37,054 research outputs found
The Future of the Western World: The OECD and the Interfutures Project
In 1975, the OECD created a research committee entitled âInterfutures. Research project into the development of the advanced industrial societies in harmony with the developing worldâ. The purpose of Interfutures was to examine how the new tools of futures research could be put to use in order to shape strategies for dealing with a new phenomenon of âinterdependenceâ, and to set out a âlong-term visionâ of the Western world. This article argues that Interfutures was appointed in order to draft an alternative image of the future to two radical visions of the early 1970s. The first was the so-called New International Economic Order. The second was the 1972 Club of Rome report, The limits to growth. As a response to these two visions, Interfutures presented a vision of globalization as a process oriented around an expanding world market, piloted by Western interests and continued resource extraction
Bouncing Palatini cosmologies and their perturbations
Nonsingular cosmologies are investigated in the framework of f(R) gravity
within the first order formalism. General conditions for bounces in isotropic
and homogeneous cosmology are presented. It is shown that only a quadratic
curvature correction is needed to predict a bounce in a flat or to describe
cyclic evolution in a curved dust-filled universe. Formalism for perturbations
in these models is set up. In the simplest cases, the perturbations diverge at
the turnover. Conditions to obtain smooth evolution are derived.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure. v2: added references
The time evolution of marginally trapped surfaces
In previous work we have shown the existence of a dynamical horizon or
marginally trapped tube (MOTT) containing a given strictly stable marginally
outer trapped surface (MOTS). In this paper we show some results on the global
behavior of MOTTs assuming the null energy condition. In particular we show
that MOTSs persist in the sense that every Cauchy surface in the future of a
given Cauchy surface containing a MOTS also must contain a MOTS. We describe a
situation where the evolving outermost MOTS must jump during the coalescence of
two seperate MOTSs. We furthermore characterize the behavior of MOTSs in the
case that the principal eigenvalue vanishes under a genericity assumption. This
leads to a regularity result for the tube of outermost MOTSs under the
genericity assumption. This tube is then smooth up to finitely many jump times.
Finally we discuss the relation of MOTSs to singularities of a space-time.Comment: 21 pages. This revision corrects some typos and contains more
detailed proofs than the original versio
dS/CFT and spacetime topology
Motivated by recent proposals for a de Sitter version of the AdS/CFT
correspondence, we give some topological restrictions on spacetimes of de
Sitter type, i.e., spacetimes with , which admit a regular past
and/or future conformal boundary. For example we show that if , , is a globally hyperbolic spacetime obeying suitable energy conditions,
which is of de Sitter type, with a conformal boundary to both the past and
future, then if one of these boundaries is compact, it must have finite
fundamental group and its conformal class must contain a metric of positive
scalar curvature. Our results are closely related to theorems of Witten and Yau
hep-th/9910245 pertaining to the Euclidean formulation of the AdS/CFT
correspondence.Comment: 16 pages, Latex2e, v2: reference corrected, v3: reference added,
material added to the introductio
X-Ray Properties of the First Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect Selected Galaxy Cluster Sample from the South Pole Telescope
We present results of X-ray observations of a sample of 15 clusters selected via their imprint on the cosmic microwave background from the thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) effect. These clusters are a subset of the first SZ-selected cluster catalog, obtained from observations of 178 deg^2
of sky surveyed by the South Pole Telescope (SPT). Using X-ray observations with Chandra and XMM-Newton, we estimate the temperature, T_X, and mass, M_g, of the intracluster medium within r_500 for each cluster. From these, we calculate Y_X = M_(g)T_X and estimate the total cluster mass using an M_(500)-Y_X scaling relation measured from previous X-ray studies. The integrated Comptonization, Y SZ, is derived from the SZ measurements, using additional information from the X-ray-measured gas density profiles and a universal temperature profile. We calculate scaling relations between the X-ray and SZ observables and find results generally consistent with other measurements and the expectations from simple self-similar behavior. Specifically, we fit a Y_(SZ)-Y_X relation and find a normalization of 0.82 ± 0.07, marginally consistent with the predicted ratio of Y_(SZ)/Y_X = 0.91 ± 0.01 that would be expected from the density and temperature models used in this work. Using the Y_X-derived mass estimates, we fit a
Y_(SZ)-M_500 relation and find a slope consistent with the self-similar expectation of Y_(SZ) â M^(5/3) with a normalization consistent with predictions from other X-ray studies. We find that the SZ mass estimates, derived from cosmological simulations of the SPT survey, are lower by a factor of 0.78 ± 0.06 relative to the X-ray mass estimates. This offset is at a level of 1.3Ï when considering the
~15% systematic uncertainty for the simulation-based SZ masses. Overall, the X-ray measurements confirm that the scaling relations of the SZ-selected clusters are consistent with the properties of other X-ray-selected samples of massive clusters, even allowing for the broad redshift range (0.29 < z < 1.08) of the sample
Cross-shaped and Degenerate Singularities in an Unstable Elliptic Free Boundary Problem
We investigate singular and degenerate behavior of solutions of the unstable
free boundary problem First, we construct a
solution that is not of class and whose free boundary consists of
four arcs meeting in a {\em cross}-shaped singularity. This solution is
completely unstable/repulsive from above and below which would make it hard to
get by the usual methods, and even numerics is non-trivial. We also show
existence of a degenerate solution. This answers two of the open questions in a
recent paper by R. Monneau-G.S. Weiss
The Cosmological Time Function
Let be a time oriented Lorentzian manifold and the Lorentzian
distance on . The function is the cosmological
time function of , where as usual means that is in the causal
past of . This function is called regular iff for all
and also along every past inextendible causal curve. If the
cosmological time function of a space time is regular it has
several pleasant consequences: (1) It forces to be globally hyperbolic,
(2) every point of can be connected to the initial singularity by a
rest curve (i.e., a timelike geodesic ray that maximizes the distance to the
singularity), (3) the function is a time function in the usual sense, in
particular (4) is continuous, in fact locally Lipschitz and the second
derivatives of exist almost everywhere.Comment: 19 pages, AEI preprint, latex2e with amsmath and amsth
Quantised vortices and mutual friction in relativistic superfluids
We consider the detailed dynamics of an array of quantised superfluid
vortices in the framework of general relativity, as required for quantitative
modelling of realistic neutron star cores. Our model builds on the variational
approach to relativistic (multi-) fluid dynamics, where the vorticity plays a
central role. The description provides a natural extension of, and as it
happens a better insight into, existing Newtonian models. In particular, we
account for the mutual friction associated with scattering of a second "normal"
component in the mixture off of the superfluid vortices.Comment: 9 pages, RevTe
A Strong Maximum Principle for Weak Solutions of Quasi-Linear Elliptic Equations with Applications to Lorentzian and Riemannian Geometry
The strong maximum principle is proved to hold for weak (in the sense of
support functions) sub- and super-solutions to a class of quasi-linear elliptic
equations that includes the mean curvature equation for spacelike
hypersurfaces in a Lorentzian manifold. As one application a Lorentzian warped
product splitting theorem is given.Comment: 37 pages, 1 figure, ams-latex using eepi
The Merger of Small and Large Black Holes
We present simulations of binary black holes mergers in which, after the
common outer horizon has formed, the marginally outer trapped surfaces (MOTSs)
corresponding to the individual black holes continue to approach and eventually
penetrate each other. This has very interesting consequences according to
recent results in the theory of MOTSs. Uniqueness and stability theorems imply
that two MOTSs which touch with a common outer normal must be identical. This
suggests a possible dramatic consequence of the collision between a small and
large black hole. If the penetration were to continue to completion then the
two MOTSs would have to coalesce, by some combination of the small one growing
and the big one shrinking. Here we explore the relationship between theory and
numerical simulations, in which a small black hole has halfway penetrated a
large one.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figure
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