- #491
- 24,775
- 792
http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0606506
Strong gravitational lens probability in TeVeS
Da-Ming Chen, HongSheng Zhao
5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to ApJL
"We calculate the strong lensing probability with the image-separation greater than a given value [itex]\Delta\theta[/itex] and the image flux ratio [itex]q_r[/itex] less than 10 in a TeVeS (tensor-vector-scalar) cosmology, which is a relativistic version of the MOND (modified Newtonian dynamics). The lensing galaxy is modeled by the Hernquist profile. We assume a flat cosmology with [itex]\Omega_b=0.04[/itex] and the simplest interpolating function [itex]\mu(x)[/itex]
with [itex]\mu(x)=x[/itex] for [itex]x<1[/itex] and
[itex]\mu(x)=1[/itex] for [itex]x>1[/itex]. Our calculations show that MOND exhibits a very high lensing efficiency compared with the CDM paradigm. In order to match the well defined sample of the combined radio Cosmic Lens All-Sky Survey (CLASS) and Jodrell Bank/Very Large Array Astrometric Survey (JVAS), the upper limit of the mass of galaxies should be [itex]1.7\times 10^{11} M_\sun[/itex]. The galaxies produce much more large image-separation lenses in MOND regime than that in CDM regime, while at small image-separation both regimes match the observational data well."
I wish to highlight this because it is Modified Gravity phenomenology----testing the "Dark Matter" hypotheis against the TeVeS relativistic MOND.
I noticed the article initially because of a confusion of names, a different person (Hongbao Zhang) has reported from Beijing about some talks given this week by Carlo Rovelli.
Here is H-B Zhang's post on N.E.W.
http://www.math.columbia.edu/~woit/wordpress/?p=415#comment-12456
Here is H-B Zhang's blog
http://hongbaozhang.blog.edu.cn/user1/3890/
Carlo Rovelli is giving a series of talks about LQG scattering amplitudes at Beijing Normal coinciding with the international String 2006 conference.
In the following paper STUFF if a technical mathematical term
don't knock it might be interesting------comes from UC Riverside
http://arxiv.org/abs/math.QA/0601458
Categorified Algebra and Quantum Mechanics
Jeffrey Morton (University of California, Riverside)
67 pages, 25 figures
"Interest in combinatorial interpretations of mathematical entities stems from the convenience of the concrete models they provide. Finding a bijective proof of a seemingly obscure identity can reveal unsuspected significance to it. Finding a combinatorial model for some mathematical entity is a particular instance of the process called "categorification''. Examples include the interpretation of N as the Burnside rig of the category of finite sets with product and coproduct, and the interpretation of N[x] as the category of combinatorial species. This has interesting applications to quantum mechanics, and in particular the quantum harmonic oscillator, via Joyal's ``species'', a new generalization called ``stuff types'', and operators between these, which can be represented as rudimentary Feynman diagrams for the oscillator. In quantum mechanics, we want to represent states in an algebra over the complex numbers, and also want our Feynman diagrams to carry more structure than these ``stuff operators'' can do, and these turn out to be closely related. We will show how to construct a combinatorial model for the quantum harmonic oscillator in which the group of phases, U(1), plays a special role. We describe a general notion of "M-Stuff Types'' for any monoid M, and see that the case M=U(1) provides an interpretation of time evolution in the combinatorial setting, as well as other quantum mechanical features of the harmonic oscillator."
Strong gravitational lens probability in TeVeS
Da-Ming Chen, HongSheng Zhao
5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to ApJL
"We calculate the strong lensing probability with the image-separation greater than a given value [itex]\Delta\theta[/itex] and the image flux ratio [itex]q_r[/itex] less than 10 in a TeVeS (tensor-vector-scalar) cosmology, which is a relativistic version of the MOND (modified Newtonian dynamics). The lensing galaxy is modeled by the Hernquist profile. We assume a flat cosmology with [itex]\Omega_b=0.04[/itex] and the simplest interpolating function [itex]\mu(x)[/itex]
with [itex]\mu(x)=x[/itex] for [itex]x<1[/itex] and
[itex]\mu(x)=1[/itex] for [itex]x>1[/itex]. Our calculations show that MOND exhibits a very high lensing efficiency compared with the CDM paradigm. In order to match the well defined sample of the combined radio Cosmic Lens All-Sky Survey (CLASS) and Jodrell Bank/Very Large Array Astrometric Survey (JVAS), the upper limit of the mass of galaxies should be [itex]1.7\times 10^{11} M_\sun[/itex]. The galaxies produce much more large image-separation lenses in MOND regime than that in CDM regime, while at small image-separation both regimes match the observational data well."
I wish to highlight this because it is Modified Gravity phenomenology----testing the "Dark Matter" hypotheis against the TeVeS relativistic MOND.
I noticed the article initially because of a confusion of names, a different person (Hongbao Zhang) has reported from Beijing about some talks given this week by Carlo Rovelli.
Here is H-B Zhang's post on N.E.W.
http://www.math.columbia.edu/~woit/wordpress/?p=415#comment-12456
Here is H-B Zhang's blog
http://hongbaozhang.blog.edu.cn/user1/3890/
Carlo Rovelli is giving a series of talks about LQG scattering amplitudes at Beijing Normal coinciding with the international String 2006 conference.
In the following paper STUFF if a technical mathematical term
don't knock it might be interesting------comes from UC Riverside
http://arxiv.org/abs/math.QA/0601458
Categorified Algebra and Quantum Mechanics
Jeffrey Morton (University of California, Riverside)
67 pages, 25 figures
"Interest in combinatorial interpretations of mathematical entities stems from the convenience of the concrete models they provide. Finding a bijective proof of a seemingly obscure identity can reveal unsuspected significance to it. Finding a combinatorial model for some mathematical entity is a particular instance of the process called "categorification''. Examples include the interpretation of N as the Burnside rig of the category of finite sets with product and coproduct, and the interpretation of N[x] as the category of combinatorial species. This has interesting applications to quantum mechanics, and in particular the quantum harmonic oscillator, via Joyal's ``species'', a new generalization called ``stuff types'', and operators between these, which can be represented as rudimentary Feynman diagrams for the oscillator. In quantum mechanics, we want to represent states in an algebra over the complex numbers, and also want our Feynman diagrams to carry more structure than these ``stuff operators'' can do, and these turn out to be closely related. We will show how to construct a combinatorial model for the quantum harmonic oscillator in which the group of phases, U(1), plays a special role. We describe a general notion of "M-Stuff Types'' for any monoid M, and see that the case M=U(1) provides an interpretation of time evolution in the combinatorial setting, as well as other quantum mechanical features of the harmonic oscillator."
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