times smaller than the lifetime of the Solar system. We calculate the cross sections of the black hole production at the 100 TeV collider, the fraction of the black holes trapped inside the Earth and the resulting rate of production. We study the astrophysical consequences of stable micro black holes existence, in particular its influence on the stability of white dwarfs and neutron stars. Several mechanisms of the micro black hole production, which were not considered before, are taken into account. Finally, using the astrophysical constraints we derive expected number of 'dangerous' black holes from the future 100 TeV terrestrial experiments.

astro-ph.GA

  • No papers in this section today!

astro-ph.IM

  • No papers in this section today!

gr-qc

  • Dynamics and Observer-Dependence of Holographic Screens.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Raphael Bousso, Mudassir Moosa
     

    We study the evolution of holographic screens, both generally and in explicit examples, including cosmology and gravitational collapse. A screen $H$ consists of a one-parameter sequence of maximal surfaces called leaves. Its causal structure is nonrelativistic. Each leaf can store all of the quantum information on a corresponding null slice holographically, at no more than one bit per Planck area. Therefore, we expect the screen geometry to reflect certain coarse-grained quantities in the quantum gravity theory. In a given spacetime, there are many different screens, which are naturally associated to different observers. We find that this ambiguity corresponds precisely to the free choice of a single function on $H$. We also consider the background-free construction of $H$, where the spacetime is not given. The evolution equations then constrain aspects of the full spacetime and the screen's embedding in it.

hep-ph

  • No papers in this section today!

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!