675,174 research outputs found
The astrophysical science case for a decihertz gravitational-wave detector
We discuss the astrophysical science case for a decihertz gravitational-wave
mission. We focus on unique opportunities for scientific discovery in this
frequency range, including probes of type IA supernova progenitors, mergers in
the presence of third bodies, intermediate mass black holes, seeds of massive
black holes, improved sky localization, and tracking the population of merging
compact binaries
Conformity-Driven Agents Support Ordered Phases in the Spatial Public Goods Game
We investigate the spatial Public Goods Game in the presence of
fitness-driven and conformity-driven agents. This framework usually considers
only the former type of agents, i.e., agents that tend to imitate the strategy
of their fittest neighbors. However, whenever we study social systems, the
evolution of a population might be affected also by social behaviors as
conformism, stubbornness, altruism, and selfishness. Although the term
evolution can assume different meanings depending on the considered domain,
here it corresponds to the set of processes that lead a system towards an
equilibrium or a steady-state. We map fitness to the agents' payoff so that
richer agents are those most imitated by fitness-driven agents, while
conformity-driven agents tend to imitate the strategy assumed by the majority
of their neighbors. Numerical simulations aim to identify the nature of the
transition, on varying the amount of the relative density of conformity-driven
agents in the population, and to study the nature of related equilibria.
Remarkably, we find that conformism generally fosters ordered cooperative
phases and may also lead to bistable behaviors.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
Lattice models of disorder with order
This paper describes the use of simple lattice models for studying the
properties of structurally disordered systems like glasses and granulates. The
models considered have crystalline states as ground states, finite
connectivity, and are not subject to constrained evolution rules. After a short
review of some of these models, the paper discusses how two particularly simple
kinds of models, the Potts model and the exclusion models, evolve after a
quench at low temperature to glassy states rather than to crystalline states
Bulk Renormalization and Particle Spectrum in Codimension-Two Brane Worlds
We study the Casimir energy due to bulk loops of matter fields in
codimension-two brane worlds and discuss how effective field theory methods
allow us to use this result to renormalize the bulk and brane operators. In the
calculation we explicitly sum over the Kaluza-Klein (KK) states with a new
convenient method, which is based on a combined use of zeta function and
dimensional regularization. Among the general class of models we consider we
include a supersymmetric example, 6D gauged chiral supergravity. Although much
of our discussion is more general, we treat in some detail a class of
compactifications, where the extra dimensions parametrize a rugby ball shaped
space with size stabilized by a bulk magnetic flux. The rugby ball geometry
requires two branes, which can host the Standard Model fields and carry both
tension and magnetic flux (of the bulk gauge field), the leading terms in a
derivative expansion. The brane properties have an impact on the KK spectrum
and therefore on the Casimir energy as well as on the renormalization of the
brane operators. A very interesting feature is that when the two branes carry
exactly the same amount of flux, one half of the bulk supersymmetries survives
after the compactification, even if the brane tensions are large. We also
discuss the implications of these calculations for the natural value of the
cosmological constant when the bulk has two large extra dimensions and the bulk
supersymmetry is partially preserved (or completely broken).Comment: 18 pages, partly based on a talk given at IARD 2012: the eighth
biennial conference on classical and quantum relativistic dynamics of
particles and fields; v2: version published in Journal of Physics: Conference
Serie
Superconductivity, Superfluidity and Holography
This is a concise review of holographic superconductors and superfluids. We
highlight some predictions of the holographic models and the emphasis is given
to physical aspects rather than to the technical details, although some
references to understand the latter are systematically provided. We include
gapped systems in the discussion, motivated by the physics of high-temperature
superconductivity. In order to do so we consider a compactified extra dimension
(with radius R), or, alternatively, a dilatonic field. The first setup can also
be used to model cylindrical superconductors; when these are probed by an axial
magnetic field a universal property of holography emerges: while for large R
(compared to the other scales in the problem) non-local operators are
suppressed, leading to the so called Little-Parks periodicity, the opposite
limit shows non-local effects, e.g. the uplifting of the Little-Parks
periodicity. This difference corresponds in the gravity side to a Hawking-Page
phase transition.Comment: 10 pages, partly based on a talk given at DICE2012 (Spacetime -
Matter - Quantum Mechanics from the Planck scale to emergent phenomena) and
on a seminar given at the Gran Sasso National Laboratory; v2 references adde
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