3,234 research outputs found
Condensing Momentum Modes in 2-d 0A String Theory with Flux
We use a combination of conformal perturbation theory techniques and matrix
model results to study the effects of perturbing by momentum modes two
dimensional type 0A strings with non-vanishing Ramond-Ramond (RR) flux. In the
limit of large RR flux (equivalently, mu=0) we find an explicit analytic form
of the genus zero partition function in terms of the RR flux and the
momentum modes coupling constant alpha. The analyticity of the partition
function enables us to go beyond the perturbative regime and, for alpha>> q,
obtain the partition function in a background corresponding to the momentum
modes condensation. For momenta such that 0<p<2 we find no obstruction to
condensing the momentum modes in the phase diagram of the partition function.Comment: 22 page
Institutional Repositories: Evaluating the reasons for non-use of Cornell University's installation of DSpace
This article reports on a three-part evaluative study of institutional repositories. We describe the contents and participation in Cornell's DSpace and compare these results with seven university DSpace installations. Through in-depth interviews with eleven faculty members in the sciences, social sciences and humanities, we explore their attitudes, motivations, and behaviors for non-participation in institutional repositories
Using ground-based GPS to characterize atmospheric turbulence
A new method for measuring and studying atmospheric turbulence is presented. The method uses data from a local network of GPS receivers. The GPS data are processed in a way that assures that the estimated zenith total delays (ZTD) contain the effects of atmospheric turbulence present in the GPS observations. The turbulence is characterized using the spatial structure function for the atmospheric zenith total delay. The structure function is modeled by an expression with unknown parameters which contains information about the turbulence. The unknown parameters are solved by a fit to the observed ZTD variations. We apply the method to GPS data from the Yucca Mountain network, Nevada, USA. The results show that the magnitude of the turbulent variations in that region have a strong seasonal dependence, with much larger variations in summer compared to winter
The stringy nature of the 2d type-0A black hole
We investigate the thermodynamics of the RR charged two-dimensional type-0A
black hole background at finite temperature, and compare with known 0A matrix
model results. It has been claimed that there is a disagreement for the free
energy between the spacetime and the dual matrix model. Here we find that this
discrepancy is sensitive to how the cutoff is implemented on the spacetime
side. In particular, the disagreement is resolved once we put the cutoff at a
fixed distance away from the horizon, as opposed to a fixed position in space.
Furthermore, the mass and the entropy of the black hole itself add up to an
analytic contribution to the free energy, which is precisely reproduced by the
0A matrix model. We also use results from the 0A matrix model to predict the
next to leading order contribution to the entropy of the black hole. Finally,
we note that the black hole is characterized by a Hagedorn growth in its
density of states below the Hagedorn temperature. This, together with other
results, suggests there is a phase transition at this temperature.Comment: 1+21 pages; v2: Substantial changes in the body of the paper, main
results the same. Clarified discussion on the thermodynamics, added section
on a phase transition, references added. v3: Typos corrected. v4: Final
version, to appear in JHE
Results of the MRI substudy of the intravenous magnesium efficacy in stroke trial
<p><b>Background and Purpose:</b>Although magnesium is neuroprotective in animal stroke models, no clinical benefit was confirmed in the Intravenous Magnesium Efficacy in Stroke (IMAGES) trial of acute stroke patients. The Magnetic
Resonance in IMAGES (MR IMAGES) substudy investigated the effects of magnesium on the imaging surrogate
outcome of infarct growth.</p>
<p><b>Methods:</b> IMAGES trial patients in participating centers were randomized to receive either intravenous magnesium or placebo within 12 hours of stroke onset. Infarct growth was defined as volume difference between baseline diffusion-weighted imaging and day 90 fluid-attenuated inversion recovery image lesions. Patients who died were imputed the largest infarct growth observed.</p>
<p><b>Results:</b> Among the 90 patients included in the primary analysis, there was no difference in infarct growth (median absolute growth, P=0.639; median percentage growth, P=0.616; proportion with any growth, P=0.212) between the
46 treated with magnesium and 44 with placebo. Infarct growth correlated with NIHSS score change from baseline to
day 90. There was a trend showing baseline serum glucose correlated with infarct growth with magnesium treatment,
but not in the placebo group. The mismatch frequency was reduced from 73% to 47% by increasing the mismatch
threshold from >20% to >100% of core volume.</p>
<p><b>Conclusions:</b> Infarct growth, confirmed here as a surrogate for clinical progression, was similar between magnesium and placebo treatment, paralleling the main IMAGES trial clinical outcomes. Glucose was a covariate for infarct growth with magnesium treatment. A more stringent mismatch threshold to define penumbra more appropriately would have
excluded half of the patients in this 12-hour time window stroke study.</p>
Geodesy by radio interferometry: Effects of atmospheric modeling errors on estimates of baseline length
Analysis of very long baseline interferometry data indicates that systematic errors in prior estimates
of baseline length, of order 5 cm for ~8000-km baselines, were due primarily to mismodeling of the
electrical path length of the troposphere and mesosphere ("atmospheric delay"). Here we discuss
observational evidence for the existence of such errors in the previously used models for the atmospheric
delay and develop a new "mapping" function for the elevation angle dependence of this delay. The
delay predicted by this new mapping function differs from ray trace results by less than ~5 mm, at all
elevations down to 5° elevation, and introduces errors into the estimates of baseline length of •< 1 cm,
for the multistation intercontinental experiment analyzed here
Trace metal accumulation in soils on and around ancient settlements in Greece.
Classical and Mediterranean Archaeolog
Finite temperature scaling theory for the collapse of Bose-Einstein condensate
We show how to apply the scaling theory in an inhomogeneous system like
harmonically trapped Bose condensate at finite temperatures. We calculate the
temperature dependence of the critical number of particles by a scaling theory
within the Hartree-Fock approximation and find that there is a dramatic
increase in the critical number of particles as the condensation point is
approached.Comment: Published online [6 pages, 3 figures
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