Academic literature on the topic 'Brand gravity'

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Journal articles on the topic "Brand gravity"

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Panjaitan, Roymon, and Farida Indriani. "Brand Gravity-Resonance Capability on Brand Love: a Resource-Advantage theory Perspective." Media Ekonomi dan Manajemen 27, no. 1 (January 4, 2022): 17. http://dx.doi.org/10.24856/mem.v27i01.2546.

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<p>This research intends to explore the experience of using brands in the past to increasingly love product brands through brand gravity-resonance capability, especially in the competition of the multi-business product sector. The novelty of this study lies in the synthesis of brand gravity variables, and brand resonance provides the proposed brand gravity-resonance capability variables of the resource-advantage theory of competition proposition results. Data were collected from 499 small and medium-sized business respondents through the dissemination of questionnaires and interviews. The SEM-PLS technique analyzes data with a path mediated by brand gravity-resonance capability on brand love. The results showed that brand gravity-resonance capability successfully mediated the brand experience relationship in brand love and the direct connection of brand experience in the past, and brand gravity-resonance capability in brand love managed to increase the sense of brand love. The practical implications of the novelty of this variable provide improvements to MSME managers or businesses to resonate the value of digital aggressiveness, configure science, integrate customer systems, and be oriented towards the creation of new markets. Conceptual implications contribute as new conceptual models that can bridge negative experiences to result in a dynamic and competitive comparative advantage in the market.</p>
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Mitchell, Alan. "The Laws of Brand Gravity." International Commerce Review 10, no. 1 (March 8, 2011): 76–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12146-011-0066-z.

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Kajal, MFI, MH Rashid, ME Uddin, and MR Zaman. "Qualities of full-cream powdered milk of different brands available in retail markets of Bangladesh." Bangladesh Journal of Animal Science 41, no. 2 (March 10, 2013): 106–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/bjas.v41i2.14125.

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The present experiment was conducted to evaluate the physical and microbiological qualities of whole powdered milk of six different brands (Kwality, NIDO, Diploma, Anchor, Farmland and Starship) available in retail market at Mymensingh town. Each brand was considered as treatment and three samples (replications) were taken for each brand. For this purpose, powdered milk samples were collected and analyzed to know the physical parameters mainly color, flavor, taste, solubility, appearance and specific gravity, and microbiological qualities such as total viable bacterial count and coliform count. In case of physical quality, all the six brands possessed the good quality grade and no significant difference was observed except that of specific gravity which varied significantly among the brands. Specific gravity was almost similar to the normal cow milk when the dried milk was reconstituted. Significant variations (p<o.o1) in total viable counts among different powdered milk brands was observed. No coliforms were detected which indicated that good sanitary measures were adopted during the manufacture and storage of the powdered milk samples. In conclusion, it can be said that all brands of powdered milk possessed the recommend suggested standard in terms of both physical and microbiological qualities.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3329/bjas.v41i2.14125 Bang. J. Anim. Sci. 2012. 41 (2): 106-111
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Rajagopal. "Brand Gravity and Performance in Satellite Markets." Journal of Transnational Management 14, no. 4 (November 30, 2009): 292–308. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15475770903325050.

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Kang, Jin-Hee. "Analysis of the Effect of Second Brand Strategy of Foodservice Company Applying Brand Gravity Model." International Journal of Tourism Management and Sciences 32, no. 5 (August 31, 2017): 1–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.21719/ijtms.32.5.1.

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Waterman, David. "Unbranding: Disenfranchising Terrorism, Disenchanting Terror." Proceedings of the International Crisis and Risk Communication Conference 4 (2021): 64–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.30658/icrcc.2021.16.

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The Theory of Brand Reduction (TBR), or unbranding, genericizes an organizational brand in order to reduce or limit its impact within its category or brand group. Unbranding asserts a product is identified by its brand and is perceived by stakeholders based on the characteristics of that brand. For example, terror is a product of some organizations - a means to an end - usually political in natural. Unbranding posits the center of gravity (COG) of an extremist group or organization is its brand. Current and previous counter-terrorism efforts have addressed elements of products but not the source of power of the brand. Unbranding posits that terror is a product and terrorism is a franchise into which members ‘buy’ a brand of terror, establish a franchise of their own, using or adapting franchise ‘rules’ but relying on the franchise brand value and name to grow and expand. This paper explicates the core concept of unbranding and proposes six hypotheses for future research.
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Perera, Prameesha, Helani Munasinghe, and R. A. U. J. Marapana. "Quality Assessment of Selected Dairy Products in Sri Lankan Market." Journal of Food Quality 2019 (January 23, 2019): 1–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/6972427.

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The purpose of the study was to determine the quality of selected Sri Lankan-marketed dairy products. Four brands of full cream milk powder (FCMP) (imported A and B; local C and D) and three brands of pasteurized milk (PM) attributed to the alphabetical identifies E, F, and G were tested, with raw cow’s milk (CM) as control. Fat, protein, ash, carbohydrate, moisture, and water percentage, total solids (TS), titratable acidity (TA), pH, specific gravity (SG), arsenic content, and total coliform count (TCC) were assessed. The average fat and ash content per serving of milk (SOM) of FCMP was significantly lower than the PM and CM. Highest (p>0.05) protein content (7.58 g ± 1.05) was recorded for CM. Carbohydrate and pH were not significantly different in three types of milk products. FCMP had a significantly lower (p<0.05) TA of, 0.18 ± 0.02 than the PM, 0.20 ± 0.02. Specific gravity in Brands D (1.033 ± 0.00) and E (1.033 ± 0.00) was significantly higher (p>0.05) compared to the CM (1.030 ± 0.00). All the abovementioned parameters between imported and locally produced FCMP brands were not significantly different from each other. In imported FCMP, mean moisture % was significantly higher (p>0.05) than local brands; however, in each FCMP, brand mean moisture % was statistically non-significant. Total solids in PM was significantly lower (p<0.05) than the CM. Every tested sample was free of arsenic. However, all PM brands and B of FCMP were contaminated with coliform. Total coliform count in B and E agreed with the Sri Lankan standard level. Nutritional value in SOM of PM and FCMP was less than CM, while the lowest value was recorded in FCMP. It can be concluded that all brands of powdered milk possess the recommend suggested standards in terms of both physicochemical and microbiological qualities. Though the physicochemical characteristics in PM brands agree with the standard levels, microbial hygiene is poor where coliform contamination was very high in Brand E.
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Sawaguchi, Takashi. "Geoscience education using a brand-new Google Earth." Terrae Didatica 14, no. 4 (December 5, 2018): 415–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.20396/td.v14i4.8654165.

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A brand-new browser-based Google Earth version 9.0 has been released in April 2017. This paper presents pedagogical ideas for geoscience education using Google Earth. Several KML files representing geospatial data and images are compiled into a downloadable file. Students can learn geoscience subjects through step-by-step interactive activities as they observe various geological and geographical information such as topography, bathymetry, volcanoes , ocean floor age, gravity anomaly and so on.
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Suryani, Monica. "Manufacture Glycerol Byproducts From Waste Cooking Oil Through The Transesterification Process In Various Brands Of Oil In The Indonesian Market." International Journal of Science, Technology & Management 2, no. 3 (May 28, 2021): 791–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.46729/ijstm.v2i3.192.

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Abstract. Waste cooking oil is oil that has been used repeatedly, up to 2-4 times in the frying pan. The large number of Indonesian people who often consume waste cooking oil due to economic factors. The use of oil repeatedly reduces the nutritional value and affects the quality and value of fried food ingredients. However, this waste is very useful, it can be processed into glycerol which is useful in the cosmetic industry. The objective of this research is to prove that the glycerol byproduct of waste cooking oil with various oil brands in the Indonesian market has similar functional groups to commercial glycerol. The research was carried out experimentally by making glycerol using waste cooking oil. Glycerol is made using a transesterification process. Transesterification (alcoholic reaction) is a vegetable fat or oil that is reacted with alcohol to produce an ester and glycerol as a byproduct with the help of an alkaline catalyst. Evaluation of glycerol includes organoleptic, specific gravity, viscosity, glycerol content, ash content, moisture content, and sugar content. The results of the study using FTIR showed that the commercial glycerol wave number was 3291cm-1, brand X at 3291cm-1, and brand Y at 3267cm-1, which indicated the presence of an OH (hydroxyl) group. Commercial glycerol absorption bands at 2931 and 2877 cm-1, brand X at 2933 and 2879 cm-1, and brand Y at 2931 and 2877cm-1, indicating the presence of aliphatic (alkyl) CH groups. Based on the research results, it can be concluded that the glycerol byproduct of waste cooking oil using the Indonesian market brands X and Y has similar functional groups to commercial glycerol. However, glycerol is the byproduct of waste cooking oil brand X which has the most similarities with commercial glycerol. Keyword: waste cooking oil, glycerol, transesterification, oil Indonesian market
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Rousseaux, Germain, and Hamid Kellay. "Classical hydrodynamics for analogue space–times: open channel flows and thin films." Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences 378, no. 2177 (July 20, 2020): 20190233. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2019.0233.

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Here we review the way to build analogue space–times in open channel flows by looking at the flow phase diagram and the corresponding analogue experiments performed during the last years in the associated flow regimes. Thin films like the circular jump with different dispersive properties are discussed with the introduction of a brand new system for the next generation of analogue gravity experiments: flowing soap films with their capillary/elastic waves. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘The next generation of analogue gravity experiments’.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Brand gravity"

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Dent, James Blackman. "Cosmology and gravity in the brane world." Texas A&M University, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/2619.

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The cosmology in the Hubble expansion era of the Horava-Witten M-theory compactified on a Calabi-Yau threefold is studied in the reduction to five-dimensions where the effects of the Calabi-Yau manifold are summarized by the volume modulus, and all perturbative potentials are included. Matter on the branes are treated as first order perturbations of the static vacuum solution, and all equations in the bulk and all boundary conditions on both end branes are imposed. It is found that for a static volume modulus and a static fifth dimension, y, one can recover the four dimensional Robertson-Friedmann-Walker cosmology for relativistic matter on the branes, but not for non-relativistic matter. For relativistic matter, the Hubble parameter H becomes independent of y to first order in matter density, and if a consistent solution for nonrelativistic matter exists it would require H to be y dependent. These results hold also when an arbitrary number of 5-branes are included in the bulk. The five dimensional Horava-Witten model is compared with the Randall Sundrum phenomenology with a scalar field in the bulk where a bulk and brane potential are used so that the vacuum solutions can be rigorously obtained.(In the Appendix, the difficulty of obtaining approximate vacuum solutions for other potentials is discussed.) In this case nonrelativistic matter is accommodated by allowing the distance between the branes to vary. It is suggested that non-perturbative potentials for the vacuum solution of Horava-Witten theory are needed to remove the inconsistency that non-relativistic matter creates. Also considered is the problem of gravitational forces between point particles on the branes in a Randall-Sundrum (R-S) two brane model with S1/Z2 symmetry. Matter is assumed to produce a perturbation to the R-S vacuum metric and all the 5D Einstein equations are solved to linearized order (for arbitrary matter on both branes). We show that while the gauge condition hi5 = 0, i = 0, 1, 2, 3 can always be achieved without brane bending, the condition h55 = 0 leads to large brane bending. The static potential arising from the zero modes and the corrections due to the Kaluza-Klein (KK) modes are calculated. Gravitational forces on the Planck (y1 = 0) brane recover Newtonian physics with small KK corrections (in accord with other work). However, forces on the TeV (y2) brane due to particles on that brane are strongly distorted by large R-S exponentials, making the model in disagreement with experiment if the TeV brane is the physical brane.
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Page, David C. "Brane probes and gauge theory/gravity dualities." Thesis, Durham University, 2002. http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/4626/.

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We examine the use of branes as probes of supergravity geometries which arise in the study of gauge theory/gravity dualities. We investigate the moduh spaces of supersymmetric gauge theories through moduh spaces of brane probes in the dual gravity theories. Preferred coordinate systems emerge in which the supergravity geometries can readily be compared to the gauge theory and various gauge theory quantities such as anomalous scaling dimensions can be read off. We also consider the physics of certain expanded brane configurations, called giant gravitons. We identify supergravity solutions which represent coherent states of these objects. We find a degeneracy between giant graviton probes and massless particles in a broad class of supergravity backgrounds and uncover a close relationship with charged particle states in lower dimensions.
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Panassiti, Antonio. "General relativity limit of Brans-Dicke gravity." Master's thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2021. http://amslaurea.unibo.it/23344/.

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In Brans-Dicke gravity a scalar field non-minimally coupled with the curvature acts as a new gravitational degree of freedom in addition to the usual metric field of General Relativity. Usually, when the coupling ω of the scalar field diverges, the latter approaches a constant and the solutions of the theory reduce to those generated by the Einstein equations with the same energy-momentum tensor as source. However, in the limit ω → ∞, the static and spherically symmetric vacuum solutions, called Brans solutions, do not reduce to the Schwarzschild metric, the only solution of General Relativity with the same type of symmetry. In this work we test their limit with a new method. Unlike the usual way, we use the Brans solutions to take the limit at the level of the equations. Since these are non-linear field equations depending on ω, in principle our procedure could lead to a different outcome. In particular, we take advantage of the Einstein frame formulation of the Brans-Dicke theory and we check if the solutions are able to satisfy the equations of the so called Minimal Geometric Deformation approach. Namely, we study if they can be seen as a geometric deformation - due to the Brans-Dicke scalar - of the Schwarzschild solution. Indeed, the peculiar feature of the geometric deformation is that it is built in such a way to guarantee a clear limit to the vacuum equations of General Relativity. However, we find that the Brans solutions do not meet all the requirements imposed by the structure of the Minimal Geometric Deformation approach. This result supports the conclusion that there is no simple limiting procedure in which the complete Brans-Dicke theory just reduces to General Relativity.
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Holden, Damien James. "Generalised Brans-Dicke cosmology." Thesis, University of Portsmouth, 2002. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.247071.

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Carter, Benedict Miles Nicholas. "Higher Dimensional Gravity, Black Holes and Brane Worlds." Thesis, University of Canterbury. Physics and Astronomy, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/10092/1273.

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Current research is focussed on extending our knowledge of how gravity behaves on small scales and near black hole horizons, with various modifications which may probe the low energy limits of quantum gravity. This thesis is concerned with such modifications to gravity and their implications. In chapter two thermodynamical stability analyses are performed on higher dimensional Kerr anti de Sitter black holes. We find conditions for the black holes to be able to be in thermal equilibrium with their surroundings and for the background to be stable against classical tensor perturbations. In chapter three new spherically symmetric gravastar solutions, stable to radial perturbations, are found by utilising the construction of Visser and Wiltshire. The solutions possess an anti de Sitter or de Sitter interior and a Schwarzschild (anti) de Sitter or Reissner Nordstrom exterior. We find a wide range of parameters which allow stable gravastar solutions, and present the different qualitative behaviors of the equation of state for these parameters. In chapter four a six dimensional warped brane world compactification of the Salam-Sezgin supergravity model is constructed by generalizing an earlier hybrid Kaluza Klein / Randall Sundrum construction. We demonstrate that the model reproduces localized gravity on the brane in the expected form of a Newtonian potential with Yukawa type corrections. We show that allowed parameter ranges include values which potentially solve the hierarchy problem. The class of solutions given applies to Ricci flat geometries in four dimensions, and consequently includes brane world realisations of the Schwarzschild and Kerr black holes as particular examples. Arguments are given which suggest that the hybrid compactification of the Salam Sezgin model can be extended to reductions to arbitrary Einstein space geometries in four dimensions. This work furthers our understanding of higher dimensional general relativity, which is potentially interesting given the possibility that higher dimensions may become observable at the TeV scale, which will be probed in the Large Hadron Collider in the next few years.
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Moskovic, Micha. "Holographic backgrounds from D-brane probes." Doctoral thesis, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/209307.

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The gauge/string correspondence provides a non-perturbative definition of string theory and hence quantum gravity in some backgrounds, making it possible to translate statements about strongly coupled quantum field theories into results about gravity.

In this thesis, we focus on the derivation of holographic backgrounds from the field theory, without using any supergravity input. Instead, we rely crucially on the addition of probe D-branes to the stack of D-branes generating the background.

From the field theory description of the probe branes in the presence of the background branes, one can compute an effective action for the probes (in a suitable low-energy/near-horizon limit) by integrating out the background branes. Comparing this action with the D-brane probe action in a generic supergravity background then allows to determine the holographic background dual to the considered field theory vacuum.

In the first part, the required pre-requisites of field and string theory are recalled and this strategy to derive holographic backgrounds is explained in more detail on the basic case of D3-branes in flat space probed by a small number of D-instantons.

The second part contains the original results of this thesis, obtained by applying this strategy to several specific examples. We first derive the duals to three continuous deformations (Coulomb branch, β and non-commutative deformations) of the basic case, in the limit in which the D-instantons can probe the full geometry. We then derive the enhançon mechanism in a dual to a simple N=2 quiver gauge theory by using a fractional D-instanton as a probe and exploiting recent exact results on the Coulomb branch of N=2 quivers.

Finally, we obtain the near-horizon D4-brane geometry by probing the D4-branes with a small number of D0-branes.


Doctorat en Sciences
info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished

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Pichler, Sebastian. "Scalar fields and higher-derivative gravity in brane worlds." Diss., lmu, 2005. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:19-36343.

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Brown, Richard A. "Brane world cosmology with Gauss-Bonnet and induced gravity terms." Thesis, University of Portsmouth, 2006. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.439185.

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Kudo, Hideaki. "Consequences of gravity beyond linear perturbations in the brane-world." 京都大学 (Kyoto University), 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/2433/147802.

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McManus, Ryan. "Testing gravity in the local universe." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/33214.

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General relativity (GR) has stood as the most accurate description of gravity for the last 100 years, weathering a barrage of rigorous tests. However, attempts to derive GR from a more fundamental theory or to capture further physical principles at high energies has led to a vast number of alternative gravity theories. The individual examination of each gravity theory is infeasible and as such a systematic method of examining modified gravity theories is a necessity. Studying generic classes of gravity theories allows for general statements about observables to be made independent of explicit models. Take, for example, those models described by the Horndeski action, the most general class of scalar-tensor theory with at most second-order derivatives in the equations of motion, satisfying theoretical constraints. But these constraints alone are not enough for a given modified gravity model to be physically viable and hence worth studying. In particular, observations place incredibly tight constraints on the size of any deviation in the solar system. Hence, any modified gravity would have to mimic GR in such a situation. To accommodate this requirement, many models invoke screening mechanisms which suppress deviations from GR in regions of high density. But these mechanisms really upon non-linear effects and so studying them in complex models is mathematically complex. To constrain the space of actions of Horndeski type to those which pass solar-system tests, a set of conditions on the four free functions of the Horndeski action are derived which indicate whether a specific model embedded in the action possesses a GR limit. For this purpose, a new and surprisingly simple scaling method is developed, identifying dominant terms in the equations of motion by considering formal limits of the couplings that enter through the new terms in the modified gravity action. Solutions to the dominant terms identify regimes where nonlinear terms dominate and Einstein's field equations are recovered to leading order. Together with an efficient approximation of the scalar field profile, one can determine whether the recovery of Einstein's field equations can be attributed to a genuine screening effect. The parameterised post-Newtonian (PPN) formalism has enabled stringent tests of static weak-field gravity in a theory-independent manner. This is through parameterising common perturbations of the metric found when performing a post-Newtonian expansion. The framework is adapted by introducing an effective gravitational coupling and defining the PPN parameters as functions of position. Screening mechanisms of modified gravity theories can then be incorporated into the PPN framework through further developing the scaling method into a perturbative series. The PPN functions are found through a combination of the scaling method with a post-Newtonian expansion within a screened region. For illustration, we show that both a chameleon and cubic galileon model have a limit where they recover GR. Moreover, we find the effective gravitational constant and all PPN functions for these two theories in the screened limit. To examine how the adapted formalism compares to solar-system tests, we also analyse the Shapiro time delay effect for these two models and find no deviations from GR insofar as the signal path and the perturbing mass reside in a screened region of space. As such, tests based upon the path light rays such as those done by the Cassini mission do not constrain these theories. Finally, gravitational waves have opened up a new regime where gravity can be tested. To this end, we examine how the generation of gravitational waves are affected by theories of gravity with screening to second post-Newtonian (PN) order beyond the quadrupole. This is done for a model of gravity where the black hole binary lies in a screened region, while the space between the binary's neighbourhood and the detector is described by Brans-Dicke theory. We find deviations at both 1.5 and 2 PN order. Deviations of this size can be measured by the Advanced LIGO gravitational wave detector highlighting that our calculation may allow for constraints to be placed on these theories. We model idealised data from the black hole merger signal GW150914 and perform a best fit analysis. The most likely value for the un-screened Brans-Dicke parameter is found to be ω = -1:42, implying on large scales gravity is very modified, incompatible with cosmological results.
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Books on the topic "Brand gravity"

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Brane-localized gravity. Singapore: World Scientific, 2004.

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Mannheim, Philip D. Brane-localized Gravity. World Scientific Publishing Company, 2005.

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Ovalle, Jorge, and Roberto Casadio. Beyond Einstein Gravity: The Minimal Geometric Deformation Approach in the Brane-World. Springer, 2020.

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Mary Vasek (Compiled by) Wilhelm. Welcome to Happy, Texas "the Town Without a Frown", Country Cooking. Town Without a Frown Publications, 1993.

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Book chapters on the topic "Brand gravity"

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Gogberashvili, Merab. "Brane Gravity." In Springer Proceedings in Physics, 251–59. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-26798-0_24.

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Beneke, Justin, and Emma Trappler. "All Hail the Brand! Why Brand Gravitas Really Does Matter." In National Brands and Private Labels in Retailing, 61–70. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-07194-7_6.

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Soda, Jiro. "AdS/CFT on the Brane." In From Gravity to Thermal Gauge Theories: The AdS/CFT Correspondence, 235–70. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-04864-7_8.

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Carlip, Steven. "2+1 Dimensional Quantum Gravity and the Braid Group." In NATO ASI Series, 541–51. Boston, MA: Springer US, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-3802-8_15.

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"Why Higher Dimensions are Interesting." In Brane-Localized Gravity, 1–5. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812703132_0001.

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"The Randall-Sundrum Set-Up." In Brane-Localized Gravity, 7–14. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812703132_0002.

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"General Structure of Anti-de Sitter Spacetimes." In Brane-Localized Gravity, 15–21. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812703132_0003.

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"General Properties of Embeddings." In Brane-Localized Gravity, 23–26. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812703132_0004.

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"The Israel Junction Conditions." In Brane-Localized Gravity, 27–31. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812703132_0005.

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"The Newtonian Limit of an Embedded Brane." In Brane-Localized Gravity, 33–37. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812703132_0006.

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Conference papers on the topic "Brand gravity"

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CHAMBLIN, ANDREW. "GRAVITY ON THE BRANE?" In Proceedings of the 7th International Symposium. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812792433_0017.

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Tanaka, Takahiro, Hideo Kodama, and Kunihito Ioka. "Gravity in brane world." In KEK COSMOPHYSICS GROUP INAUGURAL CONFERENCE “ACCELERATORS IN THE UNIVERSE”: Interplay between High Energy Physics and Cosmophysics. AIP, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2981552.

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KIM, HYUNG DO. "BRANE WORLD IN GENERALIZED GRAVITY." In Proceedings of the Fourth International Workshop on Particle Physics and the Early Universe. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812799678_0044.

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Da̧browski, Mariusz P., Adam Balcerzak, Jean-Michel Alimi, and André Fuözfa. "Higher-order brane gravity models." In INVISIBLE UNIVERSE: Proceedings of the Conference. AIP, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3462673.

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Yamashita, Yasuho, and Takahiro Tanaka. "Bigravity from Gradient Expansion in DGP 2-Brane Model." In Second LeCosPA International Symposium: Everything about Gravity. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789813203952_0055.

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KOVÁCS, ZOLTÁN, and LÁSZLÓ Á. GERGELY. "HAMILTONIAN THEORY OF BRANE-WORLD GRAVITY." In Proceedings of the MG11 Meeting on General Relativity. World Scientific Publishing Company, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812834300_0132.

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Ahmed, Nasr, Richard L. Amoroso, Peter Rowlands, and Stanley Jeffers. "Brane-world Gravity in Normal Coordinates." In SEARCH FOR FUNDAMENTAL THEORY: The VII International Symposium Honoring French Mathematical Physicist Jean-Pierre Vigier. AIP, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3536438.

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Kovács, Zoltán, and László Á Gergely. "New variables for brane-world gravity." In ALBERT EINSTEIN CENTURY INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE. AIP, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2399675.

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Gurwich, Ilya, and Aharon Davidson. "Artifact Dark Matter from Unified Brane Gravity." In Identification of dark matter 2008. Trieste, Italy: Sissa Medialab, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.22323/1.064.0094.

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Cordero, Rubén, Alberto Molgado, Efraín Rojas, Alfredo Macias, and Marco Maceda. "Ostrogradski Hamiltonian approach for geodetic brane gravity." In RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN GRAVITATION AND BEC’S PHENOMENOLOGY: IV Mexican Meeting on Experimental and Theoretical Physics: Symposium on Gravitation BEC’s Phenomenology. AIP, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3531634.

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