432 research outputs found
Hawking's singularity theorem for -metrics
We provide a detailed proof of Hawking's singularity theorem in the
regularity class , i.e., for spacetime metrics possessing locally
Lipschitz continuous first derivatives. The proof uses recent results in
-causality theory and is based on regularisation techniques adapted to
the causal structure.Comment: 19 pages, LaTeX; v2: corrected Lemma 4.2; v3: typos corrected, final
versio
Global Gronwall Estimates for Integral Curves on Riemannian Manifolds
We prove Gronwall-type estimates for the distance of integral curves of
smooth vector fields on a Riemannian manifold. Such estimates are of central
importance for all methods of solving ODEs in a verified way, i.e., with full
control of roundoff errors. Our results may therefore be seen as a prerequisite
for the generalization of such methods to the setting of Riemannian manifolds.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, correction of some misprint
On the Geroch-Traschen class of metrics
We compare two approaches to semi-Riemannian metrics of low regularity. The maximally 'reasonable' distributional setting of Geroch and Traschen is shown to be consistently contained in the more general setting of nonlinear distributional geometry in the sense of Colombea
On the completeness of impulsive gravitational wave space-times
We consider a class of impulsive gravitational wave space-times, which
generalize impulsive pp-waves. They are of the form ,
where is a Riemannian manifold of arbitrary dimension and carries
the line element with the line
element of and the Dirac measure. We prove a completeness result
for such space-times with complete Riemannian part .Comment: 13 pages, minor changes suggested by the referee
Geodesics in spacetimes with expanding impulsive gravitational waves
We study geodesic motion in expanding spherical impulsive gravitational waves
propagating in a Minkowski background. Employing the continuous form of the
metric we find and examine a large family of geometrically preferred geodesics.
For the special class of axially symmetric spacetimes with the spherical
impulse generated by a snapping cosmic string we give a detailed physical
interpretation of the motion of test particles.Comment: 12 pages, Revtex, final versio
Anthropogenic extinctions conceal widespread evolution of flightlessness in birds
Human-driven extinctions can affect our understanding of evolution, through the nonrandom loss of certain types of species. Here, we explore how knowledge of a major evolutionary transitionâthe evolution of flightlessness in birdsâis biased by anthropogenic extinctions. Adding data on 581 known anthropogenic extinctions to the extant global avifauna increases the number of species by 5%, but quadruples the number of flightless species. The evolution of flightlessness in birds is a widespread phenomenon, occurring in more than half of bird orders and evolving independently at least 150 times. Thus, we estimate that this evolutionary transition occurred at a rate four times higher than it would appear based solely on extant species. Our analysis of preanthropogenic avian diversity shows how anthropogenic effects can conceal the frequency of major evolutionary transitions in life forms and highlights the fact that macroevolutionary studies with only small amounts of missing data can still be highly biased
Aichelburg-Sexl boost of an isolated source in general relativity
A study of the Aichelburg--Sexl boost of the Schwarzschild field is described
in which the emphasis is placed on the field (curvature tensor) with the metric
playing a secondary role. This is motivated by a description of the Coulomb
field of a charged particle viewed by an observer whose speed relative to the
charge approaches the speed of light. Our approach is exemplified by carrying
out an Aichelburg-- Sexl type boost on the Weyl vacuum gravitational field due
to an isolated axially symmetric source. Detailed calculations of the boosts
transverse and parallel to the symmetry axis are given and the results, which
differ significantly, are discussed.Comment: 25 pages, LateX2
Overexpression of melanoma inhibitory activity (MIA) enhances extravasation and metastasis of A-mel 3 melanoma cells in vivo
The secreted MIA protein is strongly expressed by advanced primary and metastatic melanomas but not in normal melanocytes. Previous studies have shown that MIA serum levels correlate with clinical tumour progression in melanoma patients. To provide direct evidence that MIA plays a role in metastasis of malignant melanomas, A-mel 3 hamster melanoma cells were transfected with sense- and antisense rhMIA cDNA and analysed subsequently for changes in their tumorigenic and metastatic potential. Enforced expression of MIA in A-mel 3 cells significantly increased their metastatic potential without affecting primary tumour growth, cell proliferation or apoptosis rate in hamsters, compared with control or antisense transfected cells. Additionally, MIA overexpressing transfectants showed a higher rate of both tumour cell invasion and extravasation. Cells transfected with MIA antisense generally exerted an opposite response. The above changes in function attributed to the expression of MIA may underlie the contribution of MIA to the malignant phenotype. Š 2000 Cancer Research Campaig
A regularisation approach to causality theory for C^{1,1}Lorentzian metrics
We show that many standard results of Lorentzian causality theory remain valid if the regularity of the metric is reduced to C^{1,1}. Our approach is based on regularisations of the metric adapted to the causal structure
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